Why is there an entire community on tumblr that is infatuated with the same very specific group of women from Resident Evil 8 and all of Gwendoline Christie's characters?
Why them? What is going on? Are we all the same person? What have you done to me?
And many other questions.
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Sooo,
Iâm backâŚ
Sorry everyone! Iâve been failing to post on here, but I am still active.
Thank you to @lord6-6fandom for dragging me back!
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Everytime I see posts like this I get filled with such profound sadness
Cause you know who has the same brainrot as you? The same unhinged feelings as you after you've read the fic? The person who always wants to scream about the fic with you?
THE PERSON WHO WROTE IT
I never used to leave comments but since I got into the habit of commenting on everything i enjoy it's been incredible. Especially when the author gets back to me about it and we get to have a discussion of what other ideas they had. One writer replied to my comment with a 5 paragraph essay detailing the Floorplan of the building the characters lived in and it was incredible
Anyways this is all to say that if you find a fic that just makes you want to scream from the rooftops, leave a comment saying that to the author and maybe they will join you and you can scream incoherently together
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 18 - Seen In The Haze
(Larissa finds out more about Opheliaâs life, and what exactly has made her the way she is, and why she is so adamant about the way she operates.)
WARNING: Violence/Implied Assault/Intimacy Issue/Mentioned death
Then you realized you were on her, on the floor, your arms wrapped around her as she held you close. You swallowed, looking up at her from her chest. She was still asleep. You breathed in slowly in amazement as you stared at her. She was so beautiful, her face smoothed and relaxed, at peace. The woman was always worried. Worried about control, about what others might think, about you. Yet now, she was at peace.
You swallowed, sitting up carefully, making sure not to disturb the woman. You silently extricated yourself from her grasp, freezing as she shivered and her brows furrowed a bit. You felt the ache in your chest as you did it, closing your eyes for a moment to breathe. It made you feel guilty to leave her, you realized. You shouldnât, the two of you, you didnât know what the two of you had, but you knew you didnât like leaving her.
You stood, making yourself a cup of tea silently before sitting by the fire, staring into the flames in search of an answer. You didnât know. You just didnât know. You swallowed, trying to ignore the need beginning to burn in you. You wanted her to hold you, to touch every inch of your skin. You wanted to trace hers, to kiss every bit until she couldnât breathe.
But you were scared.
You wanted to lie in her arms, nothing in between you, but fear paralyzed you. So you curled in on yourself, hating the way you felt. You hated the way your skin burned for her and your mind just kept going back to that night. To her hands and lips trailing down you. It had never felt like that before. It had felt good, certainly, but never like that. You dug your nails into the meat of your scarred arms, curling into a ball in front of the fire and gritting your teeth. You had to forget it. You had to let it go. You didnât get to have that, you had a job to do, a life to live that would likely end far sooner than it should. It would be cruel. You didnât deserve her comfort.
âOphelia?â She whispered, her voice husky with sleep, and you just shook your head. âOphelia are you alright?â She asked you, and you sniffed, trying to fight back tears you didnât even have a reason for. You didnât even have a good enough reason to weep for her. How dare you show yourself like this, she had been through enough already, you knew that better than anyone.
âMmm, yes, fine, why?â You rasped, and you could hear the second she caught you.
You were crying. She came to you, sitting behind you and wrapping her hands around yours, trying to pull them away from your already marred skin. You shook your head, gritting your teeth harder as the tears ran down your cheeks. Your nails dug in harder, stinging even through your sleeves. She rubbed your hands slightly, hers covering yours completely, and you paused.
âLet go.â She whispered in your ear, her chin nearly resting on your shoulder. You shook your head, your entire body shaking. Yet she wrapped her arms around you, pulling you close. You whimpered as you felt her pull you between her kneeling thighs, the sensation of her wrapped around you nearly making your sob.
Her head rested on your shoulder, and you tensed for a moment. She exhaled shakily, her hands rubbing slow circles on your forearms until you started to let go, little by little. Eventually she rested her hands over yours again, slowly pulling yours away from your arms.
âThatâs it,â she murmured, and you swallowed, doing your very best not to cry out. âLet go.â She said again, and you swallowed, your hands finally relaxing. She was wrapped around you, warm against your back as the fire roared in front of you. âWhatâs wrong?â She whispered, and you shook your head. âOphelia,â she murmured, and you shuddered. You flipped your hands, placing yours over hers, and wrapped them around you.
She gasped, you, wanted her to hold you?
âOphelia, you donât have to-â she started, but the broken whisper that came from you stopped her in her tracks.
âGod I hate how much I want it.â You shook, and she froze.
âWhat?â She breathed. She couldnât have heard that right.
âI, hate, how much I crave being touched by you,â you admitted. âHeld by you, the softness, your strength, your grace, good god Larissa, youâve broken me.â You breathed. Her own breath shuddered past her lips. Her heart was racing, her name on your tongue, like that, it made her heat up in a way she didnât know she could. âLast night you- the things you say.â You swallowed, shaking your head.
She couldnât breathe, she had gone too far. She had practically confessed to the fact that she wanted nothing more than for you to be hers. Now you hated her for it. You would hate her, reject her just like the others had. Or worse, you would take what you wanted and leave, making her think she had a chance at more.
You felt the tears land on your shoulder and swallowed, bracing yourself. You leaned away from her slightly, making the woman try to cover the near sob that left her lips. Instead, you brought your hand behind you, turning so you could lean against her while you looked up at her, cupping the side of her face and forcing her to look down into your eyes.
Her breath was stolen when her eyes met yours, storm clouds of grey swirling with such passion they almost looked black. You had looked at her like that once before, when you were writhing beneath her. Seeing the same look again made her lips part as she leaned in slightly, her body aching for you, giving in of its own accord.
âIt makes me need you.â You whispered, and she shuddered. She leaned in a bit, had you forgiven her? Is that what this was? Then the room seemed to shift.
Larissaâs breath caught in fear as the walls around her seemed to fade, almost as if a watercolor painting had been left out in the rain. She looked around, scared as the room changed, revealing one much different. When she looked back to you, in her arms, she gasped as she realized you werenât there. She cried out, looking for you, something was wrong, something was very wrong. The walls seemed to melt to reveal an old apartment, decedent despite the paint peeling from the walls. The place was warm, light streaming in through a cool breeze from open curtains, flowing in the wind. It almost seemed, peaceful.
âCongratulations Mrs. Addams!â A voice rang out, as you walked in, a glass of champagne in your hand, a smile on your face. You were younger, maybe twenty, but Larissa gasped as she looked at you, you were gorgeous, dressed up to the nines. Morticia walked in after you, in a black floor length gown, her wedding dress, Larissa realized. Yet the womanâs eyes never left you.
You wore floor length midnight blue, layers of silk dripping and rippling from your body as if it was draped on your very skin. Larissa swallowed, the neckline was still a high boatneck, also loose, revealing just a touch of skin. You looked like a dark Grecian goddess, Hecate in the flesh, your always at least half up curls flowing down your back, ringlets adorned with jewelry as you brushed an errant strand back, your opera length gloves, coming almost to the shoulder of your sleeveless dress, matching the fabric perfectly.
You were stunning. You were always beautiful, but like this, your waist cinched into place, showing off every curve of your body without ever baring your skin, you were the most striking thing she had ever seen.
âI wish you could have come to the ceremony in the states.â Your sister sighed, and you rolled your eyes.
âPlease, and risk ruining your day the moment the Frumpâs saw me? I wouldnât dare.â You said, and your sister nodded. Larissa just watched it all, mystified. It seemed like you were closer then. You still wouldnât touch her, you wore your gloves and kept your distance, yet you looked more comfortable with her.
âWell, it's time for your gift.â You sighed, and your sister gasped.
âYouâre allowing Gomez and I to stay here for our honeymoon, is that not enough?â She asked you, and you smiled.
âAnd I expect the entire place cleaned after you leave!â You yelled, going into another room to get something. Larissa watched as Morticia looked around the room, going to the window. âAnd here we are.â You sighed, walking into the room and handing your sister an envelope. Your sister opened it, before gasping.
âOphelia, where did you- how did- this is too much!â She breathed taking out a check. You just shook your head, smiling at the woman.
âYou will never have to ask your parents for money, and I know the Addamsâ are well off, but still, this is equivalent to what you would have gotten from the Frumpâs estate.â You said, and she gaped down at the check.
âOphelia, this is, this is three million.â She breathed, and you nodded.
âIt is.â You said, and Larissaâs jaw practically hit the floor. You were giving your sister three million dollars, at twenty one. Morticia and Gomez had married at twenty one, meaning you had made millions by the time you were that age. It was enough to make her nearly gasp in shock.
âWhy- they threatened you, didnât they?â Your sister swallowed, looking to you. You smiled sadly.
âI would never ask you to leave your parents, but, if you continue to see me, it is entirely possible that they will cut you off from your inheritance.â You swallowed, âSo if they do, you will be alright.â You said, and your sister looked to you.
âC- can I hug you?â She asked, and you smiled, opening your arms. Your sister hugged you tight, making you laugh.
âI'm a millionaire!â She breathed, at twenty one you had made your sister a millionaire. âAnd i'm in Paris!â She yelled, and you laughed.
Larissa watched as the scene shifted again, this time you were sitting at a desk, once again the walls seemed to melt away, revealing a different apartment. This one was smaller, and you were slightly older now, bent over the desk and frantically scribbling something down, looking through piles of books to do so. The walls were different this time, the paint also worn, but still beautiful. She could hear a clock tower off in the distance strike midnight.
âCome to bed.â A woman groaned, and Larissaâs eyes snapped to a woman, laying in your bed, staring at you. She swallowed as she realized the woman was topless, laying in just her underwear in your bed. Her eyes snapped back to yours, watching as you waved the woman off. Larissa could feel your emotions again, your frustration. She couldnât tell if the frustration was for what you were working on or the woman, but either way she felt something ugly rear its head in her. Jealousy, that was jealousy.
âI'm almost done.â You murmured.
âThat's what you said an hour ago.â The woman groaned in annoyance. You shook your head.
âI need to finish this, LeĂŻla.â You sighed, and the woman glared at you. It was quiet, late. Larissa could tell, this was a conversation you had many times before, the woman was tired, and by the way you rolled your neck and shoulders, so were you.
âDo you love me?â The woman asked, and Larissaâs eyes went wide as she stilled.
This was too private, too intimate. This was a vision she felt that she shouldnât be a part of.
âLeĂŻla,â you sighed, hanging your head slightly as you sat silently for a moment, and the woman glared at you.
âOphelia.â She swallowed, and you hung your head in your hands.
âPlease, LeĂŻla, not tonight, I just need to finish this.â You groaned, and the woman seethed.
âDo you love me?â The woman, LeĂŻla, asked again. Larissa could see the exhaustion in your body, she couldnât see your face, but it wasnât hard to guess. That and she could, she could feel the exhaustion. Being in your visions, it was like your emotions were pressed up against her own. She could feel the aura. She could feel you.
âLeĂŻla.â You sighed, and the woman stood, pulling on a shirt. Love was something you never said, you had an adamant opposition to saying the phrase she wanted. Larissa had seen it in action with your own sister even, and this woman, this woman pestering you late at night was asking for it. Larissa felt her jaw tense, how dare she.
âOphelia.â The woman growled again, walking over to you. Larissa could see as your shoulders tensed. She could feel the atmosphere of your emotions shifting, the tension crawling into her body as well. The woman walked to you, slamming your books and throwing them off your desk.
âWhat are you-!â You jumped, standing up and turning to face her. âLeĂŻla, these are important things! This could save lives! You canât just-â The woman slapped you across the face, making Larissa gasp as you turned your head away, grunting as you took the blow. âNo,â you whispered, and she went across the room, grabbing books from the shelves, throwing them on the floor. The reaction made it very clear that this had been a long, long time coming.
âI am your girlfriend, I donât care about some nameless person that your latest ridiculous tirade might help! I care about you, I want you in bed with me!â She screamed, and the way you flinched made Larissa want to physically put herself between the two of you. You tried to go to her, only for the woman to grab you by the throat, backing you up to the bed.
âLeĂŻla!â You choked, and Larissa gaped as the woman threw you onto the bed. She tried to get up, to go to you, but as always, she was trapped motionless in the vision. She knew what this would make you think of, she knew it the second she felt the cold fear brushing up against the familiar shield of protection you always gave her in these visions.
âYouâre going to give me exactly, exactly what I want, until your mouth is just as tired as the rest of you.â The woman growled, and you crawled away from her.
âLeĂŻla, I- I donât want-â you swallowed. Larissaâs eyes went wide, you were terrible with touch, even with those you were close too, if this was why it had gotten worseâŚ
âTell me you love me.â The woman spat, and you tried to crawl back, only to have LeĂŻla pin you down. She glared at you, spitting in your face when you didnât immediately answer. You gasped, crying out when she slapped you again. Larissa gaped at it, you werenât fighting back. She knew you could, you were incredibly strong, not to mention the abilities you had, she had seen you bring down grown men with a flick of your finger, yet you didnât even try to stop her.
âPlease stop, LeĂŻla- please, please stop!â You whispered, tears starting to run down your face. Larissa could feel your fear, the terror that came with the woman touching you like this.
âFuck you! Youâre a pathetic work obsessed bitch!â The woman screamed, and you cried, sobbing as she continued her tirade, screaming in your face. Larissa watched as your body went limp, you didnât fight it, you just let her scream, let her hit you. She wanted to stand, but it felt like she was rooted to the ground.
The room shifted again, this time the woman was gone, and the room was destroyed, things everywhere. You were standing in the middle of it, your arms wrapped in bandages as you paced back and forth. A knock sounded at your door.
âGo away.â You gritted, and Larissa furrowed her brows, looking up at you. She still felt trapped, like she couldnât move from the floor.
âLet me in.â She heard Morticiaâs voice ring out. You swallowed, growling as you walked over to the door, opening it and glaring at your sister.
âTich, I donât want your help.â You sighed, and your sister burst in.
âShe did this to you?â She breathed, and you swallowed.
âIt, it wasnât like that,â you tried, but your sister just shook her head.
âOphelia, I know when youâre lying.â She gritted, and you shook your head.
âIt was- it was me.â You stuttered, and your sister stared at you, shocked.
âWhat?â She breathed, and you swallowed.
âItâs my fault.â You said, and she came to you. You stepped back immediately, not letting her touch you. The difference between this and the last vision Larissa had seen with your sister nearly broke her heart.
âOh my god,â Morticia breathed, and you said nothing, just swallowing. âOh my god what did you do?â Morticia asked, and you shook your head, tears coming to your eyes.
Larissa glared at your sister. She could feel the pain, the fear you were trying to swallow down, you needed comfort, not this. The way Morticia looked at you made her burn.
âI didnât mean to, I- she was, her hands, I couldnât feel anything but her hands and she was, she was hitting me and I couldnât move and-â you were crying, tears streaming down your face as you panicked, your breath coming in short, achy bursts. The sound was heartbreaking, almost as heartbreaking as the sight of you trying to hold it together was.
There was a knock at the door and a woman burst in, one neither of you recognized if the way you reacted in shock was any indication of it.
âExcuse me, this is my apartment you canât just-â you began, stepping in front of your sister protectively, even now you guarded her.
âAre you alright?â The woman asked, stepping up to you, and you immediately backed away from her, holding your arms up defensively.
âStep back, right now.â You warned, and the woman froze.
âItâs me, little flower.â The woman whispered, and you stilled. The second relief flooded your face, Larissa felt as her brows furrowed in confusion.
âMorticia, I need you to go.â You said steadily, and your sister just stared at you.
âI- I donât know what you did, Ophelia, but you need to find a way to fix it.â The woman said, shaking her head before storming out of the room, slamming the door behind her.
There was a moment where you and the remaining woman just stared at each other, a second of you looking like you were about to collapse before she did something that made Larissaâs jaw drop. The woman flicked her fingers, almost as if she was relieving tension, casting off a burden of some kind, and in the smoothest shift Larissa had ever seen, all of a sudden the short blonde standing in front of you was a very tall brunette with green eyes and a warm smile. Her hair was curly, streaks of grey in it to match the smile lines around her eyes, showing her age. Larissa watched as you sobbed, going to the woman who immediately scooped you up in her arms, easing you over to the bed where she pulled you onto her lap, letting you just cry as you clutched onto her for dear life.
Larissa gaped, she had never seen you this close to anyone, ever. Not once. Even with your niece you were more cautious than this. A shapeshifter you trusted that implicitly, she had an idea of who the woman was, the only person she could be.
âHush, Iâve got you, darling, Iâve got you.â Georgiana whispered, and you buried your head in her chest, only sobbing harder.
âI didnât mean to, please, Georgiana, you have to believe me, I didnât mean to hurt her! I didnât mean to! Please!â You panicked, and the woman just hushed you, squeezing you close and kissing the top of your messy curls, holding you in the same way Larissaâs aunt Victoria had held her as a child. The parallel nearly made the grown woman cry.
âI know, I know, itâs alright.â She whispered, and you just cried, not letting go as you cried into her. Eventually the tears subsided, leaving you sniffing as you tried to pull yourself together in the only place you knew to be safe, Georgianaâs arms. âThe woman was, itâs over now. It was taken care of.â She said, and you froze looking up at her.
âOh god, I killed her?â You whimpered, and she instantly realized her mistake.
âOphelia,â she worried, but you were up and across the room in a moment, putting as much distance between the two of you as you could, staring at your hands in utter horror. âOphelia, listen to me, she attacked you, your instincts kicked in, it is not your fault.â The woman commanded, standing and taking a slow step towards you.
âYou shouldnât be here,â you rasped, and Larissa felt her heart shatter as the woman stilled. You really had always been this protective. âYou shouldnât be here- if Iâm dangerous- I- Georgiana I could hurt people!â You cried, and the woman froze for a moment, looking as if she was evaluating something. She tilted her head slightly, biting her lip for a moment. Silence filled the room.
âCome work for me.â She said, and your eyes went wide as you stared at her in utter shock.
âWhat?â You asked incredulously, and she put her hands on her hips, staring down at you.
âCome work for me.â She repeated, and you looked at her like she had lost her mind.
âI just killed a woman and you want me to work with children?â You nearly yelled. âChildren! Unstable children!â
âYou just defended yourself, I want you to keep doing that. But I want you to do it for others.â She said, and you just shook your head. Larissa could feel the anxiety pounding in you, taking up every bit of you as you panicked.
âDefend other- defend others!â You cried, and the woman sighed, staring at you intensely. âI owe you everything, you know that, I will do anything you ask of me, but this? You- you know what I can do and you want me to be around children?â You squawked. There was a moment where the woman looked like she might give up, a moment where Larissa wasnât sure what would happen.
âI want you to help me.â The woman said, and instantly your behavior changed. You stood, walking over to the woman cautiously. She may present herself differently, but she never changed her height, not to make herself shorter at least, you always looked up at her. Even more so than you would have to for Larissa. âI couldnât help her, and I- I canât help them all, Ophelia, not on my own.â She admitted, and you furrowed your brows.
âGeorgiana, I- really?â You asked, and the woman nodded, swallowing down something so desperate it made Larissaâs heart stop. âMe? You want my help? But I- you have Jenkins, or, or anyone? A teleporter would make a better aid then I would, I- Iâm a fucking living bio-weapon, Iâm the last thing-â you rushed, but she took your hand, forcing you to look at her again.
âJenkins is a fighter, I have a few of them. I need a genius.â She whispered, and you looked up at the older woman with such compassion that Larissa thought you may burst. She could feel it, she could feel the love you had for this woman. âI need you.â She said, and you nodded.
There was something unspoken between the two of you. It was as if you both had the same idea in your minds, something you held together, but was too precious to whisper out loud.
âWeâll help them.â You breathed, pulling the woman close so you could hug her again. Her hands ran over your bandaged arms carefully, before wrapping around you and holding you supportively.
âYouâre going to save her, Ophelia. It will take you a long time, but someday youâll find my niece.â She whispered, and you buried your head in her chest, seeking the comfort the woman provided for you.
âYou say it like you already know it will happen.â You hummed, and she just rubbed your back.
âI donât, but I know you.â She said, and you shook your head. âYouâll get every single shapeshifter in the world out if you have to.â She said, and you pulled away, looking up at her.
âYouâre my family, Georgiana.â You sighed. âIâd burn the world if it meant keeping your kind safe.â You swore, and both shapeshifters felt the weight of your words, even if only one of them had really been there at the time.
Larissa tried to get up, to go to you, but the walls melted away again, this time changing to ones that were more familiar, this was, this was her room. She watched in amazement as she appeared on her bed, gently stroking your hair. This was a memory of her, or a vision, she realized. Your body was limp, and the room felt cold despite the roaring fire. This was when you were asleep, when she was taking care of the still body, your very soul seemingly vacant.
âPlease,â she whispered, and Larissa gasped as she realized she was watching a vision of herself, one that you were remembering, dreaming about. âPlease come back to me.â She whispered, and Larissa watched as the walls morphed once more.
It was different this time, less sure. This wasnât a memory, she realized, this was a vision. The fire was out in her room, and you were sitting on her bed, waiting for her. She gulped as she saw you wearing one of the three t-shirts she owned, not that she would ever let anyone see them. She flushed as she realized you werenât wearing anything else. You looked to the door, smiling wickedly as she walked in, again, only this time the real Larissaâs jaw dropped as she realized you were having a vision of her, naked.
She wore nothing but her underwear, bra, and a short silk robe, one she allowed to fall off her shoulders as she walked to you. You hummed, slipping off the bed and walking to her.
âYou look well.â The vision version of herself said, and you laughed.
âSays the goddess in front of me.â You sighed, shaking your head and walking to her, bringing her to her own bed. She hissed as she sat, and you looked to her. âTense?â You hummed, and she scoffed.
âIâm fine.â She said quickly, and you raised a brow, stepping in front of her. Larissa gaped as you stood, your hands ever so gently coming to her jaw, bringing her in for a slow kiss.
âIâll run you a bath later.â You whispered, placing your hands on her thighs and rubbing gently. She hissed, and you nodded. âLay down, let me help you.â You said, and Larissa nearly whimpered as she watched herself be pampered by you. It was so casual, so tender, almost as if it was something you did regularly. Is that the world you were seeing right now? One where you did this regularly?
She watched as the vision of her took your jaw, kissing you gratefully. Then it almost seemed to flicker. A flash of the apartment from before, the ruined one, showed itself before the dream-like vision continued. You continued, climbing up onto the bed and laying the vision of Larissa down, beginning by kneeling at her feet, lifting one leg up and kissing her ankle, making the woman chuckle before it dissolved into a moan as you began working on her tired muscles.
The vision flickered again, to one of the old apartment, only it was still the two of you.
âWhat-â you breathed, looking around. It flicked back, and you swallowed, once again on top of her, your hands pulling away slightly.
âAre you alright?â The vision asked you, and you hummed, looking about.
âYes love why- oh.â You breathed, falling silent as you pulled away. âThis isnât real.â You sighed, closing your eyes and rubbing your head. âOf course itâs not, if it was I- you wouldnât want, good lord.â You groaned, hiding your face. Yet the vision flickered again minutely before settling in the bedroom at Nevermore, with you both.
It seemed to skip and the vision of Larissa moaned as you hovered over her body, kissing her needily as her hands felt over your back, your own grabbing her thigh and wrapping her leg around your hips, pulling her closer and making the real Larissa gape. She could still feel the emotions brushing up against hers, and that, she could feel the need, the arousal, the lust, but that, it felt like love.
She swallowed, is this what you felt, or would one day feel, it was all so strange. She watched herself moan and writhe under you, blushing obscenely at the sounds you could pull from the vision of her.
âSay it,â the vision gasped, and she could see as your eyes clouded for a moment. âSay it.â The vision repeated, and you swallowed, looking at her unsure. You took a deep breath, finding something within yourself. You stared down at the woman, loosing yourself in the vision, it wasnât real, even if it was you were notoriously difficult with that one little phrase. You swallowed, and the vision grabbed you by the throat, flipping you until you laid underneath her, her thighs straddling your hips.
âI- I love you.â You whispered, and the real Larissa gasped. You said it, you really did. The vision looked down at you, her eyes suddenly clouded.
âWhat?â She said, and you blinked up at her. Oh no.
âI, um, I love you.â You repeated, and she sneered, instantly getting off of you and retreating to the end of the bed.
âGod, I wanted you to say- you wanted me- you WHAT?â She squawked, and you flinched at the sound, looking away. The way you covered yourself, trying to hide as much of your skin as possible, made the real Larissa want to wrap you up, even if she was currently staring in utter shock.
âI, I mean weâve been doing this for three years now I-â you stuttered, and the real Larissa gaped. Three years. In this world you had been with her for three years.
âYou- you love me?â The vision laughed, and you bit back tears, looking down and away.
âI- Iâm sorry.â You whispered, and the vision laughed.
âSorry? Youâre delusional.â She spat, and you flinched. âAs if I could ever- get out!â She yelled, and watched as you scrambled from the bed, tripping over yourself and landing on the ground in your hurry. âOut!â She yelled again, and you nodded, picking yourself and rushing to the door. It wasnât enough, the vision of her seethed as it looked at you. âYou know what you are, donât you?â She spat, and you froze. You tensed as she walked to you, not turning. âYouâre a good distraction, Ophelia, but thatâs all.â She said, her voice almost guilty for a moment, and you nodded.
âI know.â You breathed, your voice shaking. The real Larissa could hear it, laden with tears as you tried not to cry. Is this what the both of you would become, you were seeing it, she knew enough about visions after living with Morticia that she knew this meant it was possible, but it wasnât assured.
âYouâre close enough to your sister for me to feel something.â The vision breathed, and Larissa watched your entire body go rigid. âIâm sorry you thought it was anything else.â She said softly, and you finally turned, tears streaming down your face.
âThat I thought- I thought!â You hissed, your face wet as your heart broke. âFuck you, fuck you Larissa Weems, you cold heartless fucking bitch!â You screamed, and the real Larissa gasped as the vision version of her fumed.
âLike I care what another Frump freak says about me.â She spat defensively, and you stepped closer to the woman.
âThatâs not my name.â You growled, your voice was low, and Larissa could feel the pain, the heartbreak fueling the anger.
âYou may change it, but that is all you are,â the vision said, grabbing your arm and yanking you closer. âThis is all you are!â She yelled, and you cried out, dropping to your knees as if in pain. Larissa gaped as the vision of her pushed you away, making you grunt as you scrambled away from it. âWant me to treat you like that? Hmmm? Want me to treat you like your sister liked? Do you like it too?â She spat, and you gritted your teeth.
You stood slowly, the pain like nothing you had ever felt. She came to you again, grabbing you by the jaw. You screamed and scratched at her arm, making the woman gasp and let go as your hands stung her.
âWhat the-â she breathed, and you stared in horror at your own hands. Your blackened fingers were covered in the white milky juice of a Manchineel, it would have blistered her skin the second she touched you. The vision dropped to the floor, hissing as she clutched at her arm. âIâm sorry, oh god Iâm so sorry-â you breathed, rushing forward, and the woman scrambled backwards, grabbing about the desk until her hand closed around something. You rushed forward to her, panicking as the vision teared up, staring at her burning hand in searing pain. âIâm so sorry, I can fix it just let me-â you gasped as something sunk into your chest, looking down and realizing with horror that it was one of your knives that she had found, left on the desk.
You choked, gasping at her as the pain registered. You fell back, hitting the floor, holding the wound closed with your hand. The vision gasped, looking at you.
âI- I didnât mean-â She stuttered, and you shook your head, tears beginning to run down your face as you looked up at the ceiling, gasping for air around the blade in your chest. âOphelia, Iâm so sorry!â The woman cried, horrified at what she had done. You just opened your other hand, offering it to her. You couldnât look at her, just closing your eyes.
��Put- put my h-hand over the, oh fuck,â you whimpered, and the real Larissa gasped in horror. She could feel the pain, the mental pain, even the physical pain, brushing up against her own feelings. It didnât directly hurt her, but she was aware, intensely aware of it. âMy, my hand, over the b- burn.â You panted, weakly offering it to her.
âWhat?â The vision gasped, and you looked to her, the fear and pain in your eyes clear. The vision teared up too, and you tried to shake your head, but hissed when you moved. The real Larissa felt her own eyes tearing up. She had seen you die before, she watched you fade from life, but that was under your own terms, this- she killed you. She could kill you?
âDonât- donât let me die having hurt you.â You begged, and both versions of the white haired woman sobbed, staring at you in shock. âPlease, please let me heal you first.â You begged.
The real Larissa sobbed, and for the first time, your eyes snapped to her.
âOh my god,â you breathed, and it was over. She woke up, her arms still around the real you, who jolted awake almost violently. You were gasping for air, looking up at the ceiling as tears began to dry on your face. You had been crying even in your sleep, she realized. She swallowed, her hand instinctively reaching to wipe the tears away, her other arm still wrapped around you on the floor. You jumped away from her touch, immediately standing and frantically searching for something.
âIâm sorry, Iâm so sorry.â You repeated, your voice barely audible, trying to fight back more tears. You must have shared your dreams, one of them a very explicit vision of her, and one a creation of your own scarred mind and ability. You repeated your apology like a prayer, quickly finding your gloves and harshly yanking them on, taking away the one bit of skin Larissa had access too other than your face.
The woman sat up, panting harshly on the floor. Is that what it was like for you, is this what kept you from letting others close? You gritted your teeth, quickly moving about the room and frantically finding something to do.
âPlease, I- Iâm so sorry,â you repeated, fighting back the urge to rip your nails down your arms.
âHow much of that, how much of that was real?â Larissa stuttered, and you swallowed, freezing at the table, your back to her as you tried to hide the reaction you were having.
âThe, Ah, the the first, when I was speaking to you, that, that was me.â You admitted, and the woman stood, walking over to you. You kept your eyes forward and down on the table in front of you, bracing your covered hands on it and swaying slightly. She had seen you do this before, you were trying to calm yourself down, to force yourself to breathe.
âAnd, the others?â She asked you, stepping closer. You swallowed. âMemories, mostly.â You choked down, and you could feel as she again stepped closer, standing behind you. She was so close.
âOphelia,â she breathed, and you shook your head, your eyes closing as tears came.
âA vision, and, and a darker one.â You swallowed. She stepped even closer, and you shook your head. âIâm so sorry, I didnât realize I was sharing them.â You whispered, and she swallowed.
âWill that, will that happen one day?â She asked you, and you breathed in shakily, finally turning around. As you lifted your eyes to hers, you realized she was crying too. Your heart broke for her. You were used to seeing these things, and still they often affected you. Her, she had likely never had to deal with it before.
âIt- I can see anything that is possible, which means it is possible.â You began, and her eyes widened slightly as her throat worked to fight back the tears coming. âThat doesnât mean it will happen.â You breathed, trying to comfort her despite your own racing heart.
âI- I saw it, I watched myself kill you!â She panicked, and you took a tentative step forward, gently reaching for her. You expected her to cry, to push you away. What you didnât expect, was for the woman to pull you to her chest and tremble against you as she clutched onto you for dear life.
You froze, but you didnât struggle in her grasp. Despite the pain, despite everything, it almost felt, pleasant. She felt safe, if that was a feeling you could even still have. You hadnât been held like this since, since Georgiana died, but when Larissa did it, it was a wholly different feeling.
âPromise me you wonât ever let me do that,â she breathed, and you nodded, your arms tentatively wrapping around her. She gasped at the feeling and you sighed, leading her over to the bed. You didnât even think as you sat her down on it, sitting next to her and holding her. You were quiet, just hushing her as you rocked her back and forth slightly.
âWhat you see if not assured.â You repeated softly, and she nodded.
âHow many, how many times have you seen yourself die?â She asked you, and your breath stuttered as you thought.
âMore than I care to remember. I see the darkest possible outcome of anything, no matter how unlikely.â You explained gently. âJust as my sister sees love, I see death.â You swallowed, falling silent for a moment. âBut thatâs not all I see.â You said. She took a deep breath in.
âNo, it wasnât.â She swallowed, a blush rising on her face.
âIâm sorry.â You said quietly, and she just shook her head. She laid down on the bed, her hand tentatively reaching for you. You sighed, laying down next to her, not removing your gloves.
âMay I- please?â She breathed, her hand ghosting over your chest. Where you had been stabbed in the vision, you realized. Her hand flitted just above your left breast, the sensitive bit of skin that sent shivers down your spine as she traced your curves through your clothing.
You took a deep breath in, nodding slowly. She gently placed your hand over the spot, over your heart, feeling it beat. You shuddered.
âIâm sorry, I know it was likely mortifying for you to watch, please understand I have very little control over-â
âStop apologizing.â She murmured, and your eyes snapped to hers. âTake you own advice.â She whispered, and as the woman laid there with you, just feeling your heartbeat, you were stunned into silence.
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Why would you say this so loud???
Is it not enough to intensely daydream a fanfic in painful, emotional and visual detail constantly for over a week? Must I also convert it to doc/word format as well?
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I think Iâm in love with the way you write your stories, I find myself captivated with every little detail you add to them. Youâre seriously one of the reasons why I still have Tumblr. I just wanted to show my appreciation for every little crumb of effort you put into the masterpieces, so thank you :) I hope you have a lovely day and or night!
Thank you so much! You have no idea how much this means, you absolutely made my day! Iâm so glad you like my stories, and feel free to request one any time! Thank you for reading and so much for reaching out, have a lovely day too!
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 17 - Spinning
(Morticia visits you in an attempt to get you to let loose, unfortunately for you, she inadvertently unravels something she never wanted to see.)
WARNING: Alcohol/Drugging/Drunkenness/assault flashbacks/implied sexual assault/violence
âŚ
This is how you ended up, extremely drunk, on your floor, staring at the spinning ceiling. You only had half the bottle, there was no way that you could be this drunk off of regular wine. Heaven knows what she gave you, but it was enough to have you three sheets to the wind. You heard the door open and immediately stuck your middle finger in the air.
âYou fucking drugged me you merciless bitch.â You slurred, however, instead of hearing your sisterâs laugh, you heard a very concerned hiss.
âWhat did you do!â Larissa hissed, and Morticia just snickered.
âI didnât think sheâd actually drink that much.â She chuckled, and you attempted to sit up, glaring at the spinning image of your sister.
âI am more drunk right now, then I was- oh god the spinning-â you hissed, grabbing your head and laying back down. âThe fuck is even in there?â You asked, and she laughed.
âThat would be fortified wine and a hefty dose of delirium potions, you know how hard it is to actually get you drunk.â Your sister smiled, pulling Larissa into the room and sitting on the floor with you. You looked up at the white haired woman, very confused.
âWhy the fuck is your roommate here?â You asked your sister, eyes still locked onto Larissa. The poor woman was halfway between extreme confusion, concern, and panic.
âBecause she likes you more than I do, and I believe you like her more than you like me.â She replied, gesturing for the woman to sit. Larissa just gaped at the interaction.
âOne: not a high bar. Two: she was a fuckin bitch to me the other day, but Iâm over it now.â You slurred, and Morticia laughed.
âWhat could Larissa have possibly done that my soft hearted big sister would be upset at her?â Morticia teased, and you glared at her.
âAye, she thought I was you, you halfwitted fuck.â You shot, your accent thicker when you were careless, and Larissa blushed in mortification as Morticia raised a brow.
âWhy? Because you look like a less interesting version of me?â Your sister teased, and again you flipped her off, slumping back to the ground.
âNo, because she was upset and fuckery and this that and the other thing and youâre a cunt.â You blabbered, and Morticia laughed.
âAm I?â She asked, and you groaned.
âYou fucking DRUGGED ME!â You hollered, and she hushed you, attempting to cover your mouth. You swatted her hands away a little too aggressively. âYou were upset and stressed out, now youâre not.â She remedied, and you glared.
âLarissaâs better than you.â You said randomly, and Morticia rolled her eyes, clearly you were drunk.
âMhm, Iâm sure. Thatâs why sheâs still at the school we attended as children.â Morticia scoffed, and Larissa tensed her jaw, glaring at your sister.
âTich, I gotta tell you something.â You said, and the woman raised a brow. âSheâs smarter than you, harder working, more interesting, better educated, and a fuck ton hotter than you, so kindly, suckmadick.â You slurred, and Larissa gaped as your sister glared at you.
âYouâre a prude, I bet you donât even have one with you.â She shot back, and you smiled.
âYeah I do, and itâs nicer than the one I gave your husband for Hanukkah!â You cackled, and her jaw dropped.
âThat was you!â She yelled, and you only laughed harder.
âHeâs not even Jewish!â You rolled on the floor, laughing at your own prank, and Morticia sighed, cringing a bit. You were very, very out of it. She hadnât intended to actually do more than make you a little tipsy to celebrate you not dying.
âAlright, I might have went a little far.â She breathed, and Larissa gaped at her.
âYou drugged your sister!â She hissed, and Morticia shrugged.
âSheâs been though worse.â She hummed, and Larissa absolutely seethed.
âExactly! You didnât even think to consider that you should not do this to anyone, especially her, for that exact reason!â She snapped, and you looked up from the floor. The noise was enough to have you look up, only to see Larissa angry, very angry, and pointing at your sister.
You blushed, her hair had fallen a bit, her face was flushed, and the sheer power she showed had your own skin heating up. She was defending you, and fuck if it didnât do things to you.
âHoly mother of Fuck youâre hot.â You slurred, before dropping back down again. Larissa blushed deeply, her eyes snapping to your prone, but thankfully still covered, body, before looking back at the woman in front of her.
âDid you not stop to think that this is a massive invasion of her, not to mention the fact that itâs illegal AND you chose to do this on school grounds!â She spat at the raven haired woman sitting next to you.
âOh, fuck me senseless, madam,â you hissed, making Larissa absolutely gape at the way you were looking at her. Thankfully, you turned to Morticia before you could finish undressing her with your eyes. âMorticia, I gottatellyou somthin.â You breathed, and she giggled.
âThis is ridiculous!â Larissa hissed, and your eyes fixed on her. Want, thatâs what it was, thatâs what was coursing through you. Sheer, unadulterated want.
âWhatâs ridiculous is that youâre not in my bed right now,â you breathed, before you realized what you were saying. Your eyes went wide in horror at your own behavior before locking on your sister, who was currently cackling.
âThere may have been some of a truth potion Iâve been working on in that bottle too.â She grinned gleefully. Larissa looked to her in absolute disgust. This is how she treated you. After everything you had been through, after nearly dying just days ago, this is how she treated you, like a laugh.
âI kissed ur husband.â You slurred, and Larissaâs eyes nearly bugged out of her skull. Morticia just scoffed.
âYes, I know.â She said.
âAnd it was, terrible.â You shuddered, and your sister again rolled her eyes.
âThat would be because youâre a lesbian, Ophelia.â She said, and you nodded.
âMhm, I know, but Tich, it was terrible. And I have kissed my fair share of men.â You sneered. You almost looked innocent in your disgust, even if the comment made Larissa want to destroy anyone who has forced you to do that. Again your sister rolled her eyes. âAnd heâs so short, and gross, and soft.â You gagged.
âAs opposed to what?â The raven haired woman snapped, and you shrugged.
âWhen women are soft, itâs amazing, itâs like worshiping a Michelangelo sculpture, like Aphrodite herself, but he was just, ew.â You said, and Morticia scoffed.
âYou are the most sapphic person I know, you know that?â She said, and you smiled.
âHell yeah.â You murmured, and she sighed. You looked up at Larissa again, your head tilting and eyes melting when you did. She really was the most beautiful creature you had ever seen. âCare to give me a run for my money?â You whispered, the innuendo far from lost on the woman if they way her cheeks burned was any indication.
âWell this is slightly less amusing then I thought it would be.â She sighed, and Larissa glared at her.
âYou did this for your own amusement!â She hissed, and you hiccuped from the floor.
âShe did it to get back at me for texting her I was alive instead of calling.â You mumbled, and your sister sighed, sitting next to you. You grumbled, rolling away from her and towards Larissa, who swallowed as you sat up, laying against her legs.
That was, new. You were exceedingly careful about touch, even now, especially now. You hadnât talked to her in days, not since the wine, and now you were practically on her lap.
âWell that certainly is interesting.â Morticia smiled wickedly, and you flipped her off again. âPractically climbing my darling sequoia.â She continued, and Larissa stiffened. You could feel it. Even with your mind spinning, you could feel it, and no one should make her react like that, especially not Morticia.
âYouâre a fucking bitch.â You said to your sister, only the jest in your voice had gone. You werenât joking anymore. Larissa looked down at you in shock.
âItâs not my fault you seem to be enamored by my former roommate.â Your sister retorted, and you rolled your eyes.
âDid you ever stop to think maybe I moved because I fucking hate when you touch me?â You spat. She stopped. Everything stopped. Morticiaâs eyes went dark, angry. She hated that. She hated that she couldnât touch you anymore. You two had once been inseperable, now she was lucky if you took her hand.
âYou hate when anyone touches you.â She gritted, and you glared right back.
âNot her.â You said, and your sister stood, swallowing.
âYes, well considering you have a reputation for fucking any woman you can find your way to-â
âNo I donât.â You said. Larissa gaped. You were quite literally drugged with a truth potion, you couldnât lie. âDespite what your mother says my âlittle black bookâ is remarkably short.â You spat, and Larissa swallowed. You were angry, you were very angry. âIâm not a whore, Morticia.â You gritted, barely able to keep your head up.
âPlease, I used to see you, back in the day. I still remember coming to see you and finding you covered in bruises, and that was well before you worked for that place!â Morticia retorted, âback when you would disappear for days on end to god knows where and come back spent like a fucking whore! What do you think mother thought! What was she supposed to think?â Morticia snapped, and you froze. It was like time stopped.
âExcuse me?â You hissed, and Larissa could feel the tension in the room ratchet.
âOphelia, thatâs not what I-â she began, but your face remained hard.
âNo?â You cut, and she swallowed, backing down. âNo, you clearly didnât mean to call me a whore, or to reveal that you were REPORTING on me to your mother!â You nearly screamed, sitting up further even as your head swam. âFor Christâs sake Morticia, she put me in that place! The both of them! The both of them are the reason I ended up that way, how can you not see that?â You raged.
âI- I was worried, you were high more often then not, you were covered in bruises and I- I saw you seek out dangerous people, Ophelia, I saw one of them!â She tried to defend, and you just shook your head in disbelief.
âSaw them! Saw them! You and your husband got shitfaced with me in Paris ONE TIME!â You yelled, and Larissa physically shrunk back. So this is what it felt like when the two of you fought. It was terrifying.
âAnd you went off with some fucking succubus and I didnât see you again until morning!â She yelled back, and you shook your head.
âPlease, Iâve never slept with strangers, do you really think I can sleep with strangers, my god, I was on and off with Lorraine for months, which you might have known if you had ever bothered to actually ask instead of running to your mummy!â You spat back, and Morticia seemed to settle with this. It was quiet for a moment, Larissa just gaping in shock as the two of you stared at each other, your eyes hard. To Larissaâs utter shock, Morticia gave in, looking away in shame.
âShe covered you in- you nearly broke your arm, Ophelia.â The woman whimpered, and you sighed, shaking your
âWhen all you know is pain, love in any form without it feels wrong, Morticia.â You gritted, your words still slightly slurred. âI hardly think I need to explain why sometimes, especially back then, it feels better if it hurts.â You replied, and the woman swallowed, looking away. Larissa just stared, still shocked. She turned bright red as she realized what exactly the two of you were talking about, and the contact she had with you from where you were still slumped against her legs felt like fire caressing her very skin. Yet you didnât pull away, and as long as you wouldnât, she would rather touch fire itself then let go of a millimeter of closeness between you two.
âI guess Iâm just surprised.â Morticia admitted, glancing up at Larissa, and you calmed a bit, again leaning onto Larissaâs legs. You likely wouldnât have if you were sober, but drunk as you were, you just wanted to be close to the woman.
âWe both know sheâs stunning, you can stop putting her down to feel better about yourself.â You murmured, and Morticiaâs eyes went wide.
âI- I donât-â She stuttered, and you groaned, rolling your eyes.
âYes, you do.â You returned, and she clenched her jaw.
âWell you would think that, youâre practically obsessed with her!â Morticia snapped back. Your eyes went wide as you looked at your sister in slight fear. You were the one drugged, but if she pushed you too far⌠She smirked, she held the power, at least in this particular arena and she knew it.
âMorticia, donât-â you panicked, but her smile widened as she asked anyway.
âArenât you?â She teased, and you slammed your mouth shut, trying to stop yourself. You knew even you could only fight it off so long.
âYes,â you whispered, the word falling out of your mouth without your permission. Morticia laughed as Larissa stared down at you in shock. You were drunk, but you were also dosed with a potion that forced you to tell the truth, meaning that anything you said was⌠real.
âYouâve always thought she was beautiful, do you think about her in other ways too?â Morticia teased, and your body went tense, you were trying to fight it, desprately trying to fight it. You would tell Larissa these things, if the time came, but you did not want them to be ripped out of you, certainly not like this.
âMorticia,â you gasped, you could force poison or potions through your system quickly, but not without pain, and not quickly enough.
âDo you!â Your sister yelled. You hung your head, gasping out as you tried to call forth anything you could use to nullify what she had given you. Larissa swallowed, you almost looked pained.
âMorticia, I donât think-â she began, only to be cut off by your broken voice.
âYes,â you whimpered, and Larissaâs breath hitched.
âMorticia, thatâs enough,â the woman swallowed, but your sister just laughed, waving her off. To her, it was just a game, she meant no harm. It was just a crush, one she had been well aware of.
âWeâre just playing, itâs alright,â she smirked down at you. âWhy Ophelia? Hmmm, you barely know her, why are you so, whatâs the word, desperate?â She pushed, and you gagged, your body shaking as you tried to force yourself to expel whatever Morticia had given you. âWhy!â She yelled excitedly, and you glared up at her, staring daggers as blood dripped down your nose.
âBecause something in me makes me trust her.â You glowered. Morticia went pale, paler than usual. She hurt you. Horror seized as she realized she went too far, again, she had gone too far, and she had hurt you.
âOh my- Ophelia, Iâm sorry, I didnât mean-â she rushed, seeing exactly how hard you were fighting off whatever she dosed you with.
âBecause she feels safe,â you groaned, your body begginging to shake lightly, and Morticia came to you, she gave you too much, something was wrong.
âDonât you fucking touch me!â You screamed, slamming back into Larissaâs legs. The woman gasped, falling down on the chair behind her, and watched in horror as you cried out in pain. âDonât FUCKING TOUCH ME!â You screamed, and Morticia jumped back. Something was very wrong, you shouldnât be reacting like this. âStop it! Stop it! Stop it!â You screamed, and Morticia realized in horror what was happening.
âOh my god sheâs not seeing us.â She breathed, and you looked around wildly, searching for any source of an explanation. All you could see was your room at Newflight, one of the guards with you.
âPlease, please I donât want to,â you whimpered, and Larissa looked down at you in horror. âI- I donât like it, please,â you begged, and Larissa tried to reach for you. The moment her hands touched your back you gasped, arching up a bit and falling silent. Your eyes rolled back into your head.
âShit!â Morticia hissed, coming to you and helping you down. Your body was rigid, taught as a cord as she laid you back on the floor. Larissa lunged for you, helping your sister lay you back, only to feel a familiar pull until she went tumbling face first into a vision.
Cold, it was cold. Desolate, almost, that was the first thing she felt. The walls were dark grey in the watercolor pattern your visions always were. For the moment there was only one thing in focus, and she realized that Morticia was standing right next to her, looking around wildly.
âWhat- what is-â Larissa gaped, and Morticia looked around in horror.
âThis is Newflight.â She swallowed, jumping as a door on the side of the room swung open, revealing two guards, dragging a limp body in between them. Larissa choked as she realized who it was.
Your body looked wrong, so weak and bent, your hair looked lifeless, matted and filthy as it hung over your bent head. You were unconscious, or at the very least unresponsive, you looked like a broken doll dangling lifelessly as the men hauled you over to a filthy looking bed, taking a metal collar attached to a chain and locking it around your neck.
Morticia looked sick as Larissa stared at you in utter horror. You were young, far too young. No longer a child, but with how emaciated you were it was nearly impossible to tell.
The closer of the two men grabbed your face, your eyes lolling back as if your body was trying to respond, trying to look at the threat, but just couldnât any more. It couldnât. He sneered down at you, turning your head this way and that to get a better look, lifting you up by the metal collar and leering over your body.
âSoon, word is that oneâs parents are about to give up. If they disown her you can have your way with her before sheâs sold.â The other guard gruffed, and the man over you smiled sickly, making both women watching shudder.
âShe would be pretty, almost. If she wasnât a fucking monster.â He responded, both men leaving the room with you chained down by the throat.
It was then that Larissa noticed the other bed, a girl a bit older than you were there, she must have been 19 or so, sitting up to try to get a better look at your limp body.
Her chain was similar to yours, it was threaded through a ring on the bed and attached to the wall, meaning they could literally pull you by the throat back into the beds, where the arm and ankle restraints were. There were other points in the room with similar loops, a terrifying spot on the wall seemed to be made to chain people spread eagle into it. She didnât want to imagine what those were for, but her mind worked against her will, horrifying scenarios flashing across her consciousness. Even now, however, there was still a sense of a shield around her, you were still protecting her, as much as you could.
âHey,â the girl croaked, and you didnât respond, your lifeless body still limp and broken looking. Morticia took Larissaâs hand, making the woman flinch. She was shaking. This scared her, Larissa realized. This was something that could finally get the woman to crack her demeanor. âYou have to write your parents, tell them youâre getting better.â The girl hummed, and you didnât respond. She didnât give up though, she just looked at you, tilting her head as best she could from where she was slouched against the wall on her bed. âIâm a seer, you know, I can tell youâre awake.â The girl whispered, and when you finally took a shuddering breath in your entire body seemed to strain with the effort.
âWhy would I ever write them? They sent me here.â You whispered, and Larissa gasped, almost instinctively stepping forward to comfort you. Morticia, however, held her back.
âYouâre not stupid, you heard the guards. If your parents give up, theyâll sell you to the highest bidder.â She replied. The way the other girl spoke was almost, detached. It was as if she had seen this all before, as if she knew what was coming and had accepted it. âYouâll fetch a high price too. As powerful as you are, someone will use you as a weapon.â She sighed, and you still didnât move, didnât open your eyes.
âPowerful,â you spat. âI grow flowers. I canât even get myself out of here.â You rasped. You sounded so, defeated. It was like you didnât care anymore, you couldnât bring yourself to.
âMaybe not now, but you will be.â The girl replied. âYouâre female too, they go for higher.â She added, and you seemed to still for a moment in the bed. You were barely breathing to begin with, but the moments you went truly still, neither your sister nor Larissa could tell the difference between your young body or a corpse.
âThey sell shapeshifters for that, I thought, or succubi, sirens even.â You whispered, your voice straining against the silence.
âNot to fuck you, flower girl, to breed you.â She answered, and that, that finally got you to open your eyes. You stared straight at the ceiling, your eyes dead. Larissa nearly fell to her knees. The light in them, the mischief and madness she so adored, it wasnât there. You werenât there.
âI will never have children.â You replied coldly. The girl looked at you oddly.
âYou will never give birth, but you will have children. Many, in fact.â She hummed, and your eyes continued to stare blankly at the ceiling.
âI can stop it. I know enough- I know enough of what I can do to stop it. I can make it so I never have them. I wonât be a broodmare for some psychopath.â You said, your jaw tightening as Larissa looked to you in fear. You were talking about, could you? Could you make yourself barren based on the plants and herbs you created? Did you, that young, did you have to make that choice? Is that how it happened? Morticia gasped out next to her, her hand coming to her mouth in horror and shock as she heard the conversation.
âYou will still have children though.â The girl said, and you finally turned your head to look at her, your blank grey eyes meeting her green ones.
âNever.â You whispered, and she shook her head.
âI am not someone with the gift of foresight like you, orâŚâ she hesitated. âItâs your sister, a twin, yes?â She asked, however it was clear she already knew the answer. âI am much, much more than that, my dearâ She hummed. You fell silent for a moment, just scanning her face.
âHow old are you?â You asked quietly, and the girl hummed.
âNineteen, in this life, at least. Youâre still fifteen, arenât you?â She asked, and you blinked slowly in lieu of a nod. You were too weak to even move your head properly.
âI can see into your very soul, flower girl, I can see who you are, who you will be.â She said softly, her voice never daring to raise high, yet her conviction strong despite the clear weakness this place caused. You turned your head back slowly to the ceiling, staring at it in silence for a moment. The room was quiet, the only sound Larissa could hear was her pounding heartbeat, and surely it would simply stop altogether soon, seeing you like this, this broken, it almost snapped something inside of her.
âI donât have a soul.â You said blankly, your voice scratching its way out of your abused throat. âIt was ripped out of me. This place, those people, they took it.â You stated. âI feel nothing. I canât feel, I canât even imagine it anymore. How could that have a soul?â You rasped, your voice broken from the exhaustion of talking too much when you had nothing to give. The girl seemed to think for a moment, peering into you as you stared up at the ceiling.
âYouâre wrong. You canât feel for you, maybe, but you still feel for others. You feel for her.â She said, and you closed your eyes.
âMorticia will be fine.â You replied, and the grown woman sobbed, covering her mouth as she watched you give up in front of her. You really had given up, it was over, you let her go. This was the very day you let her go.
âShe will, yes, in time. But that is not who I am referring to.â The girl replied, and you froze in place, still staring at the ceiling. It looked like you were refusing to acknowledge what she was talking about, you were almost scared to. âBurgundy roses, white lillies, are those what you think of for her? Do you know the meanings?â She asked, and you shuddered, visibly shuddered. It was like the girl was stripping away the final walls you still had up.
âUnconscious beauty and peace.â You breathed, and she smiled at you. Morticiaâs eyes went wide as Larissaâs breath froze in her chest.
âYou feel for her, donât you?â She asked, although again, she seemed to already know. You squeezed your eyes shut tight, tears finally coming to them. Your body shook as they began to flow, began to trail down your sunken cheeks. It was the first time you showed any emotion since you were brought in. It was terrifying and relieving at the same time.
âSheâs hurting, he- he keeps hurting her. I donât know why, and I canât- I can't stop it.â You whispered, your already tiny voice broken. Larissa felt her own tears come as she watched.
âYou will someday. She will make you feel things you think are impossible.â The girl whispered. You shook your head, your eyes still closed.
âNo, no, she doesnât even know I exist and I- I donât know why sheâs always there! Always in my head, my sister gave me a memory of her and now itâs- it's the only thing that helps.â You admitted softly, tears wracking your body. The girl only sighed.
âYouâll learn why someday. Youâll meet her, you will trick her for a while, make her think youâre strangers, but your souls will find a way back together again.â The girl sighed, laying down and looking at the ceiling. You swallowed, forcing the tears to end as you shook your head.
âIâm never making it out of here.â You breathed, and the girl shook her own head in reply as she laid down.
âSure you will. You will be saved, and then you will save others, again and again. You will find every distraction. You will save countless of her kind to make up for comfort you will feel like you stole from her.â The girl said, and you visibly shook in fear.
âI donât mean to see her.â You whispered guiltily, and the girl just continued, ignoring you.
âYou will fight your entire life, and someday you will know rest. Thatâs what she is, that is why you see her.â The girl said, and you shook your head.
âShe is not rest. She is in pain!â You nearly screamed, and Larissa jumped back as the sound broke the quiet and heavy feeling in the room. Even broken and stripped, your screams were the most piercing thing she had ever heard. âShe is in pain! Horrible pain! And I canât help her! Iâm here! How am I supposed to do anything from here!â You screamed, and the girl began to laugh as pounding could be heard outside the hallway, people were running towards the room.
âYou will be hers as she is yours, flower girl. You will destroy yourself saving every child, every shapeshifter you can, but the only one who can save you will always be Larissa Weems.â She laughed, and you looked to her in utter fear, launching out of the bed with strength and speed you shouldnât have possessed, stumbling over to her and grabbing her by the slip she wore. It was the same as yours.
âDonât. Donât say her name. They canât know. If they know- if they find out- if that monster sends her here- they canât know her name!â You cried, and the girl just shook her head at you with a knowing smile. The orderlies burst in as Larissa stood in utter shock, staring as if the world had been revealed to her. It had been that long? That long you had known her? It wasnât- it didnât make sense, why would a seer talk about her to try to get you to fight. Why did it work?
The vision flickered, and the women could see you bent over, panting. You were wearing a black sports bra and leggings, little else as music blared around you, there was blood dripping down your nose and sweat from your brow.
âAgain!â A woman called, and you stood up, pulling your fists into a fighting position and tilting your head back, gasping for air as a tall red-headed man with a scruffy beard approached you.
âLook at the lass! Give her a break, Georgiana!â The man gruffed, and you shook your head, you were older here, in your twenties maybe.
âI can take it Jenkins, come on, hit me again.â You panted, pulling yourself up and setting your fists in the proper position.
âPhilly, Iâm not gonna-â he began, but you surged forward, decking him once with a tight hook before he grunted, snapping out of it and beginning to spar with you.
âThatâs it,â the woman called, and she walked almost through Larissa, making her shudder as she stepped closer, watching you attentively, marking your every movement. Larissa gaped, the woman had to be presenting as nearly six and a half feet tall, she was taller than her, that was certain. âCover your left, you lean into it too much.â She said, and you gritted your teeth, moving faster despite the clear strain. It wasnât hard to tell you were exhausted. You didnât look to the woman, her loose brown and grey curls pulled half back as she watched you.
The vision flickered back, and the young seer nearly choked as your frail hands wrapped around her neck to silence her.
âYou canât say her name!â You panicked, and the girl laughed.
âYouâll kill them long before they know her name.â She replied, and you stared at her in horror as one of the orderlies grabbed your chain, yanking you back by the throat and making you choke and scream out.
The vision changed again, and you and Jenkins were sparing heavily. Larissa and Morticia watched in fear as you dodged blow after blow, but you were tired, and it was clear you couldnât keep up forever. When he finally landed a good blow on you, you slumped to the ground, gasping for air and clutching your stomach where he had hit you.
âEnough, Ophelia, we can go again in thâ morn.â He said, spitting to the side, blood darkening the ground of the room. Larissa looked at your shaking body and her heart broke. You le head was bent down, your face hidden, but it didnât take much to know that you were crying.
âI have to fight.â You sobbed, and he sighed deeply, shaking his head and kneeling down next to you.
âNot like this, yer not gettinâ any better trying to beat me when yer already dead on your feet.â He said, stroking your hair. You turned away from him, pushing the manâs arms off, and he looked up to the woman for help. She came to you slowly, eventually kneeling down with the both of you.
âThatâs enough, darling.â She said, and you sobbed, shaking your head.
âI lost them.â You cried, looking up at her and nearly falling into the woman. Larissa gasped, covering her mouth. This was Georgiana, this was the woman who had shaped you, the shifter who had taught you and practically raised you after breaking you out of Newflight. âI lost them, I turned around for a second, and they were gone,â you sobbed, and she pulled you close, hushing you as she placed you on her lap, looking to Jenkins in work over your head.
âItâs not your fault dear, we canât save all of them.â She breathed, her own voice choking on the words. Jenkins placed a heavy hand on your back, rubbing assuringly as your sobs turned into wails of grief, staining the vision with your torment.
âYe got out four today Philly, thatâs four more whoâll have lived âcause a ye. You cannae take that for granted.â He said firmly, and you shook your head, sobbing into the womanâs chest as you clutched onto her like she could fix everything.
âItâs ok Ophelia,â she just whispered. âIâve got you, itâs ok.â She repeated, and your sobs only grew louder, until they faded into the screams of the other vision.
Larissa sobbed in horror as it changed back, one man yanking you back by the chain attachment to the collar around your throat as another went over to grab you.
âStrap her to the wall! If she wants to act out, she can take the punishment.â One of them said, and you cried out brokenly as you were dragged up and over to the wall, your body too tired to fight it. You refused to shed a single tear though. Adamant in your refusal to feel. In your unwillingness.
The guard from before came forward, smirking at you as he unholstered what seemed to be a small cattle prod.
âYou want to play, girlie?â He mocked, and even with how dead your eyes were, he still received a glare that made Larissa suffer as Morticia shrunk back. âStrip her, might as well have something to look at while she gets her punishment.â The man said. âDrug her up too, enough so she canât fight back, sheâs a feisty one.â He added before his smile widened at your helpless body, slumping into the restraints as another guard injected you with something. âWeâre supposed to make them wives after all, the bosses wonât get too mad if we break them in.â He smirked, and everything went black.
Larissa heard as Morticia screamed the moment she pulled out of the vision, her hands snapping back like she had been burned.
âOh my god, oh my god Iâm so sorry.â She whimpered, covering her mouth in shock. She felt sick, knowing that was what your childhood was, the place you had been sent to, it made her sick.
âWhat- what was that?â Larissa rasped, kneeling on the floor next to you and staring at your still unconscious body.
âI- I donât know, she was trying to fight off the potion, it must have sent her into a vision but that- that canât be real, no that can't have happened.â She whispered, horrified.
âMorticia she, let her go, she doesnât want- oh my god-â Larissa gulped, and Morticia shook her head. âMorticia, let her go!â She barked, and the dark haired woman jumped.
âSheâs been drugged like this before. I just wanted to tease her, I didnât thinkâŚâ the woman trailed, tears coming to her eyes. Larissa glared at her, picking you up and cradling your body to her protectively.
âNo, you didnât! You never do, do you?â She spat, holding you close. You stirred a bit in her arms and she looked down at you, holding you in her lap gently. Tears began to come as she cradled you, desperately waiting for any sign of life. Your eyes fluttered open and you looked up at her, swallowing as everything came flooding back. Larissa exhaled in relief, her eyes watering as yours met hers, clear again. The relief on her face was only eclipsed by her grief at seeing you like that.
âWe really do have to stop meeting like this,â you breathed, and she shook her head at you, her breath shuddering in fear as she looked at you. You were here, you were with her, you were safe. It was over, she reminded herself, it was all over. You sat up, shaking your head a bit. She rubbed your back slightly and you groaned, leaning into her hand ever so slightly.
Morticia watched the interaction in shock. You really were letting her close, very close. You let her touch you. She looked at the both of you.
âI- I thought you were teasing, Ophelia I didnât know you actually let her-â you crawled off the womanâs lap, shooting up and running to the adjoined bathroom. Morticia cringed as she heard you wretching, the telltale sign of your body rejecting what she had given you, or you were sick from the vision. She heard you gasp for breath, and swallowed down the guilt. She hadnât meant to hurt you, she really hadnât. She wanted to calm you down, help you relax a bit, get out of your head, but when you made her mad, she had lost sight of it all. She always did. SHe always had to have the upper hand. If she didnât then, then bad things happened.
She swallowed, staring at the ground as she heard the sink run. Nothing happened for a moment, both women could just hear the water running as Larissa glared at your sister. Eventually it shut off, and you appeared in the doorway. There were tears in your eyes. Morticia swallowed. She hadnât seen you cry in years, you never cried in front of her.
âNever. Never do that again.â You rasped, and she shook her head.
âIâm so sorry,â she whispered, and you shook your head.
âI donât care, promise me, promise me you will never do that again.â You said, your voice rough. She swallowed, nodding.
âI wonât.â She said, and you sighed, leaning on the doorway and holding your head. You looked absolutely ragged.
âWhat, how much did you see?â You asked her, and she swallowed, glancing to Larissa. âOh, now you give a fuck about how much of my personal feeling and experiences you wrench out of my body! What did you fucking see, Morticia?â You fumed, and she cried, shaking her head. She looked down, tears in her eyes as she tried to fight the image back. âYou were so little,â She rasped, and you swallowed.
âMorticia,â you tried, and she shook her head.
âFIFTEEN!â She screamed, and you took a deep breath in.
âFifteen.â You admitted, and she sobbed.
âI- I was complaining about Gomezâ bad flirting and Larissaâs grades and you were, that is what they did to you?â She asked you, looking at you in horror. You sighed deeply.
âAsk me again.â You swallowed. You couldnât look at Lariss yet, she had seen too much, she had seen into your very soul, into how long you had been hers. It was a terrifying thing.
âWhat?â She rasped, and you nodded.
âAsk me why I donât mind- why I like when Larissa touches me.â You sighed, closing your eyes for a moment. Larissa looked to you, her own eyes wide. Seeing you like that, how you were touched, not even touched, handled like an object, it broke something in her. Yet even then you were trying to protect her, the seer in the room telling you exactly what you would do. With the way you reacted, with the way you cared for her after the other night, after that man tried to- it made so much sense, and it made her sick.
âWhy do you like when she touches you?â Morticia whispered, and you smiled sadly.
âBecause you fed me her warmth,â you sighed. âI had seen her before because of you, but a little over a year after that, hers were the first visions you gave me, when you were trying to- when you came for me.â You sighed. You walked over, sitting on the floor with both women. âIâve known her for a very long time, even if she hasnât known me.â You said. âI know how her heart beats, the beauty of her smile. You fed me her comfort when you had none to give me, I- I know the feeling she had when she looked at you.â You said softly. Larissaâs heart shattered. That was why, that was shy it had hurt you so much when she compared you to your sister. You knew what it felt like when she was in love with her, when she hated Morticia for how much she loved her. âIf it wasnât for her I likely never would have talked to you again.â You admitted. âI wouldnât know my niece or nephew.â You sighed. âI certainly wouldnât come here, hell, I may not even be alive.â You sighed. âSo yes, I am comfortable with her touching me, and I know that is hard for you. Iâm sorry,â you said softly, and Morticia shook her head.
âYou shouldnât have to apologize.â She swallowed, and you smiled sadly.
âI wish I could hug you without being terrified Iâll show you something you canât unsee. But I canât. I can with her. She isnât connected the way you and I are.â You explained softly. The woman nodded. âYou and I, we will always be connected. Neither of us had a choice in that. When you chose to show me her, you showed me someone I could find comfort in without the fear of them seeing into me.â You whispered, and she nodded. You could feel Larissaâs eyes on you, and when you finally turned to look at her, your head tilting up slightly to see her, she fought the urge to take you into her arms and hold you until all the pain in your eyes disappeared.
âI really did always pick her, didnât I?â She asked you, and you nodded.
âYes. You did.â You sighed, and Larissa looked between the both of you. You hummed, looking to your sister. âWould you like to explain it, or should I, Tich?â You asked your sister, and she nodded. She looked to the white haired woman next to you, swallowing.
âWhen Ophelia was, dying, after what that place did to her, I wanted her to know what the outside world was like, what people, people that were good, were like. What the people I cared about were like. So I showed her you. Sheâs seen countless visions of you, a lot of Gomez too, but she didnât respond to Gomez like she responded to you. It was like fate, I could get her to wake up with you, sometimes.â Morticia said, and the woman gasped, looking to you.
âYou brought me back.â You smiled. âWhen I thought there was no beauty in this world, you brought me back.â You said, and Larissa swallowed, looking at you.
âI donât know what to say.â She admitted, and you smiled.
âThatâs alright. I wouldnât either.â You admitted.
âYou knew her too, of course.â Morticia said, and the both of you looked at her confused.
âWhat?â You said, and Larissa just shook her head.
âYou never talked about having a sister, I would know.â She said dryly, and Morticia laughed.
âNo, but I did have a pen pall in England. One whoâs writing you became a bit obsessed with.â She teased, and your brows shot up as Larissa blushed deeply.
âOh my god,â she breathed, and you stared at your sister.
âWHAT?â You repeated, and she laughed.
âYour poetry, Larissa would beg me for your poetry.â She said, and it was your turn to blush. âShe would tell me she felt she knew the soul of the person who wrote it.â Morticia chuckled, and you shook your head, utterly shocked.
âSaid soul was half dead.â You reminded her, and your sister laughed a bit.
âI had no idea.â Larissa swallowed, looking to you. It all made sense. Sometimes when you spoke it felt as though your words were familiar, this was why. This was why the way you spoke often felt like something she had known before. She had.
âNeither did I.â You said softly, and she stared at you for a moment.
âThere was one, it broke my heart, it was about a bird watching an angel,â she whispered. You hummed, thinking for a moment.
âYou.â You said, and her eyes went wide. âI was watching you.â You admitted, and she swallowed.
âOh,â she breathed, her face flushing, and you nodded, your own heart rate picking up at the implied meaning.
âYes, I- well done Morticia.â You sighed, shaking your head as you turned to your sister.
âI may have, not treated her right, I still donât, but you, I could give her you.â She said softly, and you blinked a few times at your sister. So that was how she viewed it. You never could quite understand your sisterâs view of things, but you did understand that. She wanted to help, it just so often went wrong. You yawned, the drain from it all getting to you, and Morticia nodded her head, standing.
âI should head home.â She said, and you nodded, standing as well. You offered a hand to Larissa, without thinking. The action made her blush. Even instinctually you were considerate.
âAlright. I- Iâll come around, soon.â You said, and the woman nodded.
âBye Issa.â She teased, and you rolled your eyes as the woman scoffed.
âGoodbye, Mrs. Addams.â She returned, and you chuckled at the eye roll your sister gave. She turned to go, but you stopped her.
âHey Tich?â You said, and she turned, looking to you. You sighed, walking up to her and taking her hand for a moment, the action shocking her. She looked down at your hands in amazement, smiling teary eyed as you squeezed once before letting go. She looked up at you, unsure what to say. It was a step. She had learned, today. You both had. You were never exactly sure where the two of you stood, but for now, it seemed like it might have been alright.
âI love you.â She whispered, and you sighed deeply, pain flickering over your eyes again for a moment.
âI-â You began, and she shook her head, hushing you, before holding herself up high.
âNo, no not now. I know how you are about those words, wait.â She said, and you closed your eyes for a moment in relief. Larissa watched in shock as the woman went over to her purse, pulling out a pair of gloves. Your eyes softened, your head tilting slightly at the gesture. âI- it is never my intention to hurt you,â She swallowed. âIt never has been, ever. I just- I simply-â She tried, unable to find the words.
âI know,â You said softly, and tears filled your sisterâs eyes.
âYou know,â She breathed, pulling on the glove and tentatively holding her hand out to you. You took a deep breath in, nodding tentatively and allowing her to cup your face. She gasped as she did, a slight laugh leaving her lips. âI forgot how warm you always are.â She hummed, and you chuckled.
âItâs for the plants.â You explained, and she rolled her eyes, shaking her head.
âOf course it is.â She smiled, and you pulled away, sitting back down on the floor when the woman turned to go, looking to you and Larissa one more time before she went.
She left, heading to the waiting car, you assumed, leaving you and Larissa alone. As soon as the woman left you melted, and Larissa inhaled sharply seeing your exhaustion and need for rest show so fully. The tall woman looked at you unsure, still sitting on the floor with you.
âAre you, alright?â She asked you, and you looked at her, raising your brows.
âIâm no longer drunk or under the effects of my sisterâs potions, if thatâs what youâre asking.â You said, and she nodded.
âYou ah, you donât have to worry about anything that you said, I wonât, I wouldnât hold it against you.â She said, and you sighed, nodding.
âShe likes when she gets the upper hand on me, I pissed her off, I should have stopped before she started asking me questions, Iâm sorry.â You apologized, and she shook her head.
âYou donât have to apologize.â She whispered, and you looked at her.
âLarissa I-â
âHow do you think of me?â She rushed, and your eyes went wide. It had already been more than you had talked to her in over a week. You hadnât even looked at her much, let alone spoken to her. Now she was close again, so, so close, and practically offering the comfort you so desperately needed.
âLarissa, I donât think that I-â you tried, but the woman just shook her head. She needed to try. She hadnât been close to you in far too long, she needed you again. Especially after seeing you in that hell, she needed to know that you were alright.
âI know everything else. I used to read your writing until I fell asleep at night, I used to think, of the woman writing it. Of what she would look like, sound like.â She said, and you took a deep inhale in.
âI hope I donât disappoint.â You tried to joke, and she just shook her head.
âNo, you are more than I could have ever imagined.â She breathed, and you blushed. You looked away, white and pink flowers blooming in your hair. Her breath hitched. She had seen those colors before, this wasnât red, you werenât, you werenât there, but this was something. After the other night she feared you would never talk to her again. You looked at her, watching her worried expression. She was panicked, she didnât know where she stood.
âIâm not going to kick you out.â You sighed, and her eyes went back to yours. âIf i wanted you to leave i would have asked you to.â You sighed, laying back on the floor. She just watched you, unsure. She felt like she didnât to now what to say, what to do. She had gotten so close, but she had also ruined it last time.
âIâm sorry.â You said softly, staring at the fire as you laid on the floor. âYou were hurt, I should have given you more grace.â You sighed, and she looked at you in sheer amazement.
âYouâre nothing like her.â She breathed, and you turned to her, your grey eyes meeting blue. âGod, youâre nothing like her.â She whispered, and you swallowed. âPlease I, Iâm sorry.â She breathed. You stared for a moment, deciding. She breathed, crawling closer to you. You sat up to meet her, staring into her eyes, swirling with uncertainly, and, hope. âI just found out Iâve been looking for you since I was school aged, I donât want, please I donât want your sister to be what you think of when you look at me.â She whispered, looking down at the ground. You hummed.
âWell then you know exactly how I feel.â You breathed, and she swallowed, looking back at you. âWho am I?â You asked her, and she furrowed her brows, looking at you strangely.
âOphelia,â she swallowed, and you continued.
âWho am I?â You asked again, and she looked at you for a moment before finding the words.
âYour name is Ophelia Florere. You can create the most beautiful wonders with just a thought. You hate physical contact, but you want to be touched.â She began, doing her best to meet your eyes through the intensity. âYou wrote beautiful, heartbreaking poetry. Youâve saved countless lives. Youâve lived through horrific pain. You like teaching, youâre a natural at it, Iâve never seen the students like they were with you in the conservatory.â She breathed, and your eyes widened a fraction. âYou smile like a madwoman and you dance when you think no one is around. You can sketch beautifully, and youâre absolutely brilliant. You protect those you love with such ferocity it makes me, it makes me wonder what that must feel like.â She said softly, her throat tightening. She wanted to say it, she needed to say it. Even if there was fear like she never felt, she needed to say it. âI had a taste of it, just a taste and it- itâs addictive. Youâre addictive.â She said breathlessly. âYouâre tempting in ways that drive me mad, and I know, I know I shouldnât. I shouldnât even be saying this right now, but I want you, I want you to know what it feels like, what it feels like to look at you.â She whispered. You blinked, your eyes watering as she spoke, your breath stolen. âYouâre beautiful.â She said softly, and she watched as a single tear rolled down your cheek.
âAnd you think Iâm a poet.â You tried to laugh it off, looking away as the tears came. Her hand came to your face, brushing them away almost instinctually. Your breath hitched in surprise. Touch was always strange, but hers, hers almost felt good. It did feel good. You nearly cried as you leaned slightly into her hand.
âWill you let me touch you?â She asked, and you swallowed. âI, I wonât ask for more, I just, after today, after seeing that. Let me hold you again?â She asked, and you looked up at her. âJust for a moment, and Iâll let it be then- Iâll give it up after, I just want to feel you, I want to feel that youâre alright. That everything is alright.â She finished, her voice fading into nothing. You placed your hand over hers, bringing her attention to you. You couldnât speak, you didnât have the words.
She watched in shock as you crawled to her, placing your hand on her chest and pushing her down, laying her on the ground. Her breath hitched as you leaned in, she wanted you to kiss her. She wanted to taste you again. She wanted to feel you writhe for her, to feel all of your skin pressing against her. Yet she had made a mistake last time, the only time you had let her that close. A mistake she paid for.
More than anything, she just wanted you close.
You laid her back flat on the floor, next to the fire, laying down next to her. Her breath hitched as you tucked yourself between her chest and her arm, resting your face just over her heart. Your skin was still covered, other than your hands, the turtleneck and long skirt leaving almost none exposed. It helped, the barrier between you two easing your mind. You couldnât handle your bare skin on hers, no matter how much you craved it right now.
âIt isnât so bad, when itâs you.â You whispered, and she closed her eyes, tears coming to them. You were close, she couldnât touch your skin, but she could hold you. You would allow her that much.
âThat womanâŚâ she trailed, and you hummed, it didnât take much to know who she was referring to.
âGeorgiana.â You answered the unspoken question. âShe was good too. Not the same, she was like family, but,â you breathed in deeply, trying to find the words. Her hand wrapped around your waist tentatively, and you shivered, but almost snuggled in deeper. âBut you are safe, like she was.â You whispered, your eyelids growing heavy.
The woman holding you could have sobbed. Safe. Safe you had called her. She didnât think she deserved it. She didnât think anyone did, after what the world had done to you, but the way your warmth pressed against her, it lit a fire in her. She would keep you safe, as much as she could, as long as you would let her.
âIs she, was sheâŚâ she trailed, and you hummed. You knew the question, and while the answer was likely yes. In all likelihood Georgiana was a face of the spirit that had appeared the other night, the spirit of Larissaâs aunt, you didnât have the mind to think of it right now. You were exhausted, thoroughly exhausted.
âIâm tired.â You admitted instead. She didnât dare look at you, not when you were this close. Her hands wrapped around you shakily, holding you to her. You didnât react, not that she could tell. She couldnât see the tears threatening to come to your eyes.
âThen rest,â She husked. You broke, you had spent your entire life fighting, hiding, it was too much, she was too much. âIâll be here. I- no one will come. Youâre safe.â She whispered, and she could have sworn she felt tears through her shirt as you nodded a little, curling into her slightly more as you closed your eyes, falling asleep almost instantly in her hold.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 16 - Not Quite (Minichapter)
Hello darlings! This is a bonus mini chapter for you all, as well as some of the *incredible* fan art many of you have created and submitted on the discord server! I hope you enjoy, this is a sweet one for you allâŚ
If you have any fanart to share or REQUESTS (yes, I do requests) hop on over to the discord and let me know!!!
https://discord.gg/RxqQqQYz
(Larissa attempts to approach you, only to realize that the ground has shifted.)
WARNING: Alcohol/minor use of alcohol as a scoping mechanism
She had tried, she tried to get you to stay, she grabbed you and accidentally threw you back into your mind, and the fact that her touch could do that horrified her. She hurt you, she realized. She had hurt you.
Larissa never second guessed herself, not where anyone else could see, at least, but now she found herself hesitating, nearly trembling at your door.
She could knock. She should knock, but she couldnât get herself to try. She had to, she reminded herself, her fingers forming, flexing, and then reforming a fist, over and over. She had to. Her heart was practically pounding in her head, her tongue heavy with words she didnât know how to say. But she had to. She had to find a way, to find the courage to talk to you.
Everything seemed to stretch on forever, yet the seconds rushed by. She was so absorbed in her panic she didnât even notice you standing behind her, watching her stare at your door as if she could set it on fire. You, however, were far too tired to play that game. She could go in or she could not, but you would leave that up to her. It needed to be up to her. You had to give her the space to do that.
Her throat was tight, her head was beginning to hurt, her eyes felt like she hadnât blinked in a week, she was sweating, god forbid-
âaaaand, thank you.â You hummed, placing the back of a gloved hand on her hip and moving her to the side, making the woman jump and startle, nearly yelping at the realization that you were there.
You opened the door, walked in, and let it fall shut behind you, leaving her standing there in utter shock. You would touch her casually, not truly, the back of hand, under your gloves on her clothing was hardly a touch, but you would do that and wouldnât invite her in? That was somehow too far?
Fuming. She was fuming. How dare you. How dare you treat her as if this was nothing, as if you felt nothing, as if you could be apart from her without a thought when she so clearly couldnât. It hurt. It ached that you could just brush past her. It made her see red. It was cruel. She had never known you to be cruel, and she knew you were hurt, but to be outright cruel in such a way?
She ripped the door open, her mind spinning out in deep, primal rage, the kind that made her very blood boil and her skin steam.
âNow, Miss Florere, if you think you can just brush me off- brush whatever this is off as if you donât care- when I- IâŚâ she trailed off when she finally looked at you, her mind faltering at the image laid out before her.
You were sitting on a chair in front of the fire, a small table in front of it, and another chair across. There was an empty glass on the table as well as a bottle of red wine, and a full glass of it in your hand as you stared at her patiently, your eyes glancing from the chair opposite, and the glass, back to her.
âYou- you knew.â She hissed, and you took a deep dreg of your wine. Of course you knew, you had been walking on pins and needles all day, the last few days, since the greenhouse, waiting for her to come. You knew she would eventually, but until then you had been biding your time, your entire body on edge and exhausted. You took another deep pull of the wine, there wasnât enough alcohol in the world for this conversation, but you were determined to at least attempt to keep your wits about you.
Her eyes followed the movement, the way your fingers fit around the glass, it was almost art. Your black gloves compared with the deep red of the wine, all bathed in the flickering light of the fire. There were no other lights on, just that, the curtains were drawn, the table was set, you were there, your eyes betraying how tired you were, even if you were adamant in keeping your composure, all you were missing was someone to drink with.
âI did.â You said softly, and she seethed.
âWhat is this? Are you toying with me?â She breathed, her voice strained as she shut the door behind her and strode up to you, coming close enough you had to tilt your head back to look up at her, but never invading your personal space. That was a mistake she could only make once. She couldnât see how much you wanted her. All she could see was the cool presentation you were giving, your attempt to keep everything in check.
âThis,â you said, nodding to the bottle, âis a French Malbec.â You pointed. âAnd this,â you added, gesturing around yourself, âis an invitation.â You finished slowly, your eyes betrayed exhaustion, but nothing else. You still wouldnât let her in, not fully. She stared at you for a moment, trying to figure you out.
âI- you- you have no right to treat me like I- like you- like this isnât- ugh!â She groaned, and you stared at her for a moment, your mind racing. Did she really think you didnât care? Could the woman possibly be that thick? She was brilliant, so how she came to that conclusion baffled you.
âIf I didnât care about you I would have locked the door, I would be drinking bourbon or smoking, I certainly wouldnât get out good wine, and the last thing I would have done is let you in here.â You said firmly, despite the tension creeping up your throat, and she stared at you for a moment. Iâve blue eyes searched storm grey ones for purchase, yet only found walls in their way.
âHow do you do it?â She asked you, and you shook your head, scoffing and turning away, trying to find the words. She was driving you mad, or further into madness, you supposed. âHow do you act as if you donât care?â She asked, and you sighed deeply, it had been a few days since the peace lilies, and during that time you hadnât had a word between you two.
So she really did think you didnât care. After everything, she somehow thought you didnât care.
âJesus, is that what you think?â You snapped, standing up. She stepped closer, and you shook your head. âDo you really think I donât?â You breathed, and she looked down at you, scanning your face for something, for anything. You gave nothing away but frustration bordering on anger, you were so fed up with the situation.
âYou look at me like Iâm nothing.â She hissed, and you shook your head, your breath heaving in your chest as you felt yourself heat up with your rushing emotions. They were choking you, flooding your eyes with tears you wouldnât let yourself shed.
âYou are everything.â You husked, your eyes finally giving away the intensity of the grief and sheer aching want you were hiding. âEverything.â You repeated, your breath coming heavier, and finally, finally she could see the passion in your eyes, the hunger there. âThat doesnât mean I get to look at you like you are.â You rasped, and she stared at you, her eyes widening as she was stunned into silence. That, she hadnât expected.
You shook your head, sighing deeply as you pulled away, sitting back in your chair. You stared at your glass for a moment, taking another long sip before closing your eyes, allowing the dry wine to give you something to focus on other than the woman taking up every damn bit of oxygen in the room. She was so close you could smell her perfume, and it had your mind spinning.
âWould you like a glass?â You managed, still not looking at her, and she took a deep breath in, staring for a moment. No, was her initial answer.
âNo, Iâd much rather taste something else-â she muttered before she knew what she was doing. Where did that come from! She was appalled by her own mind, even that was betraying her, she looked to you in utter panic, your head still down as you stared in front of you, yet the sound of ripping fabric gave you away.
Bright red flowers bloomed in your hair as matching red centered calla lilies ripped through your gloves, making you gasp and stand, immediately going to the other table in the room and taking a knife, cutting them and placing them down on the table, turning to face her slowly, biting your lip in thinly concealed frustration, staring at her with daggers.
âReally?â You asked, and she turned bright red, absolutely mortified. She had only seen you loose control once before, with Wednesday when she first met you, she knew the flowers meant something and calla liliesâŚ
Lust. Calla Lillies were symbols of lust. You still wanted herâŚ
âI- Iâm so sorry, I didnât mean-â she began, and you just shook your head, walking to the cabinet in the corner and pulling out a different bottle, this one, thankfully of bourbon. You no longer trusted yourself to remain calm with anything else.
You pulled the cork, taking a deep swig before sitting down on the chair again, letting the bottle sit on the floor next to you.
âI-â she began, and your voice was firm when you cut her off.
âSit.â You commanded, and she swallowed, doing as you said without another word. You poured her a glass of wine, and she glanced to the bottle of something much stronger on the floor, and you shook your head. âYouâll drink my wine before you get to my bourbon, headmistress.â You bit, and she clenched her jaw at the title, taking the glass and downing a quarter of it without a thought.
You raised your brows this time, looking at her strangely. She just downed a glass of wine. The woman was struggling, a lot, if it led to a lapse of manners such as that.
âThatâs twice now youâve done something I would think you would deem beneath you, care to enlighten me whatâs gotten into you this evening?â You asked her, and she felt the heat settle on her cheeks as you caught her. She was out of control, the thing she feared the most, yet you were only calling attention to it, not criticizing.
âPerhaps I need the courage.â She said, and you took another sip of your wine, staring at her over the glass. You knew the feeling.
âAnd what do you need courage for?â You asked her, your heart pounding, and she shut her eyes for a moment, gathering what little patience she had left. She could do this, she told herself she could, and she would. Mouthing the words across a room wasnât enough, she needed to look into your eyes when she said them.
She opened her eyes, staring into your grey ones. The ones she wanted nothing more than to get lost in. She wanted to dive into them, into you, but the space between you was too far for her to stretch on her own.
âIâm sorry.â She breathed when she looked into them, the words weighing on her like a cinder block dragging her down into the deep ocean of turmoil just below the calm surface she worked so hard to present. She swallowed, staring at you, the tension creeping into her like nothing she had ever felt. This was torture. Waiting for you was torture, waiting for you to say something, was torture.
You took a deep breath in, one that had her heart nearly pounding out of her chest, she felt as if everything would come crashing down, as if you would reject her, scream, cuss her out and run her from your rooms as if she was the monster that she often saw herself as.
What she didnât expect, however, was you to throw your head back and laugh. The cackle you let loose made her jaw drop. You couldnât help it, the entire situation was so ridiculous. She was apologizing to you. You had shoved her into a wall, and she was apologizing to you.
You were still pissed. She had compared you to your sister. Your sister who had done horrific things to her, you were still very much pissed, but the irony of it all wasnât lost on you. You just laughed, having to set your wine down for fear of spilling it.
Larissa burned. You were laughing at her, laughing. She apologized, she admitted she was wrong, and you were laughing. How dare you! How dare you do this? She had made a mistake, yes, but she didnât deserve to be mocked, to be laughed at like a freak or as if this was just all some game to you, as if she was just some game to you. She stood, her face red and her heart pounding.
It wasnât fair.
It wasnât fair that you could be so cruel and you could look that good while doing it.
She knew it wasnât right, but with your head thrown back, your hands without gloves now that you had ripped through them, she couldnât help but look. She stood, enraged, and stormed over to you, her face hot as she sneered through her words.
âI apologize and you- and you act like this! Like you-â she huffed, and you just shook your head, the laugh fading as you stepped closer, desperately needing to show her what you meant. Your eyes were stormy as they often were, but it was the broth in them that stopped her in her tracks. They were filled with⌠regret.
âSo am I.â You said, and she stopped, looking at you strangely. Your lips turned down against your will, showing a second of the emotion you were feeling, the emotion that was choking you into silence. Your grimaced to hide it, but it was too late, you knew she saw it.
âWhat?â She snapped, and you huffed out a sorry excuse for a laugh. You were tired. You were tired, and you wanted her. You didnât want to fight it. You knew you should, that as long as she saw you as nothing but an extension of your sister it wouldnât be fair to either of you, but you didnât want to, not anymore. Even you had your breaking point.
âIâm sorry.â You said, and her eyes went wide.
âWhat on earth are you sorry for?â She snapped, and you scoffed, tossing your arms to your sides as if the answer was obvious.
âI shoved you into a wall! You donât think that merits an apology!â You gawked. She was out of her mind, you didnât understand how she could ignore how wrong that was.
âIt was a door, and I am fine.â She argued, and you groaned, running a hand through your wild hair. It was fully down now, considering it was after hours. It was always so beautiful when it was down. Larissa just wanted to grab it. She wanted to run her hands through it, to play with the thick curls falling over your shoulders, to brush away the one strand that seemed to enjoy falling in front of your eyes, giving you an alluring look, at least to her, even when you were angry.
âThat doesnât matter! I laid hands on you, that is absolutely- undeniably unacceptable!â You yelled, standing up to face her. âCompletely!â You added, and she just shook her head.
âIâm fine- I swear itâs fine!â She countered, and you yelled out before you could even form the words. She was thick in the head, it seemed. In her stupidly pretty head, with her infuriatingly soft looking red lips.
âItâs not fine! At ALL! I could have hurt you-â you began, only to once again be cut off.
âYou didnât!â She hissed, and you shook your head, your face drawn with worry. This was what finally got you to crack. Your worry for her broke through every single painstakingly placed barrier. Every little line you promised yourself you would not cross.
âThat isnât the point! The point is that I could have, and the last thing I would ever want in this godforsaken life is to hurt you!â You argued, and she shook her head.
âBut you DIDNâT!â She nearly yelled, stepping closer to try to assure you. She wanted to pull you close, to hold you and tell you it was alright.
âListen to me, I canât just grab people and force them to get what I want! That is wrong! That makes me no better than- no better than- than-â you were panicking, and she could see it.
âOphelia, you were fine.â She tried to console you, stepping even closer. You looked up into her eyes, panic all over your face as you suddenly realized she was so close, close enough you were practically touching. So close you could just lean in, if you wanted to, and you certainly wanted to.
âNothing about me grabbing you- god, about the way I treat you, is fi- mmph!â You were cut off when she grabbed you by the shoulders, pulling you close and slamming her lips onto yours.
Your arms went straight up, almost as if you were surrendering to her, unwilling to trust yourself to touch her. Yet you didnât stop her. You gasped against her lips and she pulled away, her chest heaving as she stared at you.
âIâm sorry, I-â She stuttered, her eyes wide in horror that she had done the wrong thing. She just wanted you to stop, you were so close, and she knew that would stop you. She didnât even get to finish her words, you were on her again, the look in your eyes borderline feral.
âOh, shut up and do it again,â you breathed, pulling her back in.
She moaned as your lips finally pressed against hers again, you grabbed her by the hips, walking her back until she sat in one of the chairs, letting you straddle her lap so you could kiss her better. She sighed as your weight settled on her lap, her hands immediately wrapping around you, one climbing up the covered skin of your back while the other slid down your waist to cup your ass, squeezing you against her and making you nearly whimper into her lips.
You wrapped your arms around her shoulders as you slid your tongue over her bottom lip, instantly making her part her lips when you gave a little tug on her hair, the woman moaning in response. She pulled you to roll your hips against her and you groaned into her mouth, a sound that had her breath stuttering against you.
âJesus Christ,â you panted, pulling back only to slam into her again, almost as if you were being flooded by waves of passion for the woman. You wanted her, you were ravenous for her, and she wanted nothing more than to have every bit of you.
Her hands wandered over your body, she couldnât get enough. She needed to memorize every inch, feel every atom of you pressed up against her, she needed all of you, and it was driving her mad. She whimpered against you, pulling back and gasping for air against your lips.
âPlease,â she whimpered, and you groaned, your own hand winding further into her hair as you adjusted yourself on her, letting her sit up more so she could hold you better.
âLarissa,â you moaned as her hands gripped you tighter, and she whimpered, her lips parting shakily a hairâs breadth from yours.
âI- please, please believe me,â she whispered, and your breath hitched, catching in your throat as she begged. You nodded against her, your lips pressing against hers again, kissing her like you needed it to survive.
Her hands pulled you into her closer, your body sliding against her and making you grip her shoulders harshly when your core pressed against her stomach. You choked back a moan, the sound catching in your throat as you panted, pushing on her shoulders a bit and allowing you to shift your weight back onto your own legs, pulling your hips away from her. She whined, her hands grabbing fistfuls of you, desperately wanting you closer.
âI canât- Larissa, please, I canât,â you panted, dropping your head to her shoulder as your heart pounded in your chest. You wanted it, you wanted her closer, you wanted to have her like that, to touch her like that, but you couldnât, not like this, not when your mind was all over the place and you ran the risk of hurting her. Not when neither of you knew where you stood. âI canât, not like this,â you whispered, and her chest shuddered as she tried to catch her breath, panting below you.
âI- Iâm sorry- I shouldnât have-â she began, panic flooding her as she worried she made the wrong move. You pulled back enough to look at her, her face flushed, her normally perfect red lipstick slightly smudged.
Her words caught in her throat when you cupped her cheek gently, your warm skin sliding over hers. Her lips parted, the sharp intake of breath and the way her eyes fluttered half-closed as she attempted to keep eye contact giving away just how starved she was for your skin on hers. It was divine.
She looked gorgeous like this, hazy and needy, you might just go mad to see it again. She could feel your warm hands against her cheek, the strength grounding the delicate touch. You were always so gentle with her, yet it was exactly your gentleness that broke her apart.
âI- donât apologize for that,â you managed, and her eyes darkened at the way you skirted around saying something firm. She knew what you were implying, what you wanted, but wouldnât let yourself have.
âYou do, you do want⌠do you?â She whispered, unable to even form the words. It was ridiculous, her shying away from such a thing. The idea of someone wanting her, of you wanting her, like that, it was too much.
She felt she didnât deserve it.
You hummed, the sound calling her out of her thoughts as you leaned in again, kissing her slowly this time, sweetly. You took her hand in yours, leading it up to your chest, letting it settle over your heart, and she gasped as she could feel it pounding.
You moaned against her, tilting your head and kissing her again, your lips trailing down over her jaw, making her jump and buck up into you slightly. She whimpered when you kissed at her neck, her thighs pressing together in an attempt to get some sort of releif for the torture you caused. You groaned when you felt her do it, placing a final soft kiss to the column of her throat before pulling back again, another sweet kiss to her lips, one she leaned in to chase after only to feel you pull away, slipping your hand around her cheek again and feeling her skin practically heat up under the touch.
She was panting up at you, nearly squirming trying to find some relief. It wasnât fair, it wasnât even close to fair that you could do this, that you could make her feel like this.
âI want you, Larissa,â you breathed next to her ear, and the broken moan that left her throat was guttural.
âPlease, please, Ophelia,â she begged, and you just shook your head, your throat closing up at the words.
âBut youâre not mine.â You whispered, kissing her temple again before pulling back, standing and making your way back to your chair on nearly shaking legs. She could see it. She could see how much it was killing you. Yet until you forgave her, until she found her way close to you again, you wouldnât give in.
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Currently looking SO intently at your lady dimitrescu fic rn ,,, thinking, perhaps... (thank u for the kind offer too! i will def ask u first but I love ur work <33)
I mean I wouldnât say noâŚ
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And so this creator, may use any of my works for anythingâŚ
No particular reasonâŚ
Soft Spot - Lucifer x Listener Audio (NSFW)
Performer's Notes: HI! THIS IS MY FIRST GWEN CENTRIC AUDIO LOL,,, I KNOW ITS NOT PERFECT AND THE EDITING COULD USE SOME WORK BUT I WAS SO HEAVILY INSPIRED BY @alexusonfire's 'Winged Affections' that I HAD to do a wing thang(TM) audio with Luci and Listener. It's a short, sweet, and pretty simple audio. I know I don't sound ANYTHING like Gwen, but I tried and I THINK that's good enough :D !!! The image used for this cover was made by the lovely @na-shoba <33
thank you to my lovely @daydream-cement, @mithriil, and @cherryapplejuice for Beta Listening!!
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 15 - Turned Away
(Larissa realizes exactly how much of your warmth was once hers, Unfortunately she only realizes this once it is taken away. You do your very best to ignore the woman, but even you canât hold out forever when her gestures tell you exactly what sheâs thinking.)
WARNING: Mentioned Child abuse/menstruation
Wednesday woke up with you sitting at the table in your room, working on your laptop. It had been a few days since you returned, but still she sighed in relief, you were there, thatâs what mattered.
âWhat are you working on?â She asked you, and you hummed, not looking up. You must have known she was awake before she spoke then, you had a knack for that, especially with her. She could normally do it with you too, something her mother did not particularly enjoy.
âA book.â You muttered, and she nodded.
âWhat is this one about?â She asked you, and you flipped through pages of the various journals you had out until you found what you wanted.
âRare plants.â You answered absentmindedly. The girl rolled her eyes.
âSpecifically?â She asked you, and you chuckled.
âThe correlation between the rarer an outcast ability and related plants in nature.â You answered, and she nodded. Most of the things you researched were interesting to her, something she enjoyed. This was no exception. It did raise a question however.
âIf you work at the hospital, why do you write the books? And teach, for that matter.â Wednesday asked, and you hummed, still mostly focusing on whatever you were writing.
âMoney, mostly.â You hummed, âThat and teaching at college levels gives me a cover when Iâm moving all over the globe on a regular basis.â You chuckled, before furrowing your brows and picking out the journal you needed. âBut itâs mostly for money, the hospital doesnât make much, it essentially runs from various state funding from different countries and a few benefactors. I put a good bit of money in, but I still have my own income.â You answered, and Wednesday nodded as she mulled it over.
âCan I spend the day with you?â She asked, and you smiled, still not looking up from your work.
âOf course, but Iâm likely going to be working on this or fielding calls.â You said, and she nodded.
âDoes mother know youâre awake?â She asked after a moment, seemingly she hadnât thought of that yet, and you nodded.
âI texted her.â You replied, and the girl actually laughed. That sound had you turning in your chair and looking to her.
âYou texted her that youâre alive?â Your niece chuckled, and you shrugged.
âWell I was tired, I didnât want to deal with her.â You said, and the girl gave you a real smile.
âPicnic?â She asked you, and you scoffed, rolling your eyes. She knew you would never say no to that, the answer was yes as soon as she proposed the idea.
âGet dressed.â You sighed, and she nodded. She ran off to her room, leaving enough time for you to quickly pull on a turtleneck, floor length skirt, and your boots. You added a sweater on top, the cropped end of it hitting just above your waistline, still showing your figure while keeping you completely covered. You were grabbing your gloves and a satchel when a knock rang on your door.
You smiled, walking over and opening it in a hurry. You may be the adult in the situation, but there was always a touch of childlike joy involved on days like this. That smile quickly dropped, however, when you were greeted by an impeccably dressed Miss Weems, and not your niece.
âOphelia,â she began, and you just stared ahead. You wouldnât even meet her eyes.
âCan I help you, Miss Weems?â You asked the woman. She froze. That was cold. Less than a few days ago you were underneath her panting her name and now she was âMiss Weemsâ again. It hurt. She knew it hurt. She could feel the guilt flooding her. You wouldnât even look at her, you just looked through her, staring at the wall behind her.
âOphelia, please, talk to me.â She swallowed, but still you wouldnât look up, your eyes fixed straight ahead.
âI am, Miss Weems, however if this is not a school matter Iâm afraid that I do have something scheduled with my niece.â You said calmly. Her heart sank. You were icing her out. She couldnât get in. The warmth from you, the warmth that was always there, she couldnât feel it now. Now she just looked down at you, internally begging you to meet her eyes, to look at her, to realize how sorry she was.
Your phone rang, and you sighed, picking it up and answering the phone politely before your eyes went wide as you were flooded with a gushing voice from the other side. Larissa cringed as she recognized the tone of an annoyed superior, yet it would be odd, considering everyone she knew of had addressed you as such in terms of your old job. You rolled your eyes, sighing deeply as a false smile plastered itâs way onto your face.
âYes, Mr. Jones, itâs a pleasure, but allow me to reiterate, my expected stipend for a book is the same as it was last time, and the time before that, I havenât published for less under any other company, and my revenue speaks for itself.â You sighed, already annoyed by being asked. The man seemed to babble on regardless, fully ignoring you. You gave a chuckle that made Larissa shiver as your eyes narrowed at a point on the wall. âYou are correct, I do occasionally work for free at various universities, when they serve a particularly important cause, but do I need to remind you of my going rate for a semester?â You asked, and Larissaâs brows furrowed. She didnât know how much you costed, actually, you had accepted Nevermoreâs contract for a substitute without even blinking, despite the fact that she knew it was lower than she wanted to offer. âOh, oh no no no, you can listen to me, sir,â you spat. âI can go to any publishing company I wish, I donât care that youâre the CEO, or what you do, you see me as a commodity, I see you as a means to an end, so letâs get this straight, you want my book, I donât go for anything less than three million.â You smiled, not even noticing as Larissaâs jaw dropped. So yes, you did make money, a lot of money. âNot to mention my royalty, but we can discuss that after you remember how much my last book made, have a good day.â You clipped, hanging up the phone and rolling your eyes.
You were about to say something, anything. Anything would have meant the world to Larissa, it would have meant she had a chance, yet your words never came, instead, another ringing sound cut you off, only it wasnât the phone in your hand.
âOphelia, are you-â Larissa began, but you just groaned, pulling out another phone and answering it quickly.
âYes?â You hummed, and your eyes went wide for a moment, worry betraying you. Larissa immediately stepped forward, pushing you back into your room and shutting the door. You gaped up at her, bust she just shook her head, nodding to the phone, and you swallowed as she realized what she was doing. She knew you were worried, and she knew when you were worried it was often confidential. She was protecting you, you realized, and for just a moment you wanted to thank her for it.
Then the voice on the other side of the phone started up again, and you swallowed, focusing on what you were hearing.
âMiss- miss Ophelia, I- Iâm bleeding and I donât know whatâs wrong and it wonât stop and- and I canât ask any of the men and- and itâs- you- youâre the safe one- and I didnât know who else to call I just-â the young voice was panicking, and you immediately hushed her, your voice dropping to a calm and soothing tone that had Larissaâs heart fluttering with how caring you could be.
âHey, hey itâs alright, slow down, take a deep breath for me, sweetheart.â You soothed, and the girl on the other end of the phone took a shaky breath. âOk, where is the bleeding coming from?â You asked her, already having an idea of what this was. It wasnât uncommon for it to happen to girls who had been in âtreatment facilitiesâ where they were terribly abused. Extended starvation was known to delay puberty if they went in long enough.
âItâs- its coming from my- from between my legs,â She stuttered, and you hushed her again.
âAlright, thereâs no need to worry, dear, itâs completely normal, itâs, youâre having a menstrul cycle dear, remember, it would have been something they told you about in your first week or so?â You said soothingly, and Larissaâs eyes went wide. You were dealing with that? She knew you dealt with getting children out, but you really did care for them after, enough that one of them was comfortable enough to come to you.
âOh,â the girl breathed, and you hummed.
âIs any of the female staff there? Dr. Moss maybe? Or if Mirella is home for the weekend Iâm sure she will help you.â You answered, and the girl thought for a moment.
âYeah- I- I think Miss Mierella is home. She wonât, mind, will she?â She asked, and you hurried to assure the girl.
âNo, no, of course not! And even if she isnât, all of the staff know how to deal with it, and most of the older girls.â You answered, and she hummed nervously.
âIâm sorry for bothering you with something silly,â she said, and you immediately shook your head, not that she could see it.
âNo! Itâs not silly, itâs perfectly understandable, and I am happy you called, Serena.â You said softly, and the girl exhaled in releif. âYou know, Jenkins had to help me with my first one, the only woman back in those days was Georgiana, and she was out, so it was just Jenkins and I.â You hummed with a smile, and the girl chuckled, making the grin split your face in releif.
âJenkins!â The girl laughed, and you nodded, chuckling at the memory.
âYep, Jenkins. Imagine Jenkins trying to show me, at eighteen mind you, given how underweight I was, how to use a tampon. It was a nightmare.â You laughed, and Larissaâs face flushed at the idea. This felt too personal, you were talking about your, well, growing up, and it felt far too personal.
âThank you, Miss Ophelia.â The girl said, as she calmed down, and you chuckled.
âAny time, Serena, and you can call again if you need, alright?â You asked. The girl hummed a few times before hanging up, and you sighed, running a hand through your hair.
A strand fell back in your face and Larissa almost instinctively moved to brush it away, making you jerk back from her, your eyes snapping to her own as you swallowed down a flush. She didnât get to touch you, not again, not after last time. She froze, staring at you in a complete panic as she realized what she had done.
âI, Im sorry, I didnât mean to-â she began, but you just shook your head, taking a deep breath as you walked back to the door, forcing the woman to chase after you. âOphelia, please- I- I need to talk to you, we can, please, please let me fix this, I-â she grabbed your covered wrist in an attempt to get your attention, causing you to gasp and slam her back against the now closed door, your eyes going borderline feral as you pinned her.
âDonât you EVER lay a hand on me without my explicit-â you yelled, your hands pinning her to the door by her biceps. You gasped as you realized what you were doing, immediately backing up and raising your arms in surrender. âI- Iâm so sorry, oh my god,â you breathed, and her eyes widened.
âItâs- its alright, you didnât hurt me, but-â she stammered, and you just shook your head in utter horror at your action.
âNo, no it is not alright, and I donât know what on earth is is about you that makes me so goddamn sensitive to everything- for Fuckâsake!â You hissed, your hand coming to your head as you covered your eyes in exhaustion. âIâm sorry,â you breathed again, and when you finally looked up at her, the pain in your eyes was so clear it took her breath away.
âOphelia, I-â she began again, her voice desperate and her eyes betraying the shame she felt. Only for a voice down the hall to cut her off.
âMiss Ophelia, Wednesday said I could come too!â You heard Enid yell from down the hall. Larissa could see the moment you let it flow from you again, the smile that lit up your face, the relaxing of your posture, the air that seemed to float about you instead of being forced or the static. It was almost painful to watch, knowing she once had that. That once was given to her too.
âPerfect!â You called back, and Enid bounced in excitement. You turned back to Larissa, looking her in the eyes again. You were hurt, she knew that, you were incredibly hurt. There was exhaustion around the coroners of your eyes, the grey storm slightly muted, despite the smile you had. The one that faltered when you finally looked at her. âDid you need something?â You asked her, and she shook her head, biting back the tears that were threatening to come.
âNo.â She whispered, and you were gone.
You shoved it down, forcing the urge to just fall into her right then and there away as you hurried down the hall, catching up with your niece and her best friend. You followed them to the dining hall, filling the satchel with a plethora of sandwiches, fruit, and baked goods. You chuckled a bit as the girls loaded it up as you held it open, you couldnât forget about her, but you could at the very least distract yourself for a bit.
You led the girls to the conservatory, the tables were put away at the moment, so it was essentially a giant greenhouse with an open space in the middle. You formed a thick layer moss, laying out blankets on the ground, placing the satchel in the middle. Wednesday sat with Enid, diving in, as you laid down, opening your laptop and journals you had brought in the satchel and resuming your writing.
âWhat are you working on Miss Ophelia?â Enid asked you, and again you hummed.
âRare plants.â You answered succinctly, and your niece rolled her eyes.
âSheâs writing a book about how the rarer an outcast ability is, the less amount of plants there are that impact it.â The girl deadpanned, and you hummed, popping some berries into your mouth as you wrote, pouring over your various journals.
âWell said, however correlation-â
âdoes not equal causation.â Your niece finished for you, and you smirked.
âGod, Iâm a good teacher.â You smiled, and you ducked as a blueberry was thrown at your head, rolling and landing a few feet away. You didnât pay much attention to it, simply working away quietly.
âOh! You have a lot of people wishing you well and saying they hope you get better soon!â Enid said, and you raised a brow.
âWhat?â You asked her, and she pulled out her phone.
âOn my blog! I wrote about you, well, I said you were under the weather, Wednesday said I shouldnât tell anyone what had really happened.â She said, and you nodded.
âProbably a good idea.â You murmured, and both girls seemed to agree.
âAnyway, everyone in the school was talking about how they hope you get better soon, and that you come back to class, youâre really popular.â The blonde said excitedly.
âAm I now?â You asked, a hint of a laugh in your voice, and she nodded.
âOnly like, the highest on the polls ever!â She said, and you finally looked away from your laptop, raising your brows at the girl.
âThe polls?â You asked, and she nodded.
âYeah, so thereâs this thing where students can vote for their favorite teacher at the moment, it changes all the time, but youâve been on top pretty much since you got here!â She said, and you chuckled a bit.
âHuh,â you hummed, and she nodded.
âI mean, you did go down a bit after the case study assignment, but in general youâve stayed on top.â She said, and you chuckled.
âWhatâs wrong with the case study assignment, you get to pick any plant and design any project you want based on any article you can find about the plant.â You asked. âItâs completely free reign.â You added. Enid cringed.
âWell yeah, itâs cool, but some people are a bit, confusedâŚâ she muttered. You hummed, thinking for a moment, a look of disappointment on your face. âProfessor!â She added with a squeak, and you waved her off.
âOh thatâs fine, I donât care about that.â You muttered. âWell they could have asked for help.â You shrugged, and Enid furrowed her brows.
âWhat?â She asked, and you looked at her perplexed.
âJust ask for help? My email is given to all of you, I have office hours, you can stop by.â You said. The girl just shrugged.
âYeah, well no one wanted you to think that theyâre dumb.â She said, and you looked at her like she had lost her mind.
âAsking questions isnât dumb, itâs the basis of learning.â You said, and she shrugged.
âYeah, Bianca almost cried.â She said, and you furrowed your brows.
âShe nearly cried! Oh my god! Am I really that unapproachable?â You panicked, and your niece stared at you blankly.
âDonât you have a Nobel prize?â She asked you, and you waved her off.
âDonât be silly.â You stared back, but the dark haired girl just shrugged.
âYou also donât touch, and the gloves, it can throw people off.â She said, and you nodded.
âWell yes, I know that.â You hummed. âEnid, would you do me a favor dear?â You asked, and the girl beamed.
âI get to be âdearâ too!â She squeaked, and you chuckled.
âOutside of class, sure. Any friend of Wednesdayâs might as well be a saint in my book.â You smirked. The braided girl scoffed.
âYouâre rude.â She said, and your smirk just widened.
âBut Iâm ri~ight!â You sing-songed, before ducking from another blueberry hurled at your head. âRegardless, would you post something to the effect that Iâm hosting a bring your own lunch picnic open to all students for fun and any questions they may have, class related or not.â You asked, and the girl lit up with excitement. âIf itâs ok with you and Wednesday, of course.â You added, and she nodded excitedly, looking to her friend.
âYouâre going to ruin this quiet day with a swarm of bloodthirsty students who would rather try to figure out if youâre actually a lesbian than anything academic.â She sighed, and you smiled at her, batting your lashes. âFine.â She deadpanned, and Enid squeaked in excitement.
âYay! This is going to be so fun!â She buzzed, and Wednesday groaned.
âI despise you both.â She said, and you smiled.
âLove you too.â You replied, setting back to your work.
Enid sent out the message, and the three of you ate and worked quietly for a bit. Wednesday was re-reading The Prince, occasionally testing your Italian, and Enid was knitting a snood, much to your amusement and Wednesdayâs horror. A few minutes later, you heard a knock at the doorframe, and looked up from where you were laying spread out on the ground.
âCome in Miss Barklay.â You smiled, and Enid groaned.
âYou owe Thing a manicure.â Wednesday smirked, and Enid glared at her.
âI hope youâre not teasing your fellow classmates, Miss Addams.â You side-eyed your niece, and she glared at you.
âMiss Addams.â She mocked, and you scoffed at the young girl.
âCome on in Bianca, have a seat, eat, ask me anything you want if youâd like.â You hummed. The girl nodded, trying to remain calm.
âThank you, Dr. Florere.â She nodded quickly, and Wednesday smirked. You didnât even have to look at the girl, maintaining a gentle smile with Bianca as you kicked Wednesday, who stared at you in annoyance.
âI could file a complaint of abuse.â She said, and you nodded, smiling and not even bothering to look up to return the threat.
âAnd I could tell your mother thereâs-â
âTruce!â She shouted, and you chuckled as you went back to working.
âYouâre welcome to just sit and eat if you like, Miss Barkley, but Iâve heard that some students are a little confused by the case study assignment, and Iâd be happy to clear anything up if you need. I love when students ask questions.â You added, already sending Enid a text on your âcivilianâ phone to smack Wednesday for you if she made a face. The girl furrowed her brows at the notification.
âWho is- OH MY GOD I HAVE A FAMOUS PERSONâS PHONE NUMBER!â She yelled, and you sighed.
âInstant regret.â You muttered, and Wednesday smirked.
âAnyways, please ask if there is anything, I thought you all had done similar assignments before.â You said to Bianca. The girl nodded, just sitting for a bit. A few minutes later a young boy walked in, you had seen him around Wednesday before, he was head of the bee-keeping club, you remembered. Eugene, you beleived.
âHey Miss O!â He yelled, rushing in with a basket.
âWell hello there.â You smiled, that was a new one.
âCan I call you Miss O? Oh I feel bad now, I should have asked, that was inappropriate.â He worried, and you laughed.
âYou can call me whatever you like as long as itâs not offensive and vaguely related to my name.â You chuckled, and he nodded, seemingly thinking this over.
âWell, I was wondering, so Iâm head of the Hummers, thatâs our bee-keeping club, and I know that there are many plants that pollinators, such as bees, prefer, but Iâm having trouble getting them to grow and I was wondering if maybe you would have any advice, considering youâre all about plants and all!â He rushed. You bit back a chuckle as the boy went on animatedly. âIâm all about bees! Insects in general really, but bees are my favorite, theyâre amazing! Did you know they live in a matriarchy! Like a female monarchy! But the queen is also the mom for almost everyone! Itâs amazing! And they can travel for miles and miles to reach different types of flowers, and their honey can even taste different depending on the type of flowers they consume! Isnât that incredible!â He asked you, and you smiled up at him front he ground, nodding.
âIt absolutely is.â You smiled, and he beamed.
âOh, I brought you some honey by the way!â He added, thrusting the jar towards you. You chuckled, standing up and brushing off your skirt.
âWell thank you, I appreciate that. Iâll have to trade you some of the tea I make sometime.â You smiled, and his eyes went wide.
âYou make your own tea?â He asked you, and you nodded.
âCertainly, I dry the herbs myself and everything. All hand-grown.â You joked with a little wiggle of your fingers, and his eyes went wide in amazement as Wednesday rolled her eyes at your pun.
âThatâs so cool!!!!â He yelled, and you laughed, your heart blooming a bit. It was always nice when someone thought your abilities were a good thing. Especially nice when it was a child who thought that way. It gave you hope. âCould I see?â He asked, and you raised your brows.
âYou want to see me grow something?â You asked, and he nodded excitedly.
âYeah, I mean, Iâve never met someone who could do that before.â He said, and you smiled genuinely, nodding a bit as you hid the genuine shock at being asked.
âEugene, you canât just ask her to grow something! Do you have any idea how big of a deal she is! Thatâs like asking Einstein to show you how to do your math homework, you canât just demand she do something!â Bianca snapped, and you turned to the girl, raising your brows. She went wide eyed, panicking. âI mean, he doesnât mean to bother you, it would be disrespectful, wouldnât it? A waste? Iâm sure you have better things to do than just show him that you can grow some chamomile.â She swallowed, and you smiled softly.
So thatâs what it was.
She thought you had better things to do, that she would bother you. It broke your heart that she was right, in a way. You shouldnât be here, you should be back at the hospital working, but for now, that wasnât an option.
âNo, I donât, actually.â You smiled easily. âIâm here to teach, I love teaching, and I would be honored to show any of you anything you asked to see or to help you with anything.â You smiled softly. âI would consider it the perfect use of my time here.â You said, and her eyes went wide.
âOh,â she breathed, and you nodded.
âIâm just a person, Miss Barkley, Iâm actually probably more boring than most of you.â You chuckled, and you could see a bit of a smile crack through.
âThatâs not true.â Wednesday said from the floor, and you glared at her.
âOh really now?â You asked the girl, who was too busy reading to notice the challenge in your voice.
âYouâre quiet around people you donât know, but youâre not boring.â She said, and you smirked.
âQuiet?â You led her on, looking up and raising one of your hands, beckoning a vine from the ceiling. Biancaâs eyes went wide. You wouldnât.
âWell, people donât talk to you, because youâre odd, but you donât try to talk to them either.â Wednesday continued, and you hummed, calling the vine to hover right above her ankles, which were currently crossed in the air as she later on her stomach, reading.
âI see.â You said. âAnd this is coming from the girl who communicates almost exclusively through glances.â You said, and she nodded.
âThe difference being I donât want people to talk to me- AH!â She yelled as the vine snatched her, dangling her upside-down in the air. She sighed, relaxing and just hanging there, giving you a death stare to end all death stares. âI am going to end you.â She sighed, and you cackled, sitting on the ground and laughing your ass off.
âBloody Hell, that was fucking priceless!â You wheezed, setting her down.
âYouâre teaching minors.â The girl reminded you and you cringed.
âShit, no cursing- sorry! Fuck!â You yelled, before just sighing and burying your head in your gloves hands. âOh, Iâm so gonna get fired.â You breathed, and Enid giggled.
âAt least itâs only us.â She said, and you hummed, nodding your head from side to side.
âTrue, hopefully four of my most engaging students wonât rat me out for cursing.â You smiled, and Bianca perked up as you sat back down again, going back to working.
You noticed. You had noticed that she always raised her hand, that she turned in every assignment ahead of time, that she always knew the answer. The problem was, now, for the first time on one of your assignments, she wasnât positive. Sheâs rather die than let her hero give her a bad grade, you would think she was stupid, that she didnât know anything. She swallowed, trying to force down the panic. Enid walked up to her, and the girl raised her brow at the glittery aura that invaded her space.
âAsk her.â Enid whispered, and Bianca glared at her.
âI canât just ask her! Sheâll know I donât know the answer if I ask her!â She whispered back through gritted teeth. Wednesday smirked as she looked at you. Little to Biancaâs knowledge, you happened to have freakish hearing. That one wasnât even related to your abilities, it was just the consequence of growing up listening to find out if someone else was coming for you. You gave away nothing, just focusing on the work you were doing, typing away through your leather gloves.
âJust ask! Sheâs not gonna think anything! She told me she likes when students ask things!â The blonde hissed, and Bianca glared.
âOf course she told you that! Youâre her nieceâs best friend, you can do no wrong! Wednesday hated me for an entire semester! She still looks like she wants to kill me every time I best her fencing!â She hissed, and then you snorted, unable to not laugh.
âI actually think thatâs pretty badass, I fully vote for beating Morticiaâs offspring at fencing, sheâs terrible.â You remarked, and Biancaâs face dropped.
âYou- heard that.â She said, and you nodded, still not looking up.
âMhm.â You hummed, and she thought she was going to pass out.
âItâs unfair of you to route against me because Iâm my motherâs daughter.â Wednesday glared, and you smiled, still not looking up.
âNot my fault you fence like her, Iâve tried to teach you.â You smirked, and she rolled her eyes.
âYou nearly threw me in a stream.â She deadpanned, and you shrugged.
âYou were off your leg, you have to learn how to balance before you can learn how to balance with a sword.â You replied, and yet again you ducked as another blueberry was thrown.
âIâm not picking those up.â You said, and Wednesday sighed.
âCan you grow me more?â She asked, and you scoffed.
âNo.â You answered, and Bianca furrowed her brows.
âI thought you could grow any plant life, fruit and berries included.â She muttered, and you looked up at her from the ground, raising a brow. âWell, thatâs just what it said in Peter Browneâs book about you, you know, the biography, not that Iâve read a biography about you or anything.â The girl rushed, closing her eyes in her own mortification at herself, and you chuckled.
âI can grow them, yes, I just refuse to give my niece any more ammunition. Also Peter Browne hates me, so feel free to keep that in mind next time youâre picking out books.â You smiled. Bianca furrowed her brows, finally sitting, seeming to become a little more comfortable.
âWhy would he hate you?â She asked, and you shrugged.
âWe were classmates in grad school, but I went independent, he joined the guild, I became successful quickly for my own projects, he was stuck pushing papers. Just different paths.â You sighed, and she nodded. You began with nothing, no family, barely able to sit through classes in the beginning, yet you were always brilliant, and you were a hard worker. You were also significantly less amicable than Peter, and him watching you get away with things because of your genius and your ability to move from place to place without ever seeming to form any real attatchments irked him to no end.
âHeâs good though, isnât he? Iâve read his book on the learning theory of plants, itâs pretty interesting.â She said, and you nodded.
âOh, heâs great, he was just bitter, unfortunately.â You said, and she looked to you confused.
âWas?â She asked, and you nodded, still looking at your laptop.
âYeah, we just er, ran into each other recently, Iâm hoping we turn over a new leaf. We used to be pretty close, his oldest daughterâs middle name is Ophelia, actually.â You hummed, your eyes saddening for a moment. The two of you had been close. Very close. He was perhaps once the closest thing you had to a friend outside of the hospital. You had spent dinners with him and his wife, later his family quite often back then. You had studied with him for countless hours before exams back in the day.
âI named my cat Ophelia after you when I was a kid.â Bianca muttered absentmindedly, before sighing deeply, dropping her head in embarrassment.
âOh my god, Iâm going to die.â She breathed, and you chuckled.
âIâm honored,â you laughed, you were aware she wasnât the first, however this was the first time someone you didnât know personally had done it, at least to your knowledge. âWhat kind of cat?â You asked, and she stared at you in disbelief.
âYou donât think thatâs creepy?â She asked, and you shrugged.
âDepends, what kind of cat?â You asked again, going back to your work.
âRussian blueâŚâ she trailed, and you smiled, nodding.
âNice.â You said, and she laughed a little.
âWas there a wrong answer?â She asked you, and you nodded.
âOh absolutely, Sphynx.â You said, and she chuckled. âYou pull off buzzed hair incredibly well, I, do not.â You cringed, and Wednesday smirked.
âWas that a choice you made?â The braided menace snarked, and you rolled your eyes, ignoring her. It wasnât, but having your head shaved regularly was a part of Newflightâs protocol, meaning you certainly had experience with it.
âRegardless, what was I doing? Tea!â You remembered. âWhatâs your favorite herbal tea, Eugene?â You asked him, and he looked at you with giant eyes behind his glasses.
âReally?â He asked you, and you nodded.
âMhm,â you hummed, and he thought a second.
âProbably just chamomile.â He said, and you nodded.
âWell I shall bring some down to the Hummerâs shed for you when I drop by to help with those plants.â You smiled, and he beamed.
âYou donât- you donât mind doing things like that?â Bianca asked, and you shrugged.
âI love plants, I love growing things, I love the life it creates.â You hummed, searching through a journal. âYou can ask Wednesday, I grow things constantly, I donât mind being asked, I quite like that I have something to give to people, actually.â You smiled, and she nodded at you in amazement.
She stared for a moment at the leather bound journals surrounding you, the countless pages you had recorded and written. Some even discovered, she knew.
âAre- are those your field journals?â She asked you, and you nodded.
âMhm, not all of them obviously, but the ones I need at the moment.â You said, only half concentrating on the girl. âYouâre welcome to read one if youâd like something to look at.â You said offhandedly, and her jaw nearly hit the floor.
âAre you serious?â She asked you, and you looked up at her from where you lay on the ground. She gawked when you nodded, disbelief written all over her face. You nearly laughed, but contained yourself to just a smile.
âOf course, go ahead, take this one.â You said, picking one you had already looked through up and handing to to her. She took it as if it was a sacred relic, staring at it in wonder.
âHoly shit Iâm holding one of Ophelia Florereâs field journals.â She whispered, and you chuckled.
âThatâs a good one too, youâre welcome to borrow them any time, just come ask.â You smiled, and she nodded, immediately beginning to pour over the pages you had given her.
A few moments later two boys rushed in, Ajax and Xavier, you believed. From what little you had observed, the boys were interested in Enid and Wednesday, respectively.
âIs it true weâre allowed to ask you questions?â Xavier asked, and you raised a brow.
âI said you could on the first day, of course you can.â You said, and he nodded.
âOh thank god.â He breathed, and you chuckled.
âHit me, gentleman.â You smiled, looking up from your laptop.
âOk, so the case study project, what?â Ajax said, and you nodded.
âFair enough.â You muttered, and pulled up the document on your laptop to look over it. âSo youâre going to find an article about a plant, any plant, and itâs effect on any type of outcast or normie, your choice.â You explained. âThen, you are going to come up with three research questions related to what more you would like to learn based on the interaction in this one specific case.â You continued. Ajax nodded slowly, and Xavier made a face that you assumed was intended to look pensive, but instead looked more constipated. You sighed, continuing your explanation. âOk, so if I chose, say, cannabis, and I found an article where a normie took cannabis, thought he could fly, and then jumped off a building, I would maybe consider questions like âdo normies normally feel like they have outcast abilities when taking cannabis?â Or, âdo normies hallucinate when taking cannabis, leading to dangerous actions?â Or something like that.â You said, and this time both boys looked like they might have had a part of an idea.
âDid you just say âtake cannabisâ?â Wednesday said, and you stared at her with a deadpan face.
âI am a professor, I have never partaken in any illegal activities, certainly not ones that would impact my thinking.â You said sarcastically, and even Enid chuckled.
âSo youâre like, cool?â Ajax asked you, and you raised a brow. You were actually a massive nerd who happened to break into places and perform emergency experimental medical procedures, but âcoolâ was not exactly something you had ever considered yourself. At least not when not trying to actively mortify your niece.
âSorry, that was rude.â He said, and you shrugged.
âNah man, Iâm totally far out.â You replied, in your best hippie impersonation, causing Enid to burst out laughing. Even the boys gave you a small smile at that one.
âReal question though, if weâre allowed to ask you anything,â Ajax began, and you nodded. âSo the growing plants out of your hands thing, could you grow weed?â He asked you.
You tried not to laugh as you stared at him. The insolence of teenage boys would never cease to amaze you.
âNow because I would like to keep my job here for the time being, Iâm going to just stick with, I can grow anything.â You said, very slowly, and he nodded, a little smirk on his face.
âSick.â He said, before settling into a corner with Xavier, the two of them going over their project ideas together. You liked this. You liked the young minds around you, figuring out how things would work.
âHey, do we have to answer the questions?â Xavier asked you, and you swallowed down another piece of fruit. âNot in this paper, I only want like 2-ish pages double spaced, but potentially in the future.â You called back, and he nodded before returning to his work. You smiled, doing the same.
âDr. Ophelia?â Bianca asked, and you hummed, smiling at the girlâs insistence on using your degree title. âCould I write about something I have personal experience with?â She asked, and you looked up from your laptop with an absolutely insane smile on your face. Wednesday recognized the look instantly and stared at you with a thuroughly unamused look on her face.
âPlease no.â Wednesday sighed, already tired of this.
âLadies, Gentleman, and those outside of and in between those perimeters!â You hollered, standing up.
âOh god.â Wednesday groaned, and you whirled around, holding up an imaginary champagne glass. â
It is on this momentous occasion that I am truly honored to present the following award to my most esteemed student!â You yelled, prompting Enid to look at you like you had lost your mind while Wednesday looked like she wanted to die more than usual. âIt is the very basis of science, of my work in particular, that we must experience that which we aim to understand, and as I stand here before you, years into my own career, that I am once again humbled by a question uttered through my years by both myself, and the generations of students before me.â You continued, prompting Wednesday to groan.
âHave you ever actually given this speech, or is this one you just do while teaching?â She asked you, and you took off one of your gloves, all eyes immediately snapping to your hand. You held it aloft, making sure you were a good few feet from the students for doing measure, despite the fact that you were barely doing anything. Regardless, you wouldnât have done it without the distance.
Bianca went wide eyed as she looked at the blackened fingers, amazed as you wiggled them and called forth a small tiger lily, plucking it from your hand and slipping your glove back on quickly. She marveled at it, like she had just witnessed the most amazing thing she had ever seen. You held it aloft, delivering your speech to it as Enid practically rolled around laughing, Eugene much the same, the boys in the corner looking like they were attempting to cover up their snickers, and Wednesday glared at you murderously.
âPersonal experience, is, in essence, the drive behind so much of my work, it is with this small token of appreciation that I award Miss Bianca Barclay with the âbest question everâ award!â You triumphed, bowing dramatically and handing Bianca the flower. She took it, wide eyed and clearly trying not to freak out. âThank you all for attending such a prestigious and thrilling event, I hope you too are someday inspired to use your own personal experience in your work!â You finished, and Enid clapped from the ground as she laughed, Wednesday throwing another blueberry at your head.
You laughed as you sat again, laying on the moss meadow you had created in the slightly overcast midday, happy to just work or provide any answers. You began typing again as if nothing had happened, leading to some very, very confused students.
âThatâs âaunt Opheliaâ for âyesâ.â Wednesday sighed, and you nodded, continuing to work. Bianca nodded dumbly, trying not to squeal as she looked at her flower.
Another few students trickled in as the day went on, eventually small groups coming in until you had nearly three classes worth in the greenhouse, all talking over various things, occasionally approaching you while you worked, some messing with various plants in the greenhouse, others just reading or working in the area. Your heart still felt heavy, but being surrounded by bright young minds lifted the weight a little.
âŚ
Larissa had noticed that the school was quieter than normal, looking out into the courtyard to see almost no one. She swallowed, perfect. She was at her witâs end, her heart heavy with the thought of you as guilt threatened to shroud her entire being, and now the students were up to something.
She had been teaching and then in administration long enough to know that quiet meant trouble.
She sighed, smacking down her laptop and wiping the tears from her eyes. She couldnât sit in this forever, she couldnât dwell, she had to move on, be in control. Always in control, especially if her own emotions. She stormed out of her office, marching through the halls in an attempt to figure out where exactly such a large portion of the student body had disappeared. Exiting out into the courtyard looking for any sign of anyone is when she finally paused.
Then she heard it.
Music was playing somewhere. She listened for a moment before realizing that there was only one building it could have been coming from. The very one she wanted to avoid. She stormed towards the greenhouse. Of course, if there was trouble it would start with Wednesday Addams, which meant it would extend to you.
What she found, however, when she opened the doors to the conservatory, was the farthest thing from what she expected.
The entire room was full of students, all laying on a rolling moss green you must have constructed. There was a moment of silence before the song started again, her jaw dropping as a chorus of students yelled out.
âAll the leaves are brown!â They sang with laughter before a few others echoed it back. She breathed in amazement as the vines wrapped around the ceiling of the greenhouse, and the various plants hanging from them, suddenly changed to beautiful shades of brown, yellow, orange, and red, creating a multicolor kaleidoscope effect.
Then she saw you. She saw you laying on the green, chuckling as a few students yelped in surprise, returning your hand to your laptop from where you had raised it to flick the colors into existence. You smiled at them, looking back to the student standing next to you and finishing what you were saying to them before they ran off, leaving you to keep working. There were various leather bound books scattered around you, and a few students scattered around them reading more still. You laid on your stomach, typing away on your laptop as those around you worked happily. It was easy, she realized, free.
She hadnât seen the students like this since the events of last semester, since the entire Crackstone debacle. Yet here they were, laughing and smiling again, running up to each-other with bright eyes full of wonder and the occasional mischief.
It took her breath away. And there you were, at the center of it all, a calm but powerful energy, holding the moment together. You created a space full of exploration, yet one that felt safe, almost home-like. Safe, she realized. Wherever you went, it felt safe.
Your eyes met hers, and the smile on your face faded.
She looked at you like you had done the impossible, and you could see it. You could see the pain on her face, the apology. More than anything you could see the guilt. She had been hurt, and in that pain she had tried to find what she needed from you. She got scared, and she looked at you as if you were your sister. Your sister would never speak to her again, or tease her for it for the rest of time while mocking her ruthlessly. But you, you didnât have it in you.
She knew you were looking for something in her, she just didnât know what it was. She prayed, however, that you would see the apology in them. You stared a little longer, the hurt in you still just under the surface.
Then she realized what she had yet to do. She was so caught up in controlling and fixing the situation that she had forgotten the most important thing, she had forgotten to say it to you. She looked at you and swallowed, her eyes flirting around the room nervously to make sure no students were looking at her before those hydrangea blues settled back into storm grey..
âIâm sorryâ she mouthed, and you inhaled slowly. Larissa Weems, apologizing. Admitting she was wrong, would wonders never cease.
You gave her a sad smile and nodded your head. She swallowed, she wouldnât come in without your permission, this world that you had created, this was your space. You didnât let her in, simply looking to the students around you.
Her heart dropped. You wouldnât let her in again, not like you had, she thought. The realization flooded her with even more self hatred then before.
Yet just as she began to turn, she noticed something blooming out of the corner of her eye. She looked to it, a flower had bloomed in the doorway where she had just been standing. A white flower with long green leaves around it, a peace lily.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 14 - Pay the Price
(Larissa gets her first look of your real life, your real job, and it leaves her absolutely horrified. Yet the revolution that comes with you trying to numb the pain is one that shakes her to her very core.)
WARNING: Blood/death/implied violence/violence against children/drug use/non-graphic mention of assault
Danger, that was danger. You knew it well.
Your psychic abilities occasionally lended themselves to the feeling of danger, as opposed to a full on vision, and while this didnât feel particularly terrible, it certainly wasnât good.
You took a deep breath in, trying to sense where it was coming from. It wasnât clear, but as you began to move through the halls you could feel the pull, pulling you through the school and to a room you were coming to dread.
Of course you would be led to the headmistressâs office. It was the last place you wanted to be at the moment, so naturally thatâs where life would take you. Whatever force was playing at you, it wasnât deadly, and at that point, it was enough for you. You couldnât sense any real immediate danger, simply sighing deeply as you stared at the large oak doors.
You went to turn around and go the other way when you heard the glass shatter, and the startled yelp that came with it. You groaned, opening the door only to find Wednesday there, her face enraged, a glass smashed on the ground in front of her as she stared daggers at the headmistress.
âIf you so much as look at her wrong, I will make your life-â the girl began, and your mind was made up.
âWednesday Addams!â You commanded, and she whirled around to look at you.
âAuntie- I-â She stuttered, and the look you gave her betrayed the disappointment and hurt you felt. âI was just-â she tried, and you shook your head.
âThreatening your headmistress.â You said pointedly, and she just stared, her eyes falling to your gloved hands, wrapped around each other tightly as you tried to avoid a reaction.
âOphelia, she was-â Larissa tried, but you wouldnât even look at her.
âIâm aware of what she was doing, I am no fool, maâam.â You said bitterly, and the woman cringed. âWednesday. You know better.â You sighed, relenting, and the girl just shook her head.
âItâs not fair!â She yelled, and your eyes went wide at the sudden outburst. It was unlike her, very unlike her.
âWednesday, darling, are you alright?â You asked her softly, your entire demeanor shifting in concern as she stared daggers in an attempt to fend off tears. Larissa swallowed at the change. It was beautiful, the softness you showed when you looked to your niece was beautiful. She missed it. It had only been a few days and she missed it.
âYou protect everyone! And no one protects you. Iâve seen what your job, what your real job, does to you! Iâve seen you die!â She yelled, and you cringed. âYou donât let anyone hurt you! The only person allowed to hurt you is you, so why would you let her do it!â Wednesday yelled, and you sighed, closing your eyes. Of course thatâs what this was about. The girl was notoriously overprotective of you, of course Larissa would face it head on.
âCome along, Wednesday, leave her alone.â You said, referencing the woman in the room, but still adamantly not looking at her. Larissa could feel regret cutting into her, almost gutting her as your eyes looked everywhere but her. You looked so tired, it broke her heart.
âNo!â Wednesday yelled, and you stared at her curiously. âShe hurt you. She hurt you like all those other people, the ones you donât talk about, the ones even mother is too scared to say the name of-â the girl began, and this time when you cut her off there was something much deeper in your voice. Not quite sharper, but certainly much more firm.
âWednesday Addams.â You said again, and her rant was cut short as she stared at you. âMiss Weems did not hurt me, not in that sense, and you will not, ever, compare her to the people who did so.â You said firmly, and the girl shook her head as Larissa watched in utter shock. You were hurt, it was clear, you wouldnât even look at her. Yet the second Wednesday had implied that, you stopped her in her tracks.
âLike she didnât.â The girl scoffed, and you shook your head. The conviction in you was striking, and Larissaâs breath caught.
âOphelia, Wednesday, you donât have to-â she tried, the tension between you two growing heavier by the moment. It was overbearing, choking, almost.
âWednesday, whatever you think she did, itâs not nearly enough to merit this kind of behavior.â You said firmly, and the girl just shook her head at you.
âShe made you bloom black roses.â Wednesday said, and you blinked for a moment before reaching up to your hair, finding exactly that, tiny black rosettes along the crown of your head.
âWednesday, itâs fine, come on, letâs just go.â You sighed, your voice betraying exhaustion as you gestured for the girl. Larissa felt her heart sink at the defeated look that crossed your face.
âHow is she better than all the other ones? Why does she deserve your forgiveness?â Wednesday snapped, and you stilled mid-turn, sighing deeply.
âWednesday, when your mother is talking about people who have hurt me, she is not talking about my- she- damnit Morticia!â You groaned, running a hand through your hair before fixing the girl with a look. âWhen I go to work- my real work, not this, I deal with two types of people.â You sighed. âI deal with children, many younger than you are now, who have been hurt worse then you can possibly imagine.â You gritted. âAnd I then I deal with the people who have hurt them.â You said darkly. âThat is the kind of people who have hurt me, Wednesday. That is what I have to deal with, every day, every night, I hear children screaming, screaming because of these people. I spend hours upon hours bent over broken bodies and microscopes, I have worked and grown until my hands went numb and bleeding because of that type of hurt.â You said, astonishingly calmly.
âMiss Weems couldnât even touch that, darling. Sheâs not even capable.â You said softly, and Wednesday stared at you, taking in the information. Larissa watched with a stricken face as Wednesday swallowed, looking at you mildly ashamed. That is what you dealt with, that is what pain was to you, and she felt a mixture of horror and shame as she realized she had added to it.
âDo you know what this place is? What this place means?â You asked her, and she just looked away from you, mumbling quietly.
âItâs a school.â She managed, and you nodded, your lips pursing as you held back emotion.
âYes, it is. But more than that, this place is safe.â You breathed. âGod, itâs like a dream, I- I love teaching.â You smiled gently, your mind working faster than either of the other two could process. Yet your words rang true, the tall blonde staring at you felt her heart swell and sink at the same time as you spoke of the school, of the place she upheld.
âI love teaching, if I- if I had grown up differently I would have been a teacher, a real teacher, not an adjunct professor at various schools as a cover job, I would have taught class after class of students, like I taught you, like I get to now, for the time being.â You sighed, rubbing your temples before you looked at the girl tiredly. âThis is like a vacation to me, you realize that?â You asked, and she nodded slowly as Larissa stared at you, the pain on your face clear. It cut her more than anything else. She couldnât speak, she wouldnât dare, she didnât even know what to say. âI get to wake up every day in a place thatâs safe, I donât have to wonder if Iâm going to have to go out and get shot at, or if Iâm going to loose another child, or if one of the few I have managed to help is going to be the reason Iâm wearing black at the end of the day.â You breathed, and Larissa tried to bite back the emotion that came with that admission. This place really meant that much to you, and she had crushed the little happiness you had. âNo, this place, darling, this place is heaven to me.â You said softly.
âAuntie IâŚâ she tried, and you just smiled sadly. Larissa stared at you, you wouldnât look at her, your eyes firmly fixed on Wednesday, but she could see them. She could see your eyes, and they were soft as they looked at your niece. Sad, but soft, and even if you wouldnât look at her like that, the familiarity of it comforted her.
âWednesday, do you know why that is? Why this place is safe?â You asked, and she sighed.
âBecause itâs protected.â She answered, and you nodded.
âYes, it is. And how is it protected?â You asked, and she glanced to the side, her eyes cutting to Larissa, making your heart squeeze in your chest. She hurt you, badly, but that didnât mean that Wednesday could do this. The kind of hurt she had caused you wasnât even comparable to what Wednesday was implying.
âBy Miss Weems.â She admitted, and you nodded.
âShe is the exact opposite of what I have to deal with every day when I go home.â You sighed tiredly, the very idea already wearing on you. There was a reason you werenât in Cambridge, a situation that had to be sorted out before you could go home. Yet every day you were gone you were painfully aware that they still needed you. âDonât, please, please donât compare her to those people, Wednesday. Iâm far too tired and bitter to explain why this place, her school, is the very thing Iâve been working for my entire life.â You sighed, staring down at the girl until she relented. She shook her head.
âShe hurt you.â She whispered, and you smiled softly, shaking your head.
âNot in the way you think, love.â You hummed, and she sighed deeply, finally relenting.
âStill not fair,â she muttered, and you rolled your eyes.
âLife isnât fair, but Iâm much tougher then you seem to think I am.â You chuckled, despite the pain Larissa could still see hidden in your eyes.
âOphelia, if I could-â she tried, but the walled off look in your eyes when they cut to her stopped her dead in her tracks. She had seen you look at people like that, but never her. You had never looked at her like that before. Come to think of it, you only really looked at one person like that, your sister. You were looking at her the same way you looked at Morticia, with unmeasurable hurt in your eyes. With emotion so deep it was almost frightening, yet a relentless, impenetrable wall stood in the way of it.
She froze, her heart seizing in her throat as she recognized it, looking down in shame as you looked back to Wednesday.
âCome along, letâs go before I have to find you a solicitor.â You sighed, and Wednesday rolled her eyes.
âTheyâre called lawyers here.â She said, and you shrugged.
âYeah, well I left when I was eleven, and I havenât been back much.â You defended with a smile, and she laughed. You winked at her, just in time for your phone to ring. You sighed heavily, looking down at the caller ID before you froze.
It was as if all the warmth drained from your body in only a second, the shift was subtle, but it was enough for Wednesday to step back to look at you and for Larissa to stand in nervousness. You swallowed, it was as if your very energy went dark, as if the person standing in your place wasnât you, it was the woman Larissa had seen the other night, the woman who could nearly kill a man without blinking. This was sharp focus, terrifyingly so.
âJenkins,â you breathed, answering the phone, only to hear the man grunt.
âFuck,â he hissed, and your eyes went wide, panic flooding you.
âWhat happened, where are you?â You rushed, only to hear him hush you.
âItâs fine, we, the team is fine, banged up pretty bad, but weâre alright.â Came the thick Scottish accent through the phone. You sighed in relief, Larissaâs brows furrowing as she stepped closer. âPhil, I need yer help.â He sighed, and you closed your eyes for a moment, swallowing.
âOf course, Iâll be right there.â You sighed, and you could see Wednesday bloom with anger as the words left your mouth. If you had looked, you would have seen Larissaâs fear as well.
âOphelia,â she tried, but you didnât even pay her any mind, your focus entirely on the man who had called you. Wednesday, however, caught you attention. She stepped in front of you, staring at you with such deep anger and sadness it was enough to make you stop. You were leaving again. She knew what it meant when you left. The girl knew what you did was dangerous. She had been with Jenkins time after time waiting for you to return, hoping that you would. Only this time, it was Jenkins you were going too, and she would be left alone. Your eyes softened again as you looked at the girl.
âJenkins, will⌠will I be back by morning?â You asked. âI have a class at nine.â You said almost lightheartedly, almost. You heard his deep sigh on the other side of the phone.
âAye, itâs, its clean up. I just canâ ask anyone else to do this they donât- they donât have the stomach.â He sighed, and you hummed.
âI- Iâm with my niece, one moment.â You sighed, taking the phone from your ear as you looked at the girl. âI have to go.â You said, and her eyes went wide, panic settling in them.
âNo, no you canât.â She breathed, grabbing your wrist. Your lips pursed at the action, shaking your head.
âI have to honey, I- I love this place, I do, but this isnât where Iâm needed, you know that.â You said softly, the emotion in your voice as you attempted to comfort the girl making it waver.
Larissa felt her own heart stop. You couldnât leave, not now. Not when she had messed things up so badly.
âBut I need you.â Wednesday argued, her normally ambivalent demeanor completely crumbling. You took a deep breath in, doing your best to smile.
âDarling, no you donât.â You said, and she shook her head. âYou will be just fine, weather Iâm here or not, hell, I canât think of a better place for you.â You tried to assure her, only for your words to fall on deaf ears.
âWith you! I would be better with you!â She cried, and you shut your eyes for a moment, trying to force down the emotion that came.
âWednesday, I love you more than anything in this world, but you will be alright, you will be safe, and just fine until I come back.â You said softly, and the girl gritted her teeth through the tears. She hated crying, sheâd rather rip her own hair out then cry in front of others, you knew that much. You took the phone to your ear, swallowing. âAre you able to tell Wednesday that Iâll be back by morning?â You sighed, and you heard him swallow on the other end of the line. You both knew what you were really asking. You were asking if he thought this would be safe, at least, as safe as any of your outside operations could be, and you heard him clear his throat.
âAye, I can do that for ye.â He said, and you sighed, taking the phone and putting it on speaker.
âGo ahead,â you hummed, and you heard him clear his throat again before he spoke to the girl.
âMiss Wednesday, I can tell you yer aunt will be back by morning, weâre not under direct threat, that part- that part is over.â He said, and you nodded with his words.
âIf youâre not under threat then why do you need her?â The girl spat back, and you fixed her with a warning glare.
âWednesday, you know we canât-â you began, only for the Scotsman to cut you off.
âHow old is she now?â He asked you, and your eyes went wide, shaking your head instantly.
âNot old enough,â you whispered, your voice ragged if just for a moment, and he sighed.
âEven ye canât protect all of them, Ophelia, some day she will likely have to know at least a bit of it.â He added, and you cleared your throat, swallowing.
âYes, but today is not that day.â You replied, and the man hummed, respecting your decision.
âYer aunt will be back by morning. Weâre not even fighting, itâs just, itâs the what happens after part.â He tried to explain, and you breathed in slowly, trying to settle yourself.
âYou said it wasnât our teamâŚâ you muttered, and there was a moment of silence. Fear creeped into you as it stretched on, your mind racing to think what that could possibly mean. There werenât many things that made that man quiet.
âThis oneâs not for the kid, Phil.â He finally said, only making your mind spin faster.
âAlright I-â you began, only for him to continue.
âWhat are ye wearing?â He asked you, and Larissa looked at you strangely. She knew whatever was happening was bad, very bad, but she didnât know what your attire had to do with it.
âAh, what I taught in, a skirt and top, why- noâŚâ you breathed, the realization suddenly dawning on you.
âGet yer blacks, doc, yer working blacks.â He said, and your eyes closed for a moment. You turned away from your niece, not wanting her to see the reaction. This, however, meant that Larissa had a perfect view of the pain and darkness that crossed your face. It was as if the warmth and light she had come to cherish whenever you were in her presence had been snuffed, as if someone had frozen your very soul. It nearly brought tears to her eyes.
âWednesday, go to my room and get the black duffel bag in the dresser.â You said firmly, and the girl stepped closer to you, pulling you to look at her.
âAuntie you canât-â
âNow, Wednesday.â You said firmly, and the girl just shook her head, worry beginning to form all over again as she ran from the room. You didnât have time for this, you couldnât panic now.
âIâm sending Flit.â Came the voice on the speaker, and your eyes went wide again, nearly snapping to Larissa before you realized, instead fixing onto the carpet as you took the phone off speaker and held it to your ear.
âYou canât send Flit here.â You said firmly, and the man grunted as Larissa took another step towards you, slowly. You looked panicked, pained, worn down despite the strength you were standing with. She wanted to hold you and tell you it would be alright, that she would make it alright, yet she had ruined it the one time you had let her that close, she had ruined it, and she felt as if you would never let her again.
âWhatâs wrong with Flit?â The man on your phone asked, and you sighed.
âNothing, but if Flit sees someone with a posh accent over six feet tall even look at me wrong theyâll have a meltdown. I canât take that risk.â You sighed, and Larissa froze, looking at you wide eyed. Why would someone like her cause someone you worked with to have a meltdown? It didnât make sense, what were you even talking about.
âJesus, it was Flit with youâŚâ Jenkins muttered, and you hummed darkly, your hands faltering for the first time since you had picked up the phone, the woman in the room with you caught the movement, her instinct to soothe the tremor winning out over her fear as she took another step closer, only to freeze when you spoke again.
âYes, Flit was the one with me in the lab when he⌠when he came for me. They saw too much, far too much.â You breathed. âThey were just a kid.â You murmured, and you heard the man protest on the line.
âItâs not yer fault, Ophelia.â He said, and you hummed, your throat closing up.
âJenkins, the kid watched him do unspeakable things to me, I- I should have been faster.â You breathed, and you could hear him grunt in protest.
âOphelia, what ye went through that day, those weeks, what the both of ye went through, that isnât your fault. None of it. I donâ know many who could go through what you did anâ come out on the other side.â He said, and you exhaled sharply.
âSure you do,â you breathed, âEvery single succubi we take from them, nearly every shapeshifter, most of the sirens, half of the psychics and witches,â you breathed, placing the phone on speaker and putting it on the ground again as you began to braid your hair back, starting with the crown of your head.
Larissa felt her heart drop. You were talking about- but that would imply that someone had, when you were older, after everything you had been through, again? She couldnât fathom how could the world be this cruel to you, and tears formed in her eyes as she watched the weary strength and precision with which you started to tame the wild mass of curls she wanted nothing more then to run her fingers through as she held you close and safe.
âMost of the children we take from those places have been through what he did, and many have been through much, much worse.â You sighed. âAt least I have the advantage of not being able to give him what he wanted.â You hummed half wittily, the wry comment not landing. The world faded from you as your mind started working, the only thing you were consciously aware of was Jenkinsâ voice as you began to plan.
âPhil, if he had managed to- to-â he stuttered, and your face twisted in a grimace for a moment. You were too focused at this point, your mind already running scenarios. You had nearly forgotten about the fact that Larissa was there. It was odd, you were often hyper-aware of everyone, only able to let someone slip under your radar when you loved and trusted them, something that came with years upon years of closeness.
âYou can say he tried to breed me, Jenkins, thereâs not a better term.â You gritted. âUnfortunately for him, no amount of effort can make up for the fact that Iâm barren.â You finished, only to hear a horrified gasp. That was when you remembered, when you realized she was there.
You turned to go face her slowly, your hands frozen in your hair. There were tears in her eyes, her hands slightly outstretched as if she was aching to go to you, to comfort you. You wanted to let her. You did, yet as long as she could only see you as an extension of your sister, your sister, who had done terrible things to her, she would never truly see you.
âMerde,â You breathed, and the womanâs brows furrowed as her face softened in concern.
âIâŚâ she tried, but no words came out.
âYou werenât supposed to hear that.â You hissed, turning back to the side as you continued working on your hair, ending by tying the braid up in a bun.
âYe alright?â Came the thick Scottish from the phone, and you grunted.
âYeah, just, just some of my own things.â You sighed. âWake up Sugar.â You said, and he hummed.
âShe should be ready to get you in a few minutes, donât move.â He said, and you swallowed.
âAs if I donât know the standard operating procedure I came up with.â You sighed, only for Wednesday to burst through the door, carrying your bag. âSheâs back, Jenkins, clean talk.â You said quickly, and he grunted in acknowledgment.
âAuntie, you canât-â she tried, and you shook your head.
âWednesday, you need to go now. Iâll be back by morning, I- I promise.â You managed, and the girl looked at you for one final moment, rushing to you and holding you tight for just a second, a rare moment of tenderness that took Larissa completely off guard as you wrapped your hands around the girl. âI love you.â You whispered, and she nodded, allowing you to lean down and kiss the crown of her head before she left, closing the door on her way out.
You sighed, standing still for a moment and fighting back your own tears, your own worry. It was always a risk, you knew that, youâd be a fool not to. Yet leaving was never this hard when it was just you. When it was just you, it didnât truly matter if you came back. With Wednesday, it did.
When your eyes opened again, the shift was dramatic. You were no longer the soft and loving aunt, not the lighthearted and comforting teacher. This was the medic, the woman who fought every day, who risked her life over and over again, so that others might have a chance at one.
âTurn around.â You said firmly, and Larissa jumped when she realized you were talking to her.
âOphelia, please, I-â she whispered, but you just shook your head, still not looking.
âTurn around.â You repeated, slightly softer this time, but the rigidity there was unmistakable. You were going to change, and all those scars she had seen just the other night were no longer hers to look at. She did, and you began to strip, pulling off your sweater and skirt to be replaced by a black athletic turtleneck and tactical pants. You exhaled sharply as you zipped and buttoned them, before grabbing your belt and boots from the bag.
âYouâre fine now.â You gritted, and you felt more then heard Larissaâs small choked sound at the admission. You had taken away the closeness, the vulnerability. It wasnât for her to witness anymore, she was as closed off to you as everyone else. Then again, if that were really true, you would have had her leave.
âSugar is coming.â Jenkins said through the speaker, and you hummed as you fastened the belt before moving on to the tactical boots, all black, all made especially for you and your ability.
âWhat, exactly, am I walking into here, Jenkins?â You asked, and you could feel the silence settle into your bones as he hesitated. Jenkins was one of the longest standing members of your hospital, he was part of the team that had helped get you out. Him and Georgiana. You shuddered as you realized whatever it was, it was enough to make him fall silent, enough to make even him struggle to find the words. âJenkins,â you breathed, and he audibly steadied himself.
âHe has new orders, he- he would rather kill them then let someone else make a profit.â He managed, and your heart dropped. You stood there, shocked still, tears threatening to come as you tried to pull yourself together. Larissa could see it, you were coming apart, she stepped over to you again, and this time you didnât even have the fight to react. What he was saying was sick, a level of disregard for life that shocked even you.
âHow many?â You breathed, and the man swallowed.
âPhil, there was nothinâ ye could have done, we didnât even know about the order until they opened fire on them-â he tried, only to be cut off by your firm order.
âHow many?â You asked again, your voice low. He sighed, you would find out any way, there was no use delaying it.
âFour sirens, three succubi, three shape shifters, three illusionists, two psychics, and a healer.â He sighed, and you nearly doubled over. A standard transport had maybe five children, but that, sixteen, and to all be gone. Your breath stopped as your arms wrapped around yourself on instinct trying desperately to get your lungs to expand.
You werenât there.
You werenât there and this had happened, sixteen children, dead, and you werenât there to help. You painfully gasped for air, your head swimming, only to feel strong hands steadying you, exactly where you needed. You wanted to push her away, to yell at her, to scream at her, yet all that came out was a near silent whimper as you mourned lives that had barely begun.
âHow old?â You rasped, and you could hear Jenkins stutter. He knew you carried guilt when you were away, but it wasnât your fault, you were away to protect them, you had to be away until they took care of the main threat, the man who had ordered this action even.
âOphelia, ye know that it-â he tried, but your voice cut him off in a second.
âGoddamnit Jenkins, Iâm going to spend the next however many hours helping you bury childrenâs bodies because I CANâT BE THERE!â You nearly screamed. âYou will tell me how old they are, so that when I get there my team does not see me sobbing hysterically when theyâre younger then I expect them to be!â You spat, and the man seemed to fold the second your voice was raised fully.
âSo far six to thirteen, but itâs hard to tellâŚâ he trailed, and you choked, your hand covering your mouth as guilt flooded you like nothing you had ever felt. Six. At only six they had been gunned down. The very man who forced you to leave your home at the hospital would rather have a child, a six year old child, be gunned down than for someone else to make a profit off of them. Larissaâs hands just stroked over your back, the sensation simultaneously making you want to scream and push her away as well as collapse into her. âThe shapeshifters look like they were in a blitz when it happened, itâs- its bad, Ophelia.â He admitted, and you closed your eyes for a moment, willing yourself to stop before the tears started to come.
You could have a moment of shock, but you must move on, you must move on quickly. Larissa could physically feel the shift in your body as the emotions shut down, the sharpness of your mind she had seen when you had fought snapping into place.
âThey will revert within a few hours, we can try to identify then.â You said, your voice cold and dark, you were listing facts, not talking.
âGot it, Sugar should be there any second, then we can- then weâll get to work.â He sighed, and you nodded, not that he could see it.
âOphelia,â the woman above you whispered, trying to call out to you, to reach you, beneath the guard you had slammed up.
You felt the slight shift in air and heard the light snapping sound you knew to be someone teleporting near you. Larissa, unfortunately, did not, and continued to lean over you and attempt to get you to stand up straight, to talk to you. She didnât even realize someone else was in the room until the pistol cocked.
She nearly screamed, turning to find a ginger-haired girl, probably in her twenties, staring her down with a handgun leveled directly at the woman. When she finally spoke, it was in a thick southern drawl, much to Larissaâs surprise.
âIf you donât get yer hands off my boss, Iâm fixinâ to take âem off for you, understand?â She spat, her green eyes filling with absolute venom as she stared at Larissa, who shook like a leaf. There was a gun, pointed directly at her, by a woman who just appeared in her office. She could feel her heart stop, the moments seem to stretch on as she stared down the barrel.
âSugar! Stand down.â You commanded quickly, snapping straight up, placing yourself in between the two of them and directly in front of the barrel, shielding Larissa. The young woman went wide-eyed, immediately holstering the weapon and staring at you, leaving Larissaâs heart pounding as the room seemed to spin. You protected her, even now, you protected her.
âIâm sorry, Angel, I just saw someone touchinâ you, and thatâs not normally a good thing, I didnât mean- I mean, I did- but not if she was allowed to, if you- if you-â the ginger struggled, and you waved her off, straightening up and picking up your phone. âWeâll be there in a moment, Jenkins.â You said, receiving his affermative hum before you clicked off the line. âItâs alright, I- I understand.â You sighed to the woman, and she exhaled, releived, before turning to Larissa, who still seemed to be out of her body. You may be angry with the woman, but you didnât want her to suffer. Your hands were slow, steady as you braced one on her forearm, calling her attention to you.
âAre you alright?â You asked calmly, and her ice blue eyes snapped to yours, fear in them that broke your heart. âI- I think- yes, yes Iâm alright.â She stuttered and you nodded.
âGood, I need to go, but, I- Iâll be back by morning, and Sugar only pointed it at you because she thought you were hurting me. She wouldnât have shot without the command.â You said calmly, and she swallowed as she nodded shakily.
âThe medic is right maâam, Iâm sorry for startlinâ you, itâs just when most people touch her, it ainât a good thing. Never is, really.â She mumbled, and you looked at Sugar a moment before looking back to Larissa.
âDonât go,â the woman breathed, and you tensed, your entire body pulling back a bit. âPlease donât go, not like this- I- I still need to- Ophelia please, I- I have to fix it.â She rushed, and you furrowed your brows, pulling back from her as you shook your head.
âI have a responsibility.â You swallowed, pain flashing across your face once more before it settled into the cool calm of the fighter she knew you could be. âAnd it is not to be a replacement for someone who didnât even treat you like a decent human being.â You said firmly, picking up your bag and slinging it over your shoulder before walking to Sugar.
âReady, Angel?â She asked, doing her best to ignore whatever was going on between you and the other woman in the room. You sighed deeply, looping your arm through hers and nodding. âI hate that call sign.â You muttered, and the two of you were gone, leaving Larissa standing alone in her office, your words echoing in her ears.
Thatâs why it had hurt you so much, you didnât just hate being compared to your sister, you hated her comparing you to your sister, especially after everything she had done. You hated being seen as someone who would hurt her like that, and that was exactly what she had told you she saw you as. A cruel, careless woman, who would hurt her without a second thought.
Her heart sank in her chest, sobs ripping from her throat as she covered her mouth with her hand in an attempt to keep them at bay.
âŚ
You landed in the middle of a field, a cargo train stopped on the tracks by it, Jenkins standing a few feet from you as he stared blankly at the final car. You could see the blood from here. You set your jaw, the woman of Ophelia leaving as the Medic took her place, your mind and body snapping into preparedness.
âWork on transporting the team home, Sugar. Jenkins and I will be here for a while.â You said, and she nodded, headed off to the bunch of people clad in tactical gear as far from the car Jenkins was staring at as they could get.
âAngel,â he breathed, and you gritted your teeth, walking up to stand by the six foot Scotsman, taking the already lit pipe from his hands.
âI donât deserve that sign, not when I come to bury bodies I didnât save.â You said firmly, brushing past him and going into the train car, beginning the process of unchaining the bodies, marking identifiers, classing the bodies, dressing them as best you could and placing them in body bags before you could transport them back to Cambridge via chopper. Once there, they would be properly cleaned, cremated, and buried in the graves by the hospital, children feeding the garden you were known to sit in for hours or days on end, smoking opium until your mind was numb to exactly why those flowers bloomed. You bit back a gag when the blood stuck to your boots, making a sick sticky sound when you moved around in the train car.
The cold feeling when you picked them up to move them was worse.
The blood was already pooling on the sides they had fallen on, making a sick sort of bruise that covered the length of each body towards the ground. You shut their eyes gently, your soul felt empty, hollow as their hands brushed up against your body, their heads falling onto your shoulders when you moved them. It was a numb feeling that spread into you, that lasted the hours while you worked. There were no words, just you and Jenkins moving silently in tandem as you did all you could for the children who were already gone.
âŚ
Larissa stood outside the door to your room. She knew you werenât there, that it was pointless, she knew you wouldnât even want her in there if you were, yet she felt her entire body nearly shaking as she tried to calm herself down. You would be fine, you had promised Wednesday, that man, Jenkins or something, had even promised. You would be fine, she kept telling herself that, that you would be back by morning, that you would come back and be in that very room.
You would be there when she knocked on the door, you would answer it and look at her and⌠and you would say nothing. Your eyes would look blank when you saw her, or worse, full of pain, of the pain she had caused you. Your warm hands wouldnât touch her skin, your arms wouldnât extend to her, they would lay tense by your sides, or cross over your chest. You would close yourself off like you did before, like she had forced you to do. She didnât realize she was crying until her hand automatically moved to catch the tear falling from her cheek, and she cursed herself for being so, so exposed.
The door whipped open, making the woman gasp and cover her face from the tears, instantly shifting slightly to change her reddened eyes and smudged makeup. Wednesday stared up at her, her own face red as she angrily wiped away her own tears.
âMiss Addams, I- I didnât realize that someone- that you would be in here,â She rushed, and the glare Wednesday gave her could have leveled a city. Larissa stood strong however, not even wavering as she stared down at the girl. They met eyes for a moment, a second of understanding passing through everything in the way of the two of them. Wednesday was just threatening her less than a few hours ago, yet the two of them had something in common. They wanted you back. They wanted you to come back, to be safe, to be alright. They wanted you with them. Wednesday stared at her headmistress for a moment, her eyes hard and angry.
âWhat did you do to her?â She asked harshly, and the headmistress swallowed. She wouldnât tell her, couldnât, but she could stand strong.
âI said something I didnât mean,â she said firmly, leveling with the girl if only for a moment. âSomething I regret.â She finished, and Wednesday seemed to evaluate that for a moment.
âWhat do you want from her?â The girl asked, and Larissa stood, struck still. It wasnât what you always asked, you asked her what she wanted, this is what she wanted from you, and her mind spun with ideas.
She wanted to see you smile, to walk around like you had danced the first night here at Nevermore, like you had in the kitchen the other night. She wanted to see you free, see you beautiful and uninhibited. She wanted to see your skin glinting in the sun again, the paleness shining after years away from the sun. She knew what she wanted from you, she just didnât know what she wanted.
âI want her to be happy.â She breathed, and Wednesday seemed to stare at her for a moment, to try to see into her, to see if she was telling the truth. Larissaâs heart thundered beneath her calm exterior. She hated being looked at like that, yet it was almost, familiar. Wednesday had inherited her motherâs eyes, but she had inherited your gaze, it seemed, and it was your gaze that made Larissa willing to stay under it. Wednesday stepped to the side, opening the door further.
âCome in, she wonât be back until morning.â The girl said, walking in and leaving Larissa shocked still for a moment before she followed the girl quickly, stepping into the room and looking around. Wednesday had been laying in your bed, it seemed.
The girl went to the fire, turning it up before going to the electric kettle in the corner, making two cups of tea. Larissaâs face softened as she realized the girl had learned the gesture from you.
âWhen she comes back, she will either smell like opium or she will be half lucid.â The girl sighed, and Larissaâs eyes went wide. âMy aunt is very powerful, and she can do a lot, but it still takes its toll.â She added, pouring cream into the tea before handing it to the woman in front of her.
âOpium? She canât- that is an incredibly dangerous drug, Wednesday. Sheâs a scientist, surely she must know-â the woman protested, only for Wednesday to shake her head.
âShe wonât smoke it in front of me, and I doubt she would in front of any student, or when sheâs working, she respects you too much for that.â The girl thought, and Larissa swallowed as she took in the inherent compliment. âI asked Jenkins about it once, apparently when she was younger it could get pretty bad, she only smokes it now when she needs it, it, itâs better than the alternative, apparently.â The girl said, and Larissa narrowed her eyes.
âIf sheâs addicted to it, then she needs it because it has become a dependency.â The woman said, and Wednesday turned to the fire, holding her own cup of tea and sitting on the floor in front of it, leaving the chair for the woman.
âIf you could see the worst moments of everyoneâs life, of your own life, wouldnât you want to numb it?â She asked, and the white-haired woman felt her jaw slacken slightly. Wednesday wasnât just talking about you now. That comment had come from experience. âNot to mention she sees people, children, she says, in horrible conditions. She has to see what was done to her done to others every day.â Wednesday swallowed numbly. âShe wonât tell me about it.â The girl admitted. âBut when you see her eyes, her eyes when she talks about it, or thinks about it. Itâs horrifying Miss Weems.â The girl said. âIt hurts her.â She whispered, and the headmistress followed her gaze into the flames for a moment.
âShe takes it for the pain, not for the high.â The woman realized, and Wednesday nodded. âI donât know much about it, but her body reacts to drugs differently. My mother asked her for an ibuprofen once and Aunt Ophelia laughed and said that itâs useless to her, she might as well have a pack of mints.â The girl recounted as the woman nodded.
âShe⌠is she, in physical pain?â She asked Wednesday, and the girl nodded.
âI know she gets headaches and sick from the visions. And if she pushed her abilities too far for too long her hands start to bleed uncontrollably, they atrophy, the black spreads up her arms, itâs- its not pleasant.â The girl managed.
âYouâve seen it happen?â Larissa asked, mildly shocked, and she nodded.
âOnly once. I ended up staying in her hospital for a night because of an emergency. I snuck down to her lab. She hadnât slept in days, it was, it was after something bad happened, I donât know what, but her arms were completely black, it was beginning to stretch up be neck, it was like it was consuming her.â The girl whispered, and Larissa felt fear creep into her. For you to be that far gone, and for your niece to see it- it was a horrifying thought. âJenkins was watching me, he- he made sure she was alright, and then he just took me away.â The girl said, her voice flat despite the hint of fear in her eyes.
âMiss Addams, you donât have to tell me,â she began, but the girl just shook her head.
âIâm warning you.â Wednesday explained, her eyes suddenly snapping to the headmistress, a threat there once again. âShe will try to pretend she is fine. But she will be, hurt. And if you take advantage of that, I will-â
âIâm not going to harm your aunt, Wednesday.â The woman breathed, and once again they locked eyes, the girl evaluating. Larissa didnât falter under her gaze, just staring at the girl, as honestly as she could. Wednesday narrowed her eyes, but eventually looked away, her hand going to stir the tea she had made.
âI donât make it right. She can be a bit of a snob about it, living in Cambridge and all that.â The girl said, and Larissa raised her brows, taking a sip of the tea and tilting her head to the side, pursing her lips in thought.
âItâs not strong enough, you should let it steep a little longer next time.â The woman suggested, and Wednesday stared down into it.
âThen would you make it when she comes back?â Wednesday asked almost casually, and Larissa quickly nodded, surprised the girl even asked.
âOf course, I could even show you, if you like.â She added, and the girl hummed noncommittally.
âAre you going to sit or are you going to just stand there?â The girl eventually replied, and Larissa rolled her eyes, but sat on the chair in front of the fire, the girl still sitting on the floor in front of the one opposite, and the two sat in relative silence in the dark, barring the roaring fire.
Hours ticked by until Wednesday eventually fell asleep, her mug falling loose in her hand. The tall woman took it, setting it back on the table as well as her own. She looked at the girl sleeping in the chair, her heart squeezing slightly as she realized just how scared Wednesday must be. She pulled one of the blankets from your bed, laying it over the girl and sitting quietly in your room, checking the fire occasionally and just waiting, praying you would be alright when you returned. Her mind swirled, everything seemed, unreal. It was as if she was outside of time, just waiting to see when the world would start again, when you would walk in and time would un-freeze.
âŚ
You could feel the aching of your body, nearly as badly as the sickness and grief settling in your mind and heart. You and Jenkins sat, waiting for Sugar to return, you puffing on your pipe as he took deep swigs of his flask.
âIf ye donât slow down âyer likely to lift the veil again.â He gruffed, and you hummed.
âIâd rather see the dead then bury the living.â You said blankly, your voice far away as you took another puff.
âWhatâs the difference, they had died.â He asked, and you watched as Sugar appeared a few feet from you both.
Your eyes clouded as shadows started to appear around you, your breathing and heart rate slowing. You could feel the numbness start to set in as the opium flooded your system, a strain you yourself had perfected, far stronger than anything else in the natural world, but just enough to take the edge off for you. The world seemed to swim as your eyes blinked slowly.
This was better. The quiet of the dark was infinitely better than the screaming inside and around you. You vaguely heard Jenkins mumble something to Sugar, and the next thing you knew you were standing outside the door to your room in Nevermore, Sugar leading you gently. You stumbled through the door, taking another deep drag as the young woman led you.
âThatâs it, Angel.â She whispered, and you glared at her as your head spun. You looked into your room to find the fire roaring, hotter than you liked it, too hot. Yet there, in front of it, was Wednesday, sleeping soundly in a chair, a blanket over her as Larissa stood next to her, frozen as she looked up to you, her hand still brushing a stray hair out of Wednesdayâs face. The tenderness of the action towards her filled you with relief. Not as much relief as her being asleep did, however.
You walked over silently, waving your hand over her face as pollen fell from it.
âStay asleep darling, you donât need to see me like this.â You whispered, your voice far away. Your knees buckled and Sugar was with you in a moment, helping you up and to a chair.
âIâm sorry, I didnât mean to grab you-â she started, but you just shook your head, waving her off.
âI donât like being touched, but Iâm aware of your intentions.â You breathed, your eyes blinking slowly as your heart rate became even slower. Much longer and you would be seeing the dead. Yet lifting the veil through drugs was better, seeing the spirits was far better than holding corpses.
âHas your tolerance gone down or something?â She hissed in her southern drawl, and you hummed, taking the pipe to your lips as Larissa watched the broken image of you in horror.
âNo,â you hummed, looking around the room, your eyes never quite settling on anything. They looked dead, Larissa realized, not just dead, but deadened. They looked hollow. What on earth had you seen to make you look like that, how horrific could it have been. âIâm just on my third pipe, would you put my niece in the bed for me?â You asked her, and Sugar just huffed but nodded, doing so before she came to you, kneeling in front of you, pulling your attention to her.
âYou need to rest, Angel, you canât do this forever, even you canât-â
âDONâTâ you gritted, and the girl jumped back, making you look away in shame. You had scared her, and the realization made you disgusted with yourself. Larissa jumped too, only she stepped forward at your sudden outburst, desperate to find out if you were alright. âIâm sorry,â you breathed, leaning back and taking another long drag as the tears began to come again. âSugar, Iâm sorry- I- Iâm tired and, and I hate that fucking call sign.â You managed, your voice tight with tears, and Larissa gaped at how far you had fallen.
âOphelia, are youâŚâ she breathed, but your eyes never left the girl in front of you, who only shook her head at Larissaâs unvoiced question.
âI- I know, Iâm sorry, I didnât mean to flinch.â Sugar whispered, and you shook your head as you opened your eyes.
âI do not blame you for knowing that I am dangerous, dear girl.â You said gently, and you heard her sharp intake of breath, making you open your eyes only to see her fall to the floor in front of you, her arms reaching for your covered body as she shook with sobs.
âI miss you, we all miss you, please Ophelia,â she whimpered, and you tentatively pulled a glove from your pocket, putting it on one hand and using it to pet the girlâs head, attempting to soothe her. This was one of your âgirlsâ Larissa realized. This young woman was likely one that you had helped raise.
âI miss you too. All of you.â You said, your voice no louder than a breath. You took one achingly slow breath, and then your eyes seemed to gaze over even more, your entire body tensing, then going nearly slack as you looked about the room, your eyes still not focusing.
Larissa watched it, the whole thing was heartbreaking, this girl, whoever she was, sobbing at your feet as you offered what little comfort you could, your own soul as broken and barren as the harshest winter.
âCome home.â The girl breathed, and you shook your head.
âYou know I canât.â You whispered, but your voice was slow, distracted, as you stared at a particular point in the room. Sugar looked up, seeing your eyes fixed on something, on nothing. She looked back at your face to find the mesmerized shine she had seen only twice before.
âYou lifted the veilâŚâ the girl whispered, and you hummed, nodding your head.
âI- is, is someone here?â She stuttered, and you nodded again, silent. Larissa stepped forward, your eyes were fixed on something, yet nothing was there, your body was almost limp, you were barely breathing, you looked like this once before, this was the look on your face before you had died. Before you had died in her very arms.
She gasped, rushing to you and standing in front, taking your arms by her hands, and Sugar gasped, yet you didnât even flinch.
âOh my god.â The girl whispered, her accent a little heavier when she was taken off guard. You were letting someone touch you. Not just that, but grab you.
âOphelia, Ophelia are you alright? Look at me, please, please look at me-â Larissa whimpered, only to stop when the girl next to her took her arm, pulling her out of it as she shook her head.
âSheâs alright, she just, when she smokes enough opium or, there are a few plants that do it actually, she can see spirits.â The girl explained nervously. âJenkins knows more about it then I do, he was always her guard, but sheâs just seeing both planes right now, is how I think she describes it?â She said quietly, and Larissa tried to breathe as she looked back at you, you were still staring.
You could see a woman, a beautiful woman, with long white hair braided down her back, she was wearing a gray dress, a formal one, and shimmering jewels and gloves. She was pale, and very tall, and you smiled as you realized it wasnât one of your ancestors who visited you tonight. Nor was it a stranger, at least not to you. You didnât know the glowing spirit, seemingly made of moonlight and shadows, but you had an idea of who she could be.
âWhat do you travel to me for?â You asked gently, blissfully unaware of the two very real women staring at you nervously. The spirit tilted her head, smiling, and you huffed out a laugh. âYou smile like her, are you who she learned it from?â You asked softly, and the spirit chuckled this time.
âYou donât know me anymore, do you medic?â The spirit asked, and something in the way she spoke made tears come to your eyes.
âI know not your face nor voice, but your soul feels vaguely familiar.â You breathed, your own voice broken as tears came.
âHush, child, you donât have to cry,â she said, walking closer slowly. âWill you let them see me?â She asked. You hummed, nodding through teary eyes. You couldnât look away, you were transfixed.
âOphelia, who are you speaking to, I-â Larissa began, only to gasp as your hand slowly rose, you pulled off the glove you had put on and slowly snaked a hand over each of the womenâs wrists. Larissa looked down in shock. You were touching her again. She could feel your skin on hers again. Your hands were still soft, still warm, still-
âOh my god.â Sugar breathed again, and Larissaâs head snapped up, only to see a face she had thought was long gone, a face that nearly made her drop to her knees in shock.
âDo you know who I am?â The spirit asked you, and Larissa sobbed when she heard that voice again. You shook your head.
âNo, but I could guess,â you hummed, and the woman laughed, walking closer to you, her hand coming mere inches from your face before you turned away slightly, making the spirit freeze. You wouldnât let her touch you, not unless you knew who she was.
âYou truly donât know me,â the spirit whispered, and you shook your head.
âNot in this form. Yet if I knew you well enough to let you touch me, well, we must have been close.â You said softly, and the woman seemed to nod sadly.
âWe were.â She hummed, and you looked closer.
âYou could tell meâŚâ you offered, and the spirit only shook her head, her ice blue eyes boring into you.
âI am proud of you, Ophelia,â She breathed, and you froze, your eyes going wide.
You were silent for a moment, and Larissa merely gaped at you as she realized that you were indeed close with this woman. Silence stretched on for a moment, only to finally be interrupted by your teary voice. That had gotten to you, it seemed. A simple comment like that had touched your very soul.
âTell me, please,â you nearly begged. The woman just shook her head, beginning to walk about the room. Her feet made no sound.
âI should be releived, you have finally come to herâŚâ the spirit trailed, tilting her head. âIt took you long enoughâŚâ she hummed, and you just huffed out as you shook your own head. âWhy shapeshifters?â She asked you, and you just laughed breathlessly, yet the sound was sad, pained as it left you. Larissa once again looked at you in shock. She had wanted to know the answer herself, been dying to know. She knew you worked with all types of outcasts, yet you seemed to have an affinity for her classification.
âWhat a question to be asked by one.â You countered, and the spirit smiled, walking over to you again.
âSo you can tell.â She hummed, and you just pitched up your brows. âStill, the question,â she hummed, and you stared for a moment, feeling like your very heart was on display. This was a story you seldom shared, this one hurt too much.
âThere are a few reasons, most of them names.â You answered lowly. The spirit just raised her brows.
âI know of very few who would do what you have done out of something as fickle as compassion.â She said, and you sighed, relenting.
âI was gotten out by a team made up of Jenkins, a medic, and a woman named Georgiana.â You breathed, and the spirit seemed to look at you more intensely. âJenkins has been my protector for a very long time, but Georgiana, she was everything to me.â You breathed, and Larissa and Sugar both gaped as you spoke. âShe was a shifter, an incredible one, but more than that she was like my family.â You breathed. âI was a sick and broken child. I could barely walk, my mind had been destroyed, yet she took me in. I stayed at what would later become the hospital, but at that point it was a small operation financed almost entirely by her.â You sighed, shaking your head fondly at the memory. âI never knew her natural face, nor her real name, but I knew her.â You breathed. âAnd she taught me everything.â You added with a sad but almost proud smile. âShe trained me to be able to use my ability, not just as a weapon, but to create beautiful, beautiful and remarkable things.â You smiled. âShe put me through university, I wouldnât have had anything without her. I have my degrees, my doctorates, because of her.â You said sadly. âThe reason shifter medicine progressed so much was because of what her and I accomplished together, we- we did incredible things.â There were tears in your eyes as you spoke, yet the smile was still on your face. âShe saved my life the first time, and then more times then I can count on operations, she- she was my mentor, my friend, the world to me. The reason I know so much about shapeshifters is her, the reason I am so adamant about them in particular is because of what she and I went through finding and rescuing as many as we could.â You breathed, the smile fading from your face as you finally looked back up at the spirit. âDoes that answer your question?â You asked her, only to find her looking rather emotional as well.
âAnd now?â She asked you, and you sighed heavily.
âShe was killed. We had bad information, something went wrong, and I didnât get there in time.â You swallowed, pain and guilt flooding your face once more as everyone in the room stared at you in utter shock. âThe reason that place was started was her. Much of it continues in her memory.â You breathed. âI do it because of the children. I started to because of her.â You explained, and the spirit just nodded.
âShe taught you well.â She murmured. âYou could mark me.â She added with a smile, and you huffed, shaking your head.
âYour height, to begin with, your coloring, not to mention that youâve insinuated I knew you by another face.â You answered, and she nodded, encouraging you. âIn general you have very striking features, which can often be a give away. Granted, itâs a stereotype and it doesnât necessarily mean you like your features, lord knows Iâve dealt with enough teenage shifters to know that, but when youâve seen enough you start to pick up on it.â You breathed, and the spirit smiled, Larissa unable to fully process your words as she stood and stared at you both in shock,
âYouâre quite good.â The spirit smiled, and the brief moment of joy fell from your face. It all came crashing back to you then, and you shook your head.
âNot good enough.â Was your only response, and the spirit stepped closer, demanding you attention.
âHow many?â She asked you, and you grimaced and shook your head, lowering your face in shame. âHow many?â She repeated, stronger, and when you looked up there were tears streaming down your face.
âToday? Sixteen.â You shook, your throat closing up as the tears came again. âThis month, thirty maybe, last year was three hundred and twenty eight, thatâs nearly one a day, and it- it never stops, there are just more and more and I donât know what to-â
âHush, child.â Came the calm, but firm voice in front of you, and your head snapped up in shock, both you and Larissa gaping at her. âNot how many you have lost, how many have you saved?â She asked you, and you swallowed, pulling back and shaking your head.
âNot enough.â You answered, and she raised a brow.
âNot my question, now answer it.â She said, and you took a deep breath in, thinking. You knew the number, yet it felt far too small.
âThroughout my entire career? Six thousand, four hundred and twelve.â You answered, and for the first time, Larissaâs eyes snapped to you in utter shock. That was a lot. That was over six thousand lives you had saved, six thousand shield ten who had a chance, because of you. Her heart nearly stopped. âWhy? Iâve lost countless more, I donât see the point in you coming to ask me that?â You breathed, and the spirit said nothing, a small smile cracking on her face, one that made you narrow your brows in curiosity.
âAnd how many of them shifters?â She asked you, and you sighed deeply, thinking for a moment.
âTwo thousand, three hundred, and twenty six.â You responded, and this time the woman smiled proudly as Larissaâs grip on you turned into a vice.
âTo prove a point.â The spirit said, and you shook your head in confusion. She just smirked, nodding to Larissa, and for the first time this evening your eyes truly met hers. Your head was still spinning, the opium flooding your mind and slowing your every reaction and function, yet when you saw her hydrangea blue eyes filled with tears you wanted to forgive her. You wanted to give into her. You wanted to wrap her up and hold her until the tears stopped, until they never came again. She had sunk the the ground next to you, kneeling next to the chair so your faces were nearly touching. You wanted to kiss her. Even now, with your world painted in hues of grey, you wanted her blue. âDo you know the relation?â The spirit asked, and you narrowed your eyes a little more as you looked at her, taking a deep breath to try to calm yourself after being so close to Larissa. They had the same eyes, similar hair, but they werenât close enough to be mother and daughter.
âAn aunt, perhaps? Perhaps fartherâŚâ you trailed, and she nodded happily, Larissaâs smile splitting her face. It made you so happy to make the woman smile, even if you didnât know who she was to you.
âI am her aunt, yes. She can see me, you said, can she hear?â She asked, and you nodded. The spirit seemed to look around, almost sensing what was around her, not truly seeing. She focused on various things until she finally found her.
Larissaâs heart stopped as her aunt stared at her for the first time since she was eleven. She cried. She truly cried. Tears sprang forth, she wanted to reach for the woman, to be wrapped up in her arms again. Her aunt Victoria was looking at her again, and she felt like a child. She felt like the scared child who would run up to her whenever she visited, or would whisk her away from her cruel parents whenever she could.
âI am sorry, my precious girl,â the spirit breathed. âI tried so hard to find you, by the time I did, I- Iâm sorry I left you.â She whispered, and Larissa sobbed, just shaking your head.
âI love you,â was all she said in response, and tears began to spring from the spiritâs eyes as well, she wiped them away before looking at you once more.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 13 - Take A Beating
(You find Larissa just in time, and give her comfort in one of her lowest moments. Yet when she finds you bare and vulnerable, it is her own pain that cuts into you like never before.)
WARNING: VIOLENCE/BLOOD/IMPLIED PAST ASSAULT/IMPLIED PAST CHILD ABUSE/SMUT
You knew it was a vision, the feeling far too real and foreboding to be a regular dream.
You heard a scream, a flash of white hair, and saw a man standing above her. You didnât recognize him, but you recognized the place. That was by the school, out front actually. You heard the clock tower ring, it was three, but the black sky told you it was morning, far too late or early for anyone to be up. The man went for her again, picking up a bat and swinging. You jolted out of it as you heard the sickening crunch.
You panted as you woke, trying to catch your breath. They were unreliable, you had to remind yourself. They were just visions of potential futures, not ones that would certainly would happen. You had just consoled Wednesday with the same issue, you couldnât let yourself give in to the panic and fear that came after seeing something like that. If you let that happen after every time, it would consume you.
Wednesday. You looked to the girl laying in your bed next to you, sighing as you stroked your hand through her hair. Wednesday slept through you waking, thankfully, and you sighed quietly as you looked at the clock, already exhausted before the day even started.
2:58.
Your eyes went wide, you sprang up. You couldnât do it. You knew you should ignore it, try to go back to sleep, but something in you demanded you move. If she was outside then she would be outside and if she wasnât then it wasnât real, thatâs all you had to remember. You rushed silently out of your room, hurrying down the halls to the front entrance of the school, you were still in nothing but your sweater and slip, no shoes, just rushing to the front, woefully unprepared. You repeated the same mantra to yourself, the very same one you had given to Wednesday.
âWhat you see is not assured.â You whispered again and again, trying to calm yourself. This was ridiculous, you were being ridiculous, you knew it likely wouldnât happen.
Then you heard the scream.
You were through the doors on pure instinct, watching the man swing a bat at her. She was on the steps on her back, climbing backwards up the steps as he prepared to swing again.
You recognized him. He was one of the men from the liquor store, the night you had first met her. He prepared to swing again and your eyes went red.
Vines sprouted from the earth, wrapping around him, pulling him back and tethering him in place. He screamed out in panic.
âWhat the fuck!â He yelled, and you nearly growled, walking towards him. Your vines had dragged him to the ground, wrapped around his legs and bringing him to his knees before another pair hand circled around his wrists and up his arms, one still around his throat, holding him there by his very breath.
âWatch your mouth, youâre on school grounds.â You bit, your voice cold and piercing. His eyes snapped to you, as did Larissa, her breath stolen when she saw you. You were deadly. Sharp as a knife, despite how worn down she knew you were. After everything that had happened, not to mention Wednesday, you should be resting, not using your ability, yet the second she saw vines sprout from the earth, relief flooded her instantly. It was over. You had come, and it was over.
âYou.â The man spat, and you tilted your head. When you spoke, the slightly mad edge to your voice had become its dominant feature, insanity seeming to drip from your lips as you stared at the man with the most dangerous eyes Larissa had ever seen.
âI donât think you want a rematch.â You glared wickedly. âCalm down, agree to leave, and Iâll let you go.â You said calmly. He glared at you, his hand gripping against the bat, trying to break from the vines. He was no match.
âHiding behind your freak powers again, bitch?â He spat, âFucking coward!â He yelled, and you raised your brows.
Larissa watched in shock. She couldnât move, couldnât speak, couldnât think as she watched in fear.
âOh, I donât think itâs cowardice to use what I have at my disposal when you come onto school grounds, attacking the headmistress of a institute for children.â You replied. He laughed.
âHey, maybe I just wanted to see if the big bitch would put up a fight on her own.â He mocked, and your eyes widened. You walked down the steps, slowly. Dangerously slowly, Larissa had seen this calm on you before, when you were protecting your niece, but seeing it now, for her, it was wholly different.
âExcuse me?â You spat, and the man sneered. You were giving him one chance to walk out of this without any serious damage. One chance to make the smart decision.
âI wanted to teach her a lesson, see how much of a woman the freak really is, I wonder if she can take-HOLY FUCK!â he hollered out as you hit him, hard. He went down as you released the vines, letting him slump to the ground. You picked up the bat, staring down at him.
âApologize.â You sneered at him, and he looked up at you, blood streaming from his nose. Larissa looked at you in shock. You hit him. You not only hit him but you broke his nose.
âFuck you!â He cried, getting up and swinging at you. You caught his blow, directing it past you before you kneeâd him in the stomach, dropping him to the ground once again as he gasped for air.
âApologize.â You commanded again. He gasped for air, struggling to get up.
âWhat, you mad because you wanted to get the big monster to yourself?â He spat, and that was the final straw. Something in you visibly snapped. Larissa gaped as you tossed the bat behind you, grabbing him by the collar and hauling him up to his knees. You sneered in his face, your hands digging into his throat as he struggled. You were terrifying.
âMonster?â You laughed. âMonster!â You seemed to be loosing it, your mind unable to even fathom the idea of her being addressed as such. âOh you poor, poor man, you utter fool!â You cackled, your not quite American accent getting thicker as you stopped moderating your speech.
âThe fuck are you laughing about?â He sneered from the ground, launching himself up at you only to be caught once again by vines and restrained with only the tilt of your head. âGet this the fuck off of me you crazy bitch! Sheâs dangerous! Youâre all dangerous!â He hollered, and you just hummed, staring him down with murder in your eyes. He cowered back when you leaned in, much to your delight.
âShe doesnât even qualify as a class four, not that you would know that. No students here are above a class three, and you think- oh, you think theyâre dangerous!â You laughed.
âThe fuck are you talking about?â He yelled, and you just sighed.
âDangerous, hmm? How many children, normie children, do you think have died this year because of outcasts? Hmm? How many do you think went down just because they were what they were?â You asked him, and he glared at you.
âYouâre fucking crazy!â He spat, and you nodded, just smiling as you squeezed the vines a little tighter, making him shut up. You could kill him, if you wanted to. It became very clear to both him and Larissa as she watched.
âOpheliaâŚâ she breathed, but you didnât hear her over the rage in your own mind.
âOdd, I canât think of any. I can, however, tell you how many outcast children were killed this year simply because they were outcasts.â You said darkly, all north and light dropping from your voice. You were serious, deadly serious. âSixteen.â You said, and he scoffed.
âLike you can call that a fuckin statistic.â He spat, and you just stared.
âSixteen hundred.â You corrected, and he stilled. âOf course, thatâs just the United States. And only the ones we know of.â You added. âThat doesnât account for all those injured, trafficked, assaulted, those that died of unknown causes, worseâŚâ You trailed. âThe only dangerous thing at this school is the man who came here with a weapon.â You gritted, pointing to the bat. âTo attack children.â You spat, and he looked at you with pure hatred.
âFuck you.â he slurred, and you sighed, nodding your head. This man was drunk, very drunk. It wouldnât be fair to kill him. You wouldnât, even if he wasnât drunk, for Larissaâs sake, but still. It was with giving him one more choice before someone had to take him home.â
âI will give you, one, more chance, to leave this without causing issues.â You growled, and he spat in your face, blood splattering all over you from his bleeding nose.
âFine.â You muttered, throwing him to the ground. He stumbled back, trying to catch himself and stand. You watched as he staggered to his feet. âFor her sake, Iâll do this the old fashioned way.â You hummed, your fingers flexing and curling into fists. âYou should thank her, if she wasnât here I would have killed you already.â You said wickedly, and Larissa shuddered as you brought up your fists, your body settling into a practiced stance. She knew you had fought before, that you had killed before, but had you done it on purpose? Could you?
âGive it your best shot.â You challenged, and the man smiled wickedly, charging towards you with pure hatred in his eyes. He swung again, and again you evaded it with minimal effort. You swung back this time, making the man grunt as you hit him again, square in the nose. He screamed as Larissa heard the sickening crunch. He stumbled back before throwing himself at you again, this time you turned, leaning back before swinging your leg in a kick to the side of his head, dropping him to the ground.
âFuck!â He wheezed, and you just huffed, walking to him again. He crawled up to his knees, and you kneeâd him in the face, dropping him fully to the ground. He fell to his side, sucking in air desperately, painfully. You walked to him, kicking him in the stomach, making him groan as he rolled a few feet back.
âIâm gonna kill you!â He groaned, and you scoffed.
âGood luck with that.â You smiled, kicking him once more in the head, knocking him out. You sighed, panting a little.
There was a moment where Larissa just stared at you, worried the madness wouldnât fade, that you would turn around and look at her with the same cold insanity you had looked at the man. Yet, the second he was out, it seemed to melt from your body, your hands softening as your eyes returned to their caring gaze. You turned, immediately heading back to the woman still laying in shock on the steps. You immediately, went to her, kneeling next to her, taking her face in your bare hands and looking at her with concern.
âHey, hey are you ok?â You asked her, your eyes flitting over her, looking for any sign of injury.
âY- I, yes.â She swallowed, looking up to you in shock. She had seen how you could move, you practicing with your niece, but you just beat the shit out of a man at least half a foot taller than you without blinking.
âDid he touch you?â You asked her, fear invading your voice for the first time. She just shook her head, swallowing as she looked to the limp body of the man behind you. You turned your face back towards you, your warm hands soothing her despite what they had just done. âHeâs alive, we can call the police, Iâll- Iâll handle it.â You swallowed. âLetâs get you inside.â You breathed, helping her up and to her office.
She shuddered as you put your arm around her waist, helping her up and leading her with gentle, yet steady arms. You were there, she reminded herself. Your were there, and this was her you, not the you that had beaten that man, this was the you that looked at her with caring eyes, that soothed her with gentle touches and assured her with calming words.
You sat her down on the couch in her office, lighting the fire before running to your room and grabbing your phone.
When you returned you took off your sweater, leaving you in a night slip again as you pulled it over her own night dress. You were so gentle, so soft and caring with her. It was as if the woman outside had disappeared, and you were there again, her version of you. The Ophelia with warm hands, and tired, caring eyes, always looking to her. Always to her.
âCan you put your arms up for me?â You asked softly, and she nodded, allowing you to ease her into it. You didnât know what had her in shock, weather it was something the man had done before you got there or if it was watching you fight. You shuddered to think it was the second. She stared into the fire as you grabbed a blanket, laying it over her legs as you fluttered around, making her a cup of tea and placing it into her hands gently.
You wanted to touch her, to hold her, but at this point you wouldnât dare try. It was odd, wanting to touch someone. Wanting to touch someone in this way. You wanted to care for her, make sure she was alright. But if you were correct, then touch was the last thing she would want right now.
You called 911, being patched through to the sherif of the town. When he arrived to pick up the man you explained everything, telling him that you had come out when you had heard her scream, the man seemed to be drunk, and you had defended her and yourself to the best of your abilities using non-lethal force.
âYou been âround here long?â The man asked you, and you shook your head, watching as his partner loaded the man into the back of the cruiser.
âNo, I, Iâm a substitute teacher. My sister went here though.â You said, and he nodded, looking you over. He was examining you, you knew what it felt like. You were familiar with it, intimately, and grotesquely familiar with it. His eyes narrowed at your gloved hands, looking to the leather, the way all of your body was covered by clothing. You cleared your throat and he averted his eyes. At least he wasnât a pig.
âI have to talk to the headmistress.â He said, nodding towards the school, and you nodded.
âYes, I know. Iâll take you to her office.â You replied, and he nodded, following you into the building. You led him to her office, allowing him in before standing by the door.
You had changed into a pair of pants, another sweater, and your gloves and shoes before the man arrived, as well as giving Larissa something to change into. She stood in one of her normal sets, yet your eyes widened a touch as you realized she still held your sweater in her hands, almost clutching it for comfort. Her hands were shaking with how tight she was gripping it.
Maybe she wasnât horrified by you, perhaps there was a chance.
âSherif Galpin, a pleasure.â She said, quickly shifting back into her âHeadmistressâ persona. âI assume Miss Florere walked you through what happened.â She said, and the man nodded. You stood attentively at the door, folding your hands behind your back, your chin squared and you head held high atop your straight back. You didnât look at them, just stared at the wall opposite you, ready for whatever you were asked for. Youâd kill the man now, if she asked.
âYes, she did, I still need your statement, however, Miss Weems.â Sherif Galpin said. âThe guy has had a few incidents with your kind before, I have a feeling this is similar.â He said. You clenched your jaw slightly at the term of otherness he directed at her, but stayed silent, standing by the door.
âYes, Iâm aware.â She said, and he hummed, nodding as he took out a pad and paper. âI had went out to get some fresh air, and I saw him come stumbling up the drive. He approached me, said a plethora of things I wonât bother to repeat and attacked me.â She said, swallowing, and you felt your hands clench in your gloves. You moved them behind your back, doing your best to remain calm. It wouldnât do to show your anger now. You were already in a tough situation, you had beat the shit out of a man, even if he started it. Hopefully, he wouldnât remember all you had said in your hot-headed rage.
âCan you elaborate?â The sherif sighed, and Larissa looked to you a moment. You stared straight ahead, your eyes boring into the wall across from you. Your hands were behind your back, your posture straight, your chin held high. This was the look of a woman who had been through this before, she realized. Many times, in all likelihood. She knew you had been through much in your life, she had even seen glimpses of it, but this. You had been accused before, she realized, you were on guard. And you were guarding her. The thought struck her, landing in your chest and nearly stealing her breath.
âMiss Weems?â The sherif repeated, and she looked back to him. Control, she had to keep it together.
âYes, sorry. He came at me with a bat, and he, groped me, er, then shoved me to the ground. He was trying to pull my clothes off, something about âexposing the freak I amâ I pushed him off and he picked up the bat. He was about to swing when Ophelia came out.â She explained, doing her best to retain control. It was hard. She felt disgusting, felt like she had lost control, credibility. Like it had been taken from her.
You, on the other hand, were livid. Larissaâs eyes snapped to you when you visibly twitched, you had to clutch your hands together behind your back, pressing the palms together even through your gloves. You were angry, almost violently angry, it seemed. And it was for her. The man nodded, sighing tiredly as he listened to her, not looking at the woman, or thankfully, at you.
âIs that enough, Sherif?â You asked gruffly. The man looked to you, surprised you interrupted, but nodded.
âYeah, yeah that would do it. Iâll take him to the drunk tank and see what he says when he wakes up.â The man said, and you nodded, still not deigning to look anywhere but the spot on the wall you were fixed on.âI have another question for you, though.â He said, and you finally looked at him, raising your brows. âAre you military? You stand like it, and with how badly that guy was beaten-â
âThat âguyâ threatened a school full of unarmed children starting with an again unarmed woman who tirelessly works to mend the relationships between the school she oversees and the town it resides in.â You nearly spat.
âAs unarmed as any of you ever are.â The man muttered under his breath, and Larissaâs eyes snapped to him as you clenched your jaw.
âSherif, Iâm sure youâre not implying what I think you are.â She said carefully, and you tried your best not to react. You couldnât look at her. You had failed her, you hadnât been there in time, you had let her be hurt. That man- if you could even call him that, thought he had the right to touch her, to beat her! And you werenât even there⌠Shame flooded you, burning you from the inside out as your eyes remained anywhere but on her.
âNo, maâam.â The man murmured, mildly annoyed by her authority, but knowing when he had been beaten. Silence reigned for a moment before he remembered his question.
âIf not military, then what?â He asked, trying to figure you out. Larissa continued to stare holes into the carpet. She wasnât even fully aware of what was going on, she was on autopilot, brought to catch the sherifâs earlier mistake, but not enough to stop him now. She just knew you were there. As long as you were there, you wouldnât let anything more happen, she knew that.
âI grew up where people like that man deem outcasts less than human before they sell them like cattle or disect them like some sick experiment.â You hissed, and he backed up, blanching. âOr the third option.â You said, and you could practically feel his heart beating in terror. He was scared. Good. Let him be scared of what people would do to your kind, unchecked. âThey hunt us down, for sport.â You said darkly, your voice still terrifyingly calm. He looked almost sick. Silence fell for a moment, he just stared. It seemed like it hit him just then. He didnât like outcasts, but murder? Human trafficking? He knew what was wrong. He knew what was too far.
âI- that wasnât gonna happen here.â He defended, and you stared at him for a moment more, the intensity of your eyes making the man visibly shrink back. âMy sonâŚâ he murmured, and you hummed.
âHydeâs are hard. But not a death sentence. Not unless people like the pathetic excuse for a man outside are put in charge.â You sighed, relenting slightly. He nodded, staring at you for a moment.
âHow the hell did you beat him up like that?â He asked, and you sighed.
âI was in witness protection in the UK back when I was nineteen. I learned a thing or two from my officer.â You said, and he raised his brows.
âAnything that I should know about?â He asked, and you shook your head.
âI helped shut down an institute that killed kids like your son. They didnât like the idea of one of their former wards exposing them.â You said, and he nodded.
âGot it.â He said, staring at you for a moment more. He was trying to determine if you were a threat or not. You certainly were, but not to him.
âDo they actually, is there really a sport of-â he asked tentatively, and you cut him off without thinking.
âThree hundred thousand for your son.â You said in an almost detached manner. He looked like he might be sick. âTo hunt.â You added. âHeâd sell more for parts. But only if transformed.â You finished, taking a deep breath to steady yourself.
âHow the fuck do you know that?â He asked, his face pale. You blinked at him slowly, shaking your head in an almost grimace.
âBecause that institute had a few.â Your words shocked him. Clearly. He looked down for a moment, covering his eyes as he breathed.
âI- Iâll take care of it.â He said, and you hummed, turning your face back to the wall.
âI would recommend that. Unless you want to see your son on the other end of that manâs bat.â You finished, once again returning to a guard like position.
Larissa just stood, she couldnât even fully process what you were saying. Her body was still shaking, hidden beneath her clothes, her heart still pounding as her mind whirled. The man hadnât gotten far, but he had gotten far enough. If you hadnât been thereâŚ
You watched as the man said goodbye to Larissa, nodding to you before he left. It was silent for a moment, the both of you standing in her office. You checked the clock, it was only 4:30. You didnât look at her, you kept your guard up, looking ahead.
âTell me what you need.â You said softly, and she nearly choked. She walked to you slowly, your face still looking firmly ahead until she stood next to you. âIâm sorry.â You breathed, still unable to look at her. She exhaled shakily, and you looked down, your head still straight forward as your eyes looked down in shame. You bit back the tears.
You failed.
âI- I should have been there, I had a vision, but I thought, I thought it- I didnât want to bother you if it wasnât real, and they often arenât, so I didnât- I just wandered- I should have ran, Iâm sorry.â You whispered, and she gasped. Thatâs why you had gotten there in time. You had seen it. She didnât speak, she just took your hand, making you inhale sharply in surprise. She took you to the couch, sitting down and bringing you to stand in front of her again. You swallowed, still not meeting her eyes. You had been through this before, with children you didnât get there on time for. Countless faces flooded your mind, some beaten, some worse, some already dead by the time you got there. Yet nothing, nothing had ever made you feel like this.
âLook at me.â She whispered, and you just looked up, trying to blink back the tears that threatened to come. You didnât get there in time, you couldnât protect her. You failed. âI need you to look at me.â She whispered, and you swallowed, your eyes immediately meeting hers. You would do it, for her. You would put aside anything you had to for her. Her breath hitched when you looked at her, your grey eyes swirling with a storm of emotion. You took a deep breath in.
Everything faded away, all of your own guilt and pain melted from you as you looked into the eyes of the woman next to you.
âI will give you anything, anything you need right now.â You breathed âJust ask.â You said, and you could see her eyes filled with tears. Now wasnât the time for your guilt, now you needed to be there, for her.
âStay,â she whispered, and you nodded, all your attention instantly being directed towards her. âWould you like me to sit, or to stand, do you need space?â You asked her gently, and the woman swallowed.
âI need, I- I need, I feel revolting, I feel vile, like I- I donât know.â She hissed, tears threatening to spill from her eyes. You nodded. The entire time the sherif was there she was detached, perfectly calm, but even she couldnât hide this forever.
âAlright, letâs get you a shower, come with me.â You breathed, offering your hand. She stared at it for a moment. You were still wearing your gloves. You had put them on when the sherif had come, and they were still on your hands. Her faced soured, staring at your hands. You were holding back, hiding part of yourself from her. Guarding her from you.
âTake them off.â She husked, and you raised your brows.
âLarissa,â you breathed, and she swallowed, shaking her head.
âTake them off.â She said again, and you took a deep breath, sighing and doing as she asked. You took them off, quickly folding them into your pocket before offering your hands again. She nodded, slipping her hands into yours. She just watched, she liked the way your blackened fingers looked with her pale ones. She liked the way your hands supported hers, the comfort it gave her. You held her hands gently, waiting for her to come back to herself. You ran your thumbs over her hand, and she eventually blinked, starting to come back to reality.
âCome on, letâs get you cleaned up.â You sighed, and she nodded, standing up with you and allowing you to lead her back to her own rooms.
The sun wasnât even beginning to rise yet, you were the only two wandering the school. It was quiet, you remained silent as long as you could, sitting her on her bed and going to her bathroom. You turned the shower on, running it until the water steamed up the room before you returned back to her bedroom and climbed up onto the bed behind her. She had shifted back to her natural state, out of the pristine look she had shown to the sherif, and your breath stuttered when you saw her so, undone. She slept in a braid, it seemed, and you undid it slowly, gently, your fingers brushing through her hair to comb out any tangles.
âYou donât have to do this,â she whispered eventually, and you nodded, continuing to brush your hand through her long white hair. It was soft and thick, reaching a bit past her shoulders. It was beautiful.
âI know.â You hummed, and she swallowed, nodding as you stood up from the bed. She felt numb, as if all the feeling had been drained from her. Yet your hands, your hands eased the ache of the void. âIâm going to go sit in your parlor. Iâll make some more tea and Iâll be there when youâre done with your shower.â You promised, and her breath hitched. She didnât want you to leave, she wanted you with her. She wanted you close, holding her, she wanted to feel your hands all over her, blocking out the idea of the man who had tried to do the same.
âCould, could you stay, actually?â She asked you, and your brows raised. You inhaled deeply, you would, of course. You would do anything she asked.
âWhere would you like me to stay?â You asked her, and she blushed, looking down.
âI just- I would appreciate it if you stayed in the same room as me.â She managed, her heart racing. She was vulnerable, hurting. She was shaken, she realized. She had spent her entire life always in control, always pristine and perfect, but now she was shaken. The man didnât get very far, but he got far enough. You took her hand, drawing her eyes back to you.
âIf youâd like.â You said calmly, and she nodded. You went with her into the bathroom, sitting on the floor and looking down at the tile there. She furrowed her brows as you averted your eyes. Most people gawked at her, even your sister had always taken every chance to examine her body for flaws, but you, you bent your head, making sure she was in control of what all you saw, you were in her space, yet you made her feel⌠safe.
âYou wonât look?â She asked you, and you shook your head, your eyes firmly fixed on the old tile.
âNo.â You said, and she swallowed. She almost wanted you to. But not like this. She didnât want you to see this, to see the vulnerability, the softness. She wanted you to look at her and be awestruck, not look at her with pity.
She slowly took off her shirt and skirt, dropping them to the floor. Still, your eyes remained fixed on the ground. Even now, with her stripping in front of you, you made it clear she was in control. You wouldnât look, not unless she told you to.
She watched you as she dropped her bra, revealing the pale skin. She could tell you blushed when the garment hit the ground, but not once did your eyes leave the spot they were fixed upon.
She slipped off her underwear, biting back the shame that came with standing fully naked. Your sister had always pointed out her imperfections. Countless others had too. They called her giant, freak, anything they could think of. Yet you remained silent, ever respectful as your eyes never flickered. Your heart pounded in your chest at the intimacy of it, at the vulnerability, your cheeks flushed with the knowledge that the woman was so close to you, yet you never looked up.
She stepped into the shower, pulling the curtain closed and sighing at the water running down her skin. It melted away the feeling, the filth she felt. It all melted away as she sighed, leaning back and letting the water run over her. It was quiet still, you were silent as she began to wash her body, scrubbing her skin clean.
She swallowed at the feeling, scrubbing harder. It wasnât enough. She huffed as she scrubbed harder still, trying to clean away the manâs hand, her hands shaking as a burning sensation started to form as she scrubbed her skin raw. She didnât realize she was crying until she heard your voice from the other side of the curtain.
âGentle.â You said softly. âTake a deep breath, nice and slow.â You instructed, and she nodded, not that you could see her. âJust breathe with me, Larissa.â You said softly, and she took deep inhales with your exaggerated breaths. You continued until the crying subsided, silence once again filling the bathroom, other than the sound of the water.
âHow do you know what to do?â She asked you finally, and you swallowed.
âAnother time. Iâll tell you another time.â You replied. That, she didnât need to know. She did not need to know the price you had paid to survive the institution you were sent to. Nor did she need to know about the punishments that occurred after dark there. She didnât need to know just how far the instructors were willing to go to make you the âperfect wife.â Even with all your training, nothing would ever teach you as much as you had learned living it.
âIt wasnât just the once, was it?â She asked you, and you sighed, shutting your eyes for a moment. You brought your hands up to your face, swallowing as you braced your elbows on your knees, finding the words. She had seen some of what that place did to you, thankfully you had pulled out of the vision before it went any farther, but she had seen it. âTell me.â She whispered, and you sighed.
âLarissa,â you hesitated, and she swallowed.
âI want to know why they do that, why they think they can do that?â She asked you, and you shook your head.
âI wish I could tell you, but even I donât know that answer.â You sighed, and she remained silent again.
âThen tell me something else. Tell me something good.â She asked, and you nodded, trying to find something. Silence settled again as she began to rinse the aggressive scrubbing from her body, beginning to wash her hair as you found something to speak about.
âWhen I was, twenty-four, I visited the Amazon.â You began, and her pain faded as she listened to you speak. âI had already earned my second PhD, the lab needed something for some children we were working with at the time, and that was the first time I had been out in the field, at least on an expedition.â You smiled, âWe had been hiking for two weeks, trying to get as deep into the jungle as possible, looking for a rare species of passionflower said to aid in visions by the locals.â You hummed. âWe had a guide, an incredible woman, from the Kayapo tribe, who led us to the spot where they were known to grow. We had made a deal with her, we would take two plants, not touching the rest, and leave peacefully.â You explained. âWe were exhausted, and the sun was setting as we finally neared the place. The rest of the team wanted to stop, but I was, well, me.â You sighed, and you could have sworn you almost heard the woman chuckle.
âBut we made camp, a few kilometers away from the site. But in the middle of the night, our guide shakes me awake, and all of a sudden Iâm following her through the jungle, lit only by the moon and her knowledge of the area. I thought we were going to get lost, thought we were dying and everything, but as we near the edge of what looks like a cliff, suddenly I can see it.â You smiled. âWe came up to the edge of the cliff and I can see this giant basin of thousands of these flowers.â You breathed. âYou canât find them anywhere else in the world, theyâre incredibly rare, but here they are, thousands, blooming in the moonlight.â You breathed. âSilent except for the sound of the jungle, the moon hitting them through the canopy, the air cool in the night, still humid, but almost, pleasant.â You smiled. âMy god it was magic.â You breathed, and you heard her turn the water off.
You looked down at the floor again, making sure to keep your eyes averted. She pulled a towel in with her, drying off quickly before wrapping it around her body. She stepped out, her eyes landing on you sitting on her bathroom floor, there as she asked, still not looking. She stared at you for a moment. It was so simple, so meaningless, yet it meant the world to her. You were there, without her asking, you simply told her that you would be, and had rushed into helping her almost instantly.
âShow me.â She said, and you nearly looked up at the question before remembering the woman was wearing nothing but a towel. You blushed, ducking your face back down, sighing deeply at your behavior as your heart rate picked up once again.
She went to her room and pulled out a new pair of pajamas, it was Saturday, she technically had the day off, as did you. You let her go, staying on the floor of her bathroom as she went to her bedroom. You thought for a moment as you found the right way to approach it, you knew what you had wanted, and you knew what countless of the children you helped wanted and needed, but she was not them. She wasnât just another person, she was Larissa. She was the woman you would give everything for, you would strip away the pain and the judgement from her own soul if you could. If your hands could do so without the risk of hurting her.
Eventually she came back into the bathroom, waiting until you looked up. She was in full coverage silk pajamas this time, not another nightdress. You smiled sadly at the gesture, you didnât know if it was for her or for you, but either way it made a small bit of warmth pull your from where your mind went.
She nodded her head towards her room, and you stood, following her until she laid on her bed, leaving you standing at the foot of it. You hesitated, and she just stared at the ceiling, not looking at you. She didnât really know why you were there. She knew you had said you would be, and you were a woman of your word, but still. There was no reason for you to stay, to help her. Hell, there were reasons not to. You had been through enough, how dare she put you through her own suffering as well.
âYou can go.â She said, and you nodded.
âI know.â You replied, and she swallowed.
âWhy donât you?â She asked you, and you hummed.
âBecause you asked me to stay.â You replied, and she just shook her head.
âBut do you want to?â She asked, and you were quiet for a moment. Her eyes shut in regret. She shouldnât have asked. You were here out of guilt, regret, nothing more. That was it.
âYes.â You finally answered, and she shook her head, she couldnât believe it, she refused to believe it. Morticia had done the same, stayed and told her she wanted her until she got what she wanted, then she left. She wanted to curl up in her bed and lay there forever, wasting away in her sheets just like she had wanted when your sister had rejected her feelings time after time all those years before. âYou donât believe me.â You stated. You didnât even bother phrasing it as a question.
âWhy would I?â She answered simply, and you nodded. ďżźof course she didnât. She wouldnât, not until you showed her.
âFine, Iâll be back then.â You said, sighing as you left the room. You went back to your own, writing a note for your niece and leaving it on your pillow, next to her, telling her you had to go handle something. You picked up your own pajamas, ones that actually covered your skin this time, and you said nothing as you walked back into Larissaâs rooms, shutting the door behind you before walking back into her bedroom. She looked up at you, suspicion clear on her face.
âWhy wouldnât I want to be here?â You asked her, and she shook her head, fighting to keep control of her emotions.
âDonât mock me.â She said, and you raised your brows.
âIâm not.â You replied, and she nearly scoffed.
âYouâre here because you feel guilty, you feel a sense of obligation, that is all.â The woman told you, and you grimaced. âYou donât want to see this, you donât want to see weakness, ugliness like this.â She spat. âYouâre- after everything youâve been through, you donât show it, youâre strong, you donât- you donât cry- you just- you donât show weakness like this- how could you ever even stand to be around it?â She breathed, on the verge of tears. âYouâre untouchable, and I- I am wretched.â She whispered.
They werenât her own words, you knew enough to know that. These were words that had been said to her so many times they were burned into her very heart. The realization broke yours. You looked at her for a moment, at her laying on her back, staring up at the ceiling blankly. Then you did something she would never forget.
âLook at me.â You said, and she set her jaw as she sat up on her elbows, glaring at you as if your very presence was a lie.
You stood in front of her, untucking the sweater you wore from your pants. Her jaw dropped as you pulled it off, revealing the tank top underneath. You unbuttoned and slipped off your pants too, leaving you standing in your underwear and the tank top, before that came off as well. She sat up, swallowing as you pulled off the tank, leaving you in your bra and underwear standing in front of her.
Her eyes travelled over the skin you exposed to her. She had seen it, when she changed you from your clothes into the sweater she had put you in when you were unconscious. Yet now you were showing her. It was a choice that you made, you let her eyes wander, the scars up and down your arms, the black lace bra you wore. She blushed, of course you wore black. She could see the strength in your body, you were less soft than your sister, your curves were still certainly there, but this was a body that had been molded by years of abuse and being forced to strengthen itself.
You had curves, and she swallowed as she looked from the softness of your chest to the outline of your stomach in the early morning hours, only lit up by the moon and the flickering of the fire. She wanted to touch. You were forbidden, off limits, she could tell you were trying to be tough right now, there were slight giveaways, your hands folded behind your back and she stared up from where her eyes had been fixed on your muscular thighs.
You were a fighter, someone who had been working in the dirt for years, someone who had fought for everything you had. Morticiaâs skin was smooth, perfect, yours was littered with small and light scars, outside was not the first time you fought, not close to it. There was one along your ribs, another few on your legs, one just above your right hip, you were littered in what the world had given you. You sighed as you stared at her, pointing to the scar on the left side of your ribs.
âThis is from a botched operation, I was trying to get a girl who could form weapons out of her own blood out. She cut me right between the ribs, Jenkins though I would bleed out, actually. I almost did.â You hummed. âI taught her to fence properly a few years later.â You sighed, looking to another, your blackened fingers smoothing over a small one under your right breast. âThis was the first time I got shot. Itâs a little hazy, but I didnât realize I was actually shot until I passed out in front of a six year old.â You breathed, shaking your head as you turned, lifting your hair to reveal one running across the base of your neck at your back, âChain scars.â You swallowed. âThe ones at the front of my neck and my wrists I managed to remove, but this one was too deep. âThat and they used to take a metal rod to the spot, beat it bloody.â You muttered, turning back around to find her staring at you with tears in her eyes. You were showing her your scars, your own pain. You were showing her she wasnât alone. âAnd these,â you swallowed, running one of your hands over your arms. âThese are by my own hands. I- I did these.â You breathed, and she gasped, sitting up fully and moving towards you. You looked away, unable to meet her eyes as it became too much.
âOpheliaâŚâ she whispered, her throat tight, and you shook your head.
âThese are just the ones you can see.â You sighed. The ones you canât are the ones that hurt more, but just because they hurt doesnât mean I am weak.â You said softly. âIt doesnât mean you are weak.â You adjusted, looking to her with the most tender expression she had ever seen directed towards her.
She just stared at you in shock.
âI certainly wouldnât show you these out of obligation.â You said gently, sighing as you pulled on your pajama pants. âEven my twin sister hasnât seen most of them, the only person who sees me in less than long sleeves is Wednesday, and that is because she needs to learn the same lesson.â You sighed, slipping on the shirt as well and covering the rest of you.
âYou donât have to-â she muttered, and you just shook your head, finally looking at her again.
âI showed you them so you would know why I am here, why I can stay, why I- I want to stay. Not for my own pain to hurt you..â You swallowed. âYouâre not alone, Larissa. You never will be as long as Iâm around.â You promised, and the both of you looked at eachother for a moment, neither of you daring to address the commitment that had slipped from your lips so easily. You took a shuddering breath, finding something to distract yourself as you looked down at your hands as you finished buttoning your shirt. The loss of the view of your skin made her nearly tell you to take it off again, to let her look at you, to trace each one of your scars until hers faded away.
âIâm not obligated to tell you that I could produce a plethora of substances that would calm you down, ease any pain, or even numb you to the experience if you wanted me to. Hell, I could make you forget it if you asked me to.â You said gently, cuffing your sleeves absentmindedly. âOf course all of those would be illegal, but I could if you asked me.â You said, finally looking up and meeting her eyes. She was flushed, staring at you intensely.
Larissa could feel her heart pounding, she could feel the fear. She couldnât keep you, but she might be able to have you for the night. You were strong, powerful, you controlled the world around you, brought people to their knees. She wanted that power, she wanted to feel powerful, she wanted the control back. She needed it.
âMake me forget.â She said, and you raised your brows. For a woman so obsessed with control, that was the last thing you would have thought sheâd choose.
âNot would I would have thought youâd ask for.â You hummed, rolling up your sleeves, and she crawled to the end of the bed, sitting back on her knees. She placed her hands over your own, wrapping hers around your wrists, making you jump despite yourself when she touched you. It was dangerous, you knew that. Dangerous to let her touch you. You could hurt her, you could kill her even if you lost control, but as long as you were looking at her you could try.
âNot like that.â She whispered, and your eyes snapped to her. She couldnât mean⌠She herself had seen what could happen, she would never.
âLarissa,â you breathed, and she just shook her head. Just for one night, she could have you just for one night. Thatâs all she wanted, just one night with you, like you were hers. She pulled you closer gently, and you followed, stepping to the edge of the bed, inches from her.
âI donât want your drugs,â she whispered, leaning in a little. Your breath hitched as her lips brushed your ear, leaning in even closer. She felt like she was spiraling, and you, you were steady, you were powerful. She wanted that, she needed it. âI want you to make me forget.â She breathed, and you shuddered.
âLarissa,â you repeated and she pulled your hands onto her hips, wrapping her arms around you.
âPlease?â She whispered, and you stared at her for a moment. It was just her, you reminded yourself. You had said you would do anything, and you wanted her, you ached with how much you wanted her, but the danger was always there. You looked into her eyes. She was desperate, she needed you to let her have this, she realized.
You sighed, closing your eyes for a moment and taking a deep breath before you relented.
You followed her up onto the bed, allowing her to pull you closer by the collar. You stared into her eyes as she looked over your body. Her hands went to your collar, slowly unbuttoning the shirt there. You knew what she was doing, she wanted control, she felt out of control, this would help. You just prayed she wouldnât take your heart with everything everything else you would willingly give her.
You straddled her lap and she nodded, instantly leaning in and kissing at your neck. Your breath hitched the second her lips met you, and she moaned. You did taste good, so good. You shuddered as she licked a stripe up your neck.
âFuck,â you breathed, and she smiled against you, you wanted her and she knew it, you liked what she was doing. It felt so good, so good to be wanted, to be the only one able to have you like this, to look at you like this. âC- carful,â you stuttered, and she chuckled against you.
âI will be,â she smiled as she unbuttoned the rest of your shirt, swallowing as she took you in so close to her. She could feel the heat of your skin, the way you reacted to her. She kissed where your neck met your shoulder, and you whimpered, your arms wrapping around her head and shoulders. God, your skin around her was everything, the way you just gave to her as if she was a goddess amongst men.
Your hand wound into her still damp hair, and she moaned into you, sucking a slight mark into you. Would you stop her? Would you push her away and run? She knew she was pushing you, she wanted to push you, she wanted to feel powerful, in control. Your hand tightened in her hair, your thighs tensing as she did. She reveled in the power, power you gave to her so easily. She turned you around, laying you down on the bed and leaning over you, your legs wrapping around her hips. Her hands went to your ribs, tracing over the scar on your side. Your breath hitched, and she smirked against you.
âSensitive?â She teased you, and you swallowed. You were, yes, but more than that you were just so unused to touch, to any touch, let alone touch so intimate and gentle. It sent shockwaves through your as you arched slightly into her hands.
âSomething like that,â you breathed, and she chuckled. She went back to your neck, kissing the mark she had given you before starting to kiss her way down, her lips and teeth dragging down until she reached the top of your bra. You moaned as she bit down lightly on the top of your breast, arching into her as your hands pulled at her.
âFuck, you are.â She breathed, kissing over the edge of the lace covering your chest. You groaned at the vulgarity, she didnât curse, almost ever, and the utterance slipping past her lips had you flushing. She brought her hands to your chest, grabbing you as her lips continued kissing over the edge of the lace. âTake it off?â She asked you, and you exhaled in releif.
She asked.
She may be using you, but at least she asked. You sighed as your eyes fluttered closer, a slight smile on your face. You could do this, for her, you could do this.
You nodded, arching up and allowing her to reach behind you. She unclasped it, easing the straps off your shoulders before pulling it off of you. You inhaled shakily, looking to her eyes for any sort of reaction. You knew you were attractive, but this woman had your heart pounding, every insecurity you had spent years working over flooding back as her ice blue eyes took you in.
âGood god.â She breathed, her lips instantly meeting your skin. Her eyes looked up to your as she sucked her nipple into your mouth, making you gasp, your hands gripping onto her shoulders.
âAh- Larissa,â you whimpered, and she groaned at the sound of her name on your lips. The power she had, that she could reduce someone as strong as you to this in a matter of minutes. She drug her teeth over you, and you moaned, arching up into her as you felt heat settle between your legs. You didnât know how far you could go, how much you could give her, but you could certainly feel how far you wanted to.
âMmm, beautiful.â She murmured, and you gasped as she nipped at the bottom of your breast.
âFuck!â You hissed, and she smiled.
âSo sensitive, you really do crave touch, donât you, sweetheart?â She teased you, and you swallowed, your head spinning. You nodded dumbly, she had you, she had you irrevocably needy, desperate, nearly crying out for her. âOh poor darling,â she breathed, âtell me, how long has it been?â She teased you, and you groaned, pulling her up by the chin and slamming your lips into hers. Her breath hitched, kissing you roughly before she grabbed your hands, pinning them above your head. You jumped, your heart startling as you stared at her.
âLarissa, I-â you said shakily, and her hands softened around your wrists, her fingers stroking over yours gently. You breathed in slowly, closing your eyes for a moment, just feeling her above you. It was alright, it was Larissa. You needed to give this to her, you could give this to her. You nodded, and she pulled you against her again. Fuck, she was strong.
âIâm in control, sweetheart.â She whispered against your lips, and you were helpless to do anything other than nod.
âYes,â you breathed, and she nodded.
âThatâs right.â She breathed, her throat closing up a bit. She was in control, she reminded herself. You were under her, pinned, panting desperately, not asking anything of her, just giving willingly as she took.
But you werenât hers.
You werenât hers and this wasnât right. She was using you. She was using you and she knew it. Guilt flooded her as she looked at you, spread out underneath her. You were panting, flushed. She looked up, your blackened fingers pinned beneath her hands. She was pinning you down. She was pinning you down and taking, taking without asking, demanding, she felt sick, what was she doing? Why did it hurt, why did she do this, why did she-
âLarissa,â your voice was soft, a comfort, pulling her out of her head. âAlright, thatâs enough.â You whispered, and she shook her head, fighting back the panic in her own mind.
âNo, no I can do this, I- I can, I can make you feel good, I promise, I-â she started to panic. You were going to leave. She had done something wrong and now you were going to leave, just like everyone else. Just like your sister.
âLarissa, stop.â You said, and her eyes snapped to yours. âYouâre crying, stop, let my hands go.â You swallowed, you didnât know if it was something that you did or something that happened in her mind, but you knew that it was enough. Her hands released yours, and she sat up, turning away from you.
âIâm sorry.â She whispered, and you sat up, grabbing your shirt and pulling your arms through.
âLarissa, look at me.â You said, and she shook her head, wrapping her arms around herself.
âNo, I- I used you, I wanted control, and I- I just took and-â she was panicking, you would never talk to her again, she might as well shut out everything she felt now.
âDid I tell you to stop?â You asked her, and she quieted for a moment. âLarissa, did I tell you to stop?â You asked again, and she swallowed, shaking her head. You sighed, your heart saddening for the woman. Someone had hurt her. Your sister had hurt her, her parents had hurt her, and it broke your heart. âI am perfectly capable of stopping you, but thatâs not what I did, is it?â You asked her. She still stayed silent. âI know.â You sighed. âI know what youâre feeling right now and I knew what you were doing.â You said, and finally she turned to you.
âThen why didnât you stop me?â She asked you, and you swallowed.
âBecause I wanted to stay.â You admitted, your throat tight. She furrowed her brows. âGod, I just wanted to stay, I wanted to help you- I- I still do.â You whispered, your heart dangerously close to the surface. You should do this. You shouldnât tell her these things, you certainly shouldnât when she was already on the edge.
âYou wanted to stay? Why would you want to stay?â She asked, and you shook your head. She turned to you, and your heart broke even further as you saw her red-rimmed eyes. She swallowed, looking at you in desperation. âI wasnât, I didnât even do anything, I- why would you want to stay! I canât even touch you properly!â She hissed, and your eyes went wide.
âLarissa,â you shook your head, and she just cringed, her jaw clenching.
âNo, no Iâve done this before, Iâm not- I know how this works. You feel guilty, youâll stay until you get what you want, then youâll go.â She said, and you swallowed. âThey always go. She always goes, you will go.â She choked through her anger and pain. That wasnât you. She knew that wasnât you. You reeled back as you realized exactly what she was saying.
âLarissa, I-â you warned, but she just shook her head.
âYouâll get tired of me, or youâll get what you want, youâll be like her, youâll be just like Morticia, and youâll go and-â
âFuck you.â You gritted, and she stopped. She looked at you again. She didnât just look at you, she really looked. There were tears in your eyes, your arms were wrapped around yourself protectively. She had said something wrong, something very, very wrong. She had just compared you to the woman who had drugged her into passive submission and denied her feelings for years. The woman you had been compared to your entire life. Yet up until now, never by her.
âI am not my sister.â You spat at her. You swallowed, fighting back the tears that threatened to come. âI- I came in here for you, not for my own fucking sake!â You yelled, standing and backing up. You got off the bed, clutching your shirt around yourself. âI would have stayed.â You said, your voice quieting. âI would have stayed no matter what you asked me to do.â You swallowed, and her eyes went wide.
Yes, you would have. And she knew it. She knew from the moment you helped her into her room that you would do anything she asked. You would stay until she felt in control again. She didnât have to take it from you, you had given it freely.
âI- Iâm sorry.â She breathed, and you nodded.
âYeah.â You replied, biting back a much cruller retort.
âOphelia, I-â she started, and you shook your head, backing up.
âNext time you want to fuck my sister, call her, donât expect me to be her.â You gritted, walking towards the door. Larissa panicked.
âWait, Ophelia- wait, I-â she tried, but your mind was already made up.
âAnd six years.â You said, glaring at her. It was pain, she realized, pain was marring your face, not hatred. âSix years since someone touched me like that.â You spat, slamming the door on your way out.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 12 - Visions of You
(You comfort Larissa, the gentleness of you thoroughly surprising her. When she gets a glimpse into your past, as well as what you have seen, how you can be so gentle shocks her. When Wednesday needs you, she is left completely amazed at what you will give, if you have to, for those you care about.)
WARNING: SMUT/TRAUMA/MENTIONED ASSAULT/DESCRIPTIONS OF VIOLENCE/ATTEMPTED ASSAULT/SLIGHT GORE
She felt like she had been crying for hours.
For hours she had done nothing but lay in your arms after you took her back to her room, you holding her close as she felt like her very soul was pouring from her body. You hushed her, letting her hair down and combing your fingers through it.
You stayed calm, your heart breaking for the woman as the storm inside of her raged and swirled. You had been where she was, and you had helped many others through it, but never like this. Never had you offered up your own heart like this. It was never intimate in the way this was. Those were children, and she was, she was everything.
If she was anyone else you would be certain she was going to loose control of her ability and go into a shape shifting blitz. It wasnât anyone else though, it was Larissa Weems, the woman who had eased your pain for years without even knowing you existed. It was enough to nearly break you.
Yet she had held you for so long, kept you warm and safe while you were healing, and you would rip anyone apart who attempted to keep you from doing the same.
She had cried herself into silence, no sound coming from her as she just took slow, almost shocked breaths. You knew what it was, you had worked with children who had been through similar things time after time, not to mention experiencing it yourself when you were young. You knew the release that came once they allowed themselves to cry. You knew what it felt like to cry until it felt as if your very soul had been drained from your body. Just as you knew the numbness that followed it.
âHow do you do it?â She whispered, and for the first time, the great woman sounded, weak. You felt your throat close up at the realization, anger flooding you as you thought of the man, of the people who had made her feel this way.
âIt depends,â you answered slowly. âI have tried many different things, but the only thing that has worked is riding it until it passed.â You said softly, and she stared up at the ceiling, still laying half on top of you. You were careful, the high neck of your sweater and long sleeves meaning she would never come in contact with your actual skin, even as your hands traced slow patterns over her clothed back.
She shuddered at the touch, it was almost disconcerting how gentle you could be. How you could hold her with almost no thought. Her mind was numb, but her body felt a sense of familiarity, safety even, at your touch.
âYou must think me pathetic.â She sighed. âWith everything you have been through and somehow I am the one sobbing like a child.â She rasped, and you took her by the jaw, startling her when you forced her to look at you. Your blackened fingers were tender, gentle, yet they held a firmness reflecting the conviction she found in your eyes. The normally peaceful gray hard as stone with what felt like powerful truth.
âYou were a child. You were hurt, as a child. No child deserves that.â You said strongly. âNo child, no matter what, deserves what you went through.â You breathed. âI donât know the specifics, Iâve only seen flashes, but I have felt what you felt and no one, no one deserves that. Certainly not you.â You said with such power, despite the shake in your voice. It felt as if even your own voice, the voice that she so adored, couldnât contain your meaning. âDo not compare pain, Larissa, it only adds to it.â You said softly, before blinking away your own tears, brushing back a strand of her hair and turning your own face towards the ceiling to hide the intense ache for her you had at the small gesture. You were silent for a moment, taking a deep breath as you centered yourself, trying to ignore the pleasant weight of her against you. âI think you are incredibly strong.â You breathed. âAnd far too hard on yourself.â You added, and the woman swallowed.
âI have to be.â She replied, and you shook your head.
âNot like that.â You whispered.
She remained silent, tentatively running her hand over the collar of your sweater. You flinched back a bit, and she pulled back instantly, fear flooding her. She made you uncomfortable. Again. Here you were putting aside all of your own feelings, your own issues, for her, and she had pushed it too far.
âIâm sorry,â She rasped, and you looked to her sadly, taking her hand in yours. You hated yourself for it. You hated yourself for how terrified you were of something you wanted so badly. Her eyes widened when you gently rubbed your blackened thumb over the palm of her hand, giving her a light squeeze before letting go.
âDo not apologize for that, darling, that is my own history, not you.â You said softly, and she swallowed, blushing and nodding a bit. She knew how you spoke. She was used to how you spoke to others, the pet names and tender words that could slip from your lips were utterly enchanting, but directed at her, directed at her they made her heart do summersaults in her chest. A simple âdarlingâ had her blushing as if nothing could be sweeter. She pulled away, and you hummed as she sat up, standing quickly and trying to gain control of herself.
âThat was highly inappropriate.â She breathed, and you tilted your head, raising your brows. You were trying your best to fight off your own reaction, the second she pulled away you could feel yourself chase after her, and it terrified you. It terrified you how much you wanted her. You felt your heart sink.
âTouching me? Iâve already told you I⌠I like it.â You hummed, and she took a deep breath in, shaking her head. She was ignoring your words, not even daring to think about the meaning let alone the rarity of you enjoying her touch. She tried to rationalize it, she knew that you didnât touch anyone, of course she would feel nice, she was the only one you let close.
âNo, I- well yes, however- It is not your job to console a grown woman crying over what happened to her as a child.â She breathed, shaking her head in distain.
You sat up on the bed, staring at her for a moment. She had shut herself down so quickly, guilt and shame flooding her the second she pulled away. It broke your heart for the woman. There had been a time when you did that as well. When you would rather pretend that nothing had ever happened, as you punished yourself for all of it.
âHave you ever cried over it before?â You asked her, and she looked to you strangely. You could practically see the disgust she felt at the idea. The weakness of crying, she would never, she could never. Her mother had told her countless times, girls donât cry, they are to remain silent.
âI donât see what that has to do with anything.â She said quickly, and you hummed, staring out the window for a moment. You knew that the anger wasnât directed at you. She felt exposed, vulnerable. If she needed to lash out at you, then so be it. She wouldnât be the first. The strongest, perhaps, but not the first.
âYou cannot grow from the child you lost until you mourn her.â You whispered, your voice far away for a moment. Larissa was about to argue when she saw the look on your face. It was distant, as if you were looking at something that was no longer there. A shadow, or a ghost of some kind. She swallowed, she could see her for a moment, the young girl you once were, chained to a bed and starved, hair matted to your head. She could see the pain that girl had been through, but just as quickly as it came, it was gone. You blinked, your face shifting back, and it was over. You looked to her, the light finally returning to your eyes as you blinked a few times, snapping yourself out of it.
âAnd where, where did you learn that, Miss Florere?â She asked you, and you hummed, tilting your head for a moment and thinking. A woman named Georgiana had taught you that. A doctor, right after you had been broken out of Newflight, a woman who would later hire you for a small operation that you would transform into what it was today. Hope. You smiled briefly at her memory, of the woman trying desperately to stitch you up, deep in the woods outside of the institution you were once trapped in, as you shivered from the cold and the hunger engrained so deep in your body she almost thought the next gust of wind would blow your soul from this plane.
âA doctor in the woods we were camping in after I broke out.â You smirked, and Larissaâs eyes widened.
âBroke- Broke out!â She exclaimed, and you chuckled, swinging your legs and hopping off the bed.
âAt the time it was breaking out or my life, can you blame me?â You asked her, looking to her carefully. She inhaled slowly, unsure.
âI cannot, I- I donât. But you must know hearing a woman I hired broke out of an institution is not exactly calming.â She sighed, and you shook your head.
âOh, Miss Weems, if you think that is the maddest thing Iâve done, then you are far more innocent then you appear.â You chuckled, and she swallowed. There was a twinkle in your eye, one that made the flush return as she felt her pulse quicken slightly. She didnât know how you did it. How the look of slight mischief and madness on you would be more than concerning on anyone else, but when you did it, it made her heart flutter. She swallowed, steeling herself. Two could play that game.
âI appear as something else to you?â She challenged, taking a step closer. You raised your brows. You did your best to ignore the way her challenge lit a fire in you, the way it had you aching to kiss her again, to show her exactly what you thought of her. Memories of visions flashed in your mind, her under you, writhing and gasping as your tongue worked for hours upon hours buried between her legs or tracing every inch of her skin.
âI think you know what you appear as to me.â You breathed, and she narrowed her eyes slightly. She inhaled sharply as red rosettes once again bloomed in your hair, creating a warm feeling inside of her, one that slowly settled deeper into her abdomen, making her shudder. âAre you alright?â You asked her concern in your voice as you stepped forward, dropping the game for a moment given what had just happened. The woman glared at you. It was infuriating. She wanted you, and you were so gentle, so caring to her. It burned her.
âOh for fuckâs sake!â She hissed, walking towards you and grabbing your hand in an attempt to get you moving.
What happened, however, was your head snapped back, your eyes rolling skywards as your body gave out. Larissa panicked as she pulled you close, wrapping her arms around you before she too felt the pull. It was a vision, and a powerful one, only this time you werenât controlling it. She felt her consciousness shrink through her body, traveling down into her chest before crossing over into you through your entwined hands.
She never felt her body hit the floor.
What she did feel, however, was an intense feeling of lust as she opened her eyes in her bedroom, once again, only the walls almost seemed like they were painted in water color. It was night, as well, the fire in the room keeping it warm, however the heat she could feel was not remotely caused by that. She knew she could feel similar to what you felt during your visions, but this, this was an intensity she had yet to experience. Heat flooded her body, heat that nearly brought her to her knees. She gasped as she felt wetness bloom between her legs, nervously pressing them together in an attempt to stop whatever it was that had her this aroused.
âOhhh, fuck Larissa!â You hissed, and her eyes snapped in utter shock to the bed, seeing you laid out on it. She turned a shade of red she didnât even know was possible as she watched herself bury her head between your thighs, your fingers clawing at the sheets as you panted. She felt her heart nearly stop. You were writhing under her, your head thrown back as you encouraged her breathlessly.
âFuck, youâre such a good girl for me, donât stop, darling,â You breathed, and she watched as the vision version of herself moaned, wrapping her hands around your thighs and pulling you into her further. You laughed breathlessly, a sound that quickly devolved into a moan as your face contorted in pure sin as you were grinding against her face, chasing some sort of relief from the building tension. âOh we liked that, did we?â You panted, and she watched herself moan and nod into you, her hands dragging over your exposed ass and thighs.
Larissa gaped, she knew you were gorgeous, she had seen you naked when she changed you, she had held you in her bed throughout the night, but the way you writhed in the firelight put it to shame, it stole her breath away and caused a rapidly building need between her thighs. A need that was all her own. She could feel your arousal, she could feel your absolute need for her, yet watching you, watching you like this, it woke a hunger in her she had never felt. She had no idea how you could see things like this and hold a conversation with her, how you could be so gentle when you knew this is what it felt like to be with her.
âThatâs a good girl Larissa, just like that, baby,â you breathed, and both the vision and the headmistress moaned in tandem. She squeezed her thighs together, she couldnât do this, she didnât know how you could see things like this and then pretend to be fine. She didnât think she could ever look at you without this engrained into her mind. The way the firelight reflected off your skin, the way you whispered her name like a prayer, your hands searching for leverage in the sheets as she gave you nearly more than you could take.
Another moan fell from your lips and Larissa gritted her teeth, she knew she should look away, that it wasnât fair for her to see this, but she couldnât remove her eyes from your writhing body. You were powerful, she realized. She had seen it before, known it before, but the way the muscles in your thighs tensed, the way your back arched when the vision of her hit a certain spot. This was power. And it was thrilling.
âYes darling, right there- oh god- fuck youâre doing so good for me Larissa,â you nearly whimpered, and she bit her lip so hard she thought she may draw blood.
It felt so good, she knew you were speaking to her, to a different version of her, but the sweet praise dripping from your lips as she pushed you closer and closer to the edge made her nearly whimper in need.
âJust like that darling, just like that, ohhhh fuck I love your tongue,â you whimpered, and she gasped at you still. You rolled your hips into her, seemingly unable to stop yourself. âGod youâre so good for me, so perfect- fuck! So fucking beautiful, I- I need you,â you whispered, and she watched as the vision of her brought her hand to the apex of your thighs, teasing you for a moment. âYes! Please darling, I need you, I need you to fuck me, please, please I need you~â you rushed, and Larissa watched as you practically screamed when the vision of her thrust her fingers into you, making you arch off the bed.
Then the vision seemed to flicker for a moment. It almost got dark, the water-color walls shifting to something much darker, much colder for a second before shifting back.
You arched against her, crying out as she kissed your body while her fingers were buried inside you, she couldnât see exactly what she was doing, but from the way you bent off the bed, she was doing well, incredibly well. The wild spark that always inhabited your eyes had become a burning flame with the intensity of the sun and stars itself.
âFuck, Larissa, love, my darling, please, please donât stop!â You begged, and she could feel herself nearly go mad at your words. You called her so many sweet things, begging her not to stop, begging her to keep touching you. Touching you. She was touching you, and she had never seen you look like you wanted anything more. âHere, please, come here,â you panted, and she watched as the vision of herself climbed up your body, her fingers still fucking into you as you pulled her down for a kiss that looked so desperate and feral Larissa felt herself clench around nothing. Fire burned through her veins as she watched herself fuck you, as she watched you claw at her as you got closer and closer to the edge. You leaned up, grabbing her by the hair and pulling her close to whisper against her lips. Larissa felt her breath stop as she watched, the air caught in her lungs. âBe a good girl and make me come like only you can.â You whispered against her lips. Larissa felt herself twitch, her underwear getting impossibly wetter as she watched the vision of her nearly growl before pushing you back down and fucking you into oblivion.
The vision flickered again, to a dark room with another bed in it, only this one was filthy, the fluorescent light flickering in the darkened room, she thought she heard a sob before it flickered back to you nearly screaming in pleasure, crying out her name as you crashed over the edge.
âYes, all yours love, all yours,â you nearly screamed, your hands tightening around her as you began to come undone on her fingers.
She didnât even have time to register the moment before the room changed again. Larissa gasped in utter horror at what she saw. You were on the bed still, but you were younger, much younger. No older than your niece was now, and you were beaten worse than she had ever seen. You cried as a thin slip clung to your skin, blood streaked across it and dripping from your nose and lips, where they had been split open.
You had a black eye, and your face was covered in bruises across your cheeks. You had your equally bruised arms wrapped around yourself, holding your legs tight and closed, but she could see the stains on the nightgown. Some of it was blood and grime, but some made her physically ill to imagine what it could be.
You were sobbing, your small, incredibly frail looking body shaking as you stared at something across the room from you. Larissa heard a groan from behind her, and she shuddered.
Fear, pure, all encapsulating, paralyzing fear gripped her, yet it almost felt like there was a force around her heart, keeping it from truly reaching her. It felt like you. Even now, even like this, you were protecting her. You may not be in control, but your instinct was strong enough to shield her from as much as you could.
She heard a sickening cough, and turned around slowly, painfully slowly.
She could never have been prepared for what she saw.
Four men were hanging from a mass of vines, climbing up the walls and ceiling until they could support the weight of four grown men. Three of them had their pants by their ankles, only the mass of vines had seemingly ripped off the appendages that were once there.
One was hanging by the arm, his head bent back at a sickening angle, a vine stuffed down his throat so far that he couldnât breathe, Larissa could see it bulging inside his abdomen, it had crushed him from the inside out. The second man was hanging by his throat, his neck broken from the force, a vine crushing his windpipe until blood was leaking from his eyes, ears, and nose from the pressure. The third man was trapped against the wall, his entire body smashed into it and covered with the green mass. He was flatter than any human should ever be.
The fourth man, however, was still alive.
Larissa watched in horror as he cut himself down with a knife he seemingly had on him. He was bleeding from where his temple must have bashed into the wall, his arm broken, and his leg twisted at an odd angle as he limped over you.
âYouâre going to pay for that you little bitch!â The man spat, blood dripping from his face as you just sat there, curled up in a ball rocking yourself back and forth. Larissa couldnât move, she wanted to stop him, wanted to grab him and finish the job for the child version of you.
Rage ripped through her like nothing she had ever felt. How dare he, how dare he touch a child like that! How dare he touch you like that! His good arm wrapped around your ankle, pulling you to the edge of the bed and locking your legs into the restraints there.
The scream you let out when the man touched you was something Larissa would never forget.
The room flickered again, and Larissa gasped as she found herself back in her room, only horror seized her once again as she realized why. You were still on the bed, still crying out her name as you came, but the moment you lost control of yourself she watched as vines erupted from you, pushing the vision of herself back and across the room, pinning her to the wall.
She gasped as she heard the sickening crack of bone, heard herself cry out and clutch her arm before the vines seemed to almost shrivel in on themselves, dropping her and making her slump to the floor. You were up and across the room faster than anyone should be able to move, your legs still wobbly and your head still spinning as your cheeks remained flushed.
You looked to her in utter horror. This time, she felt guilt pressing up against her. Your shield of protection around her was still there, but the sea of guilt that flooded her took her breath away, nearly dropping her to her knees.
âIâm sorry, Iâm so sorry, fuck, Iâm so sorry!â You sobbed, and she watched you fall to your knees in front of the vision of her, immediately running your bloody hands over her, the droplets from where the vines had detached smearing over her skin as you frantically checked for harm. You forced her dazed eyes to look at you, cupping her jaw to hold her head up.
âWh- what was- Ophelia did you- how could you?â She watched the vision rasp, and she could physically feel your heart shatter.
It all went black, she felt herself practically slam back into her body, gasping for air as she opened her eyes, once again in the world of the living.
You pulled away, running to her bathroom where she could hear you wretch into the toilet. She sat on the floor, numb and shaking as she heard you run the water, gasping for air as you emptied your stomach.
Her ears were ringing, she had just seen you, she had seen you gorgeous, absolutely sinfully enchanting, then so hurt the sound of your scream still echoed in her ears. And then. Then she had watched you loose control, throw her back as your body panicked, trying to protect itself from the only kind of touch it knew. She couldnât see anything through the tears clouding her eyes, she couldnât hear over your broken scream still echoing in her ears.
â-saâ she heard the tail end of something, and looked up confused. âLarissa,â she heard your voice call again, and the world seemed to snap back into focus as she looked at your face, you were kneeling in front of her. She was sitting on the floor, leaning against the end of her bed, as you kneeled in front of her. âAre you alright?â You husked, your voice broken and tight with tears. The horror in her eyes when she looked at you made you want to cry. You wanted to rip your heart out.
She was looking at you scared. You had never wanted her to look at you that way. Many had, but up until now, not her. You choked back a sob as you repeated your question.
âAre you alright?â You nearly cried, and she just blinked at you, tears blooming in her bright blue eyes.
âTell me that wasnât real.â She breathed, and you closed your eyes for a moment, trying to steady yourself. Your hands were shaking, she realized. You must have had a pair of gloves on you, because she realized they were once again back on your hands, taking the little bit of contact she had with your skin away from her. You felt yourself shake as you tried not to cry, looking back up at her as you bit your lip for a moment.
âThe- the one with the both, the both of us, that was not real.â You swallowed, and she shook her head.
âNo,â she whimpered, and you felt tears streak down your own face. You panicked. Your breath was stolen as you panicked, you couldnât think, couldnât breathe, you just needed to reassure her. âIâm so sorry, I would never- Larissa, I would never hurt you like that, please believe me, please- Iâm so sorry- itâs just a vision, they rarely come true, please, please I-â you were cut off as she grabbed you, pulling you into her until you fell forward, straddling her lap and laying against her chest. You froze. She should be scared, terrified, not-
âPlease tell me they didnât do that to you?â She whimpered, and you felt your own throat close up. She was holding you. She had just seen what you could do, and she was holding you. Choosing to touch you. Her hands were careful, never going to your actual skin, staying on the fabric covering you, but she was holding you, clutching onto you almost. Your heart nearly stopped.
âI- I was younger, I didnât have full control of my ability, I didnât mean to kill them-â you stuttered, only to be cut off by her harsh sob. Her arms wrapped further around you, pulling you close. Your words died in your throat as you choked on emotion. She was holding you. Just like she had before, even after seeing you- hurt her. âLarissa,â you swallowed, and she just shook her head, pulling you in until you fully straddled her, tucking your head into the crook of her neck, wrapping your own arms around her. You shuddered, the bare skin of your face just a breath away from her neck as you rested on her shoulder. It was so close, you were terrified. You were still tense, but you gave her the touch she was asking you for. She wrapped her arms around your waist, pulling you close to her and just holding on for dear life.
âNo one, will ever, touch you like that again, do you understand me?â She husked, her voice suddenly so strong and full of rage that it struck you.
âI-â you stuttered, and her hands gripped you a bit harder.
âNo one.â She repeated, and you just nodded, your face staining with red as she gripped onto you. Her hands slipped around you further, pulling you in protectively, and you bit back a sob.
You were the protector, you had been your entire life. The idea of someone, protecting, you, it made you feel smaller than you had ever felt. Yet it also stirred something else in you. A feeling suspiciously close to one you had banned yourself from. Saftey.
Her hands wrapped around you until one finger grazed the skin of your neck, making you jerk back as you felt her skin against yours. She immediately let you go, and you scrambled off of her, panting as you turned profusely red. You liked it. You didnât just like it, you needed it. Yet she had just seen what a second of you loosing control could do, and that was far from the worst of your damage. You panted as you touched where her finger had grazed you, it made you shiver, made your body ache to give in to her.
âIâm sorry, I didnât-â she began, but you just shook your head, trying to catch your breath as you stared a hole into the floor.
âDonât you dare apologize for making me feel that way.â You rasped, and her eyes widened as she looked at your hair. It was a smattering of red and white flowers that bloomed across the top of your head this time, and a blush that stained your cheeks and neck so deeply she thought you may just be about to faint. She took a deep breath, sitting up and seeming to steel herself.
âDo you often have, visions, like that?â She asked you, and you took a deep breath in. You knew what she was asking, youâd be a fool not to, but you would refuse to admit it for as long as possible.
âIn what way?â You asked her, despite knowing full well what she meant.
âI want to know how many times you have seen me in explicit situations.â She said firmly, and you cringed.
You were silent for a moment. The first time you had ever seen that was when you had a vision of her kissing your sister. It thankfully didnât go any further than that when you were young, however it was clear that was what it was. As you grew, you would occasionally have visions of her. You knew you would meet her someday, but until Wednesday had needed you, you never took it upon yourself to come to her. You had seen her kissing you, you had seen you pleasuring her in ways that would make a sailor blush, but they didnât start coming to you with any frequency until you arrived at Nevermore. Until you met her. After that, after that they plagued you with reckless abandon. Haunting you until your skin burned and your body ached for her.
âI donât know.â You admitted. She stared at you for a moment, narrowing her eyes. âItâs not as if I try to have them, they just- oh god they just happen!â You tried to defend yourself, panicking. âAnd- and Iâm sorry that they do, I know how much of an invasion it is but itâs just- mmph!â You weâre cut off when the taller woman leaned over and pulled you to her again, kissing you suddenly.
You froze for a moment before giving in, putting your arms up and just allowing the woman to lead you. You knew you were a force of nature, but she made everything feel as if it was whirling around you into oblivion. You loved it. You whimpered against her, knowing you should pull away but desperately needing more. You needed her.
âDo you like them?â She whispered against your lips, and you gasped for air, your mind spinning.
âI- I feel guilty that I see them without your permission.â You swallowed, and she kissed you again, her arms around your waist holding you up as her lips melded to yours again. She was careful, she didnât go farther, she didnât push you. She didnât seek out any more skin then your lips. Your lips, however, were completely at her mercy. You felt your body shaking as she kissed you, desperate for what you couldnât have.
âBut do you like them?â She husked, and you just stared up at her dumbly. You couldnât. Not now. It was too much. You could snap at any moment, you were always volitile after visions like that, you knew it, you knew you could hurt her, or worse, much, much worse.
âI- I canât touch you, not now.â You whimpered, pulling away and panting as you rested your head on the covered part of her shoulder. You couldnât do it. You couldnât risk hurting her. She paused. You were literally shaking with restraint, she could feel it. Yet her own fear flooded her anyway.
âDo you not want-â she whispered, and you raised your gloved hand, pulling back and turning her to look at you again.
âI want you more than I have ever wanted anyone, Larissa.â You confessed, and her eyes went wide, her jaw slackening into your hand. âBut that does not change what I am,â you whispered, your face contorting in pain for a moment. You were scared, she realized. Scared of hurting her, of trusting yourself to trust her. She was about to reply when the door burst open.
You snapped back from her, nearly falling on your back as you looked at the door. Enid was carrying Wednesday. Enid was CARRYING Wednesday.
You were up and moving faster than should have been possible, you took the girl from Enidâs arms, gently laying her on your lap as you sat on the floor.
âI- I donât know what happened! She was fine, and then she touched my hand and she just- she just!â Enid panicked, and you hushed her as you focused on your niece, your movements calm and practiced. You had done this before, Larissa realized.
âI need you to calm down Miss Sinclair, she will be fine.â You replied quickly. The girl was shaking in your arms, it almost looked as if she was seizing.
âThis isnât fine! How do you know-â the girl cried, but you shut her up with a look.
âI know because it has happened to me.â You said darkly, and the girl froze, staring for a moment. Her mind seemed to catch up to her and she closed the door, sitting next to you on the floor. Larissa was still across from you, looking to you worriedly.
âOphelia, is she-â the woman began, but you just shook your head, beginning to rock the girl gently in your lap as you held her. She was groaning out and crying even trapped in the vision, tears streaming down her face as her jaw clenched. Then you did something neither blonde expected. You began to recite something.
âIf I cling to you in times of darkness, I beg you to let me go. If I walk to you in tattered likeness, I will reap just what I sow. I have seen the ocean deep my dear, and it still compares not to this. For if you come too close my love, I will pull you to the abyss.â You hummed, and Larissaâs heart nearly stopped. She knew that poem, she had heard it before, yet she couldnât place it. âBreathe Wednesday, it will end, I promise you it will end.â You whispered, and the girl continued shaking. You just hushed her, holding her close.
Her eyes snapped open and she screamed, surging forward in a desperate attempt to stop whatever she saw.
âNo! Please! I didnât mean it!â She screamed, and your arms wrapped around the girl, pulling her back and into you before she could rush forward to hurt herself or someone else. She panted, doubling over as the sobs began, her hands clawing into your arms for support.
âItâs me Wednesday, it was a vision, nothing else, it wasnât real, it doesnât mean it will come to pass.â You said softly. âWhat you see is not assured.â You hummed to her, and she sobbed, shaking her head as her nails dug in tighter. Larissa and Enid stared at the two of you in shock, whatever just happened, if it was enough to scare Wednesday, which was terrifying in and of itself.
âI- Iâm going to be sick,â she panted, and you quickly helped her up, rushing her to the bathroom and closing the door before you turned on the sink.
Both Larissa and Enid stared in shock. Larissa had seen you do that before, the getting Ill after a vision, yet seeing it happen to Wednesday was heartbreaking in a different way. You had been dealing with this since you were a child, she realized. The difference was you didnât have anyone to help you.
Nothing happened for a moment, then you emerged from the bathroom, holding the girl on your hips as she clung to you. Larissa knew you were strong, perhaps that was one of the manifestations of your ability, but seeing you move your niece with such ease still surprised her. You sat the girl down, sitting with her on the floor. She laid down further, staring at the ceiling.
âI killed her.â She whispered, and you removed a glove, taking the girlâs hand.
âIt wasnât real.â You told her, and still she stared blankly ahead.
âI killed her.â She repeated, and you sighed, running your hand over the girlâs face before returning to her hand again. You had taken your gloves off, Larissa realized. Your body knew well enough that Wednesday wouldnât harm you. It accepted her. It seemed that Wednesday was the only one you could touch with ease. Not even Morticia could touch you freely, and she⌠she didnât know where she stood.
âWho?â You asked, and the girl just shook her head. âWas it someone you love?â You sighed, and she blinked for a moment, tears building in her eyes. She nodded, and Larissa watched as you did everything you could to comfort the girl. She couldnât help but see the parallel. You had years to understand and deal with your visions. Wednesday, on the other hand, had only begun.
âHow often do you see them die?â She asked, and you took a deep breath, closing your eyes for a moment.
âIt depends on the person and the connection.â You answered. âThe deeper the connection, the more they occupy your mind, the more you will see.â You sighed tiredly, and Larissa felt her mouth go dry. You had admitted to having visions of her, often, and she knew you had used visions of her to calm yourself before, they were what Morticia gave you for comfort, after all, but to hear that, to hear that perhaps there was some sort of meaningful connection, beyond just stolen memories, it made her heart pick up despite the deep concern she was feeling.
âA friend.â Wednesday replied, and Enid stiffened. Wednesday flinched at the action and your suspicions were confirmed. The poor girl had watched herself kill her roommate.
âEnid, could you please get Wednesdayâs cello for me?â You asked the girl calmly. She furrowed her brows, but nodded. âAnd then, if you could, thereâs a smaller case in my room, it should be next to the wardrobe.â You said calmly, and the girl nodded again
âItâs- its another instrument?â She asked, and you just hummed, your eyes never leaving your niece. You were silent until Enid left the room, going to fetch what you had asked her to. The request confused Larissa, but she imagined it was in part to get her out of the room. You squeezed Wednesdayâs hand, beginning to answer her question as the girl stared blankly ahead, her face expressionless as always.
âOften enough, a few times a month, more if they are on my mind, more if I am in close proximity.â You answered, and Larissaâs heart broke for the both of you.
âHave you seen me die?â The girl asked, and you bit back a reaction. More times than either of you could count. You loved the girl, you practically treated her like your own, and as such, you would suffer for it. You would always suffer for it. Love had a price, a heavy one.
âYes.â You whispered, and she closed her eyes for a moment.
âHow did I die?â She asked you, and you took a deep breath in, trying to steady yourself. You wouldnât lie to the girl, nor would you hide the truth. It wouldnât help her. Larissa was left to just watch in shock as you tried to find the words. She didnât know why she was here, it seemed she always was when it came to the two of you, as if she had been thrust into your lives with no consideration for the privacy of either of you. She went to turn, to get up and move away, yet she was shocked as your free hand seemed to move reflexively. It settled on her knee, keeping her there almost without thought before it left, going back to your niece. Her eyes widened at the action.
You wanted her there.
âThe first time, was before you were born. I had a vision of your mother handing you to me. I crushed you with vines when your skin touched mine.â You answered, and she swallowed, her eyes staring blankly up once again. âI didnât hold you for three months after you were born.â You said, and Enid came back into the room, carrying both instrument cases. You didnât look away from your niece.
âWhat if you love them?â She asked, and your eyes closed slowly, a look of defeat crossing your face. Larissa looked to you torn. This, this is what love was for you. It was subjecting yourself to torture. It made sense now. You covered your hands to keep in your abilities, you covered your skin and kept to yourself to protect those around you. You pulled away to protect those you loved. She felt tears prick at her eyes at the realization.
âOften.â You whispered, and you watched as Wednesday tried to bite back a sob.
âIs it worth it?â She asked, and you just bit your lip, doing your very best not to look at the tall woman staring into your very soul, searching you for any sign of hope.
âIt depends on the person.â You breathed, and the four of you settled into silence for a moment. Then Wednesday cried. Your eyes snapped to her, pulling her up off the floor and into your arms without a moment of hesitation.
âI canât, I canât do it, I donât want it,â she whispered to you, and your heart broke as you nodded, holding her close and rocking her slightly. âI canât do it, I canât see them die, not everyone- not, not when they get me.â She breathed, her eyes going wide as she began to truly panic. âI saw myself kill her!â She cried, and you picked the girl up again as she seemed to hyperventilate. âI donât- not her- I donât want to kill her- auntie- auntie make it stop, please make it stop- I canât- make it stop!â She cried, and you just sat her up in a chair, grabbing her cello and putting it between her legs. She grabbed it absentmindedly, and Larissaâs eyes went wide.
âOphelia- you canât, is now really the time-â she hissed, and you just shook your head, placing the bow in her hand before opening the smaller case, your case, and pulling out a fiddle. She knew you were mad as a hatter, but this! You expected the girl to play music right now? Now!
You just looked at the girl, taking your own bow and sliding it over the strings in an almost tantalizing pattern. Larissa gaped at you, you had gone mad, this was it, you must have had a psychotic break watching the girl suffer through what you knew.
Yet Wednesday seemed to still as she heard the melody, her own hand gripping the bow slightly tighter.
âDonât think, just play, you know the song.â You continued, kneeling in front of her and playing something strange, but almost enchanting, and slowly, to the shock of Larissa and Enid, Wednesday began to play. The smile you cracked when she did could have lit up the sky. âThatâs it, there you go.â You hummed, taking a deep breath before you sang.
âAre you a fish inside a birdcage?â You sang gently, and both blondes watched in shock as Wednesday replied.
âMy mother used to sing me songs.â She whispered, and you smirked, she was changing the lyrics, but you were more than happy to do so.
âAnd with her beak she tries to soothe me, she makes me feel that I belong.â You hummed, and Wednesday only went further into the music, making Larissaâs jaw drop as you kept up with her effortlessly.
âShe has a wild imagination, and tells me things that must be true.â The girl sang, and you smiled back.
âLike thereâs a world where you can take flight, where you can freely move.â You replied.
âSo carry me, from these walls, mother of mine! Show me the world out side.â The two of you sang in unison, and you smiled as the girl seemed to breathe again, she could breathe when she focused on the music, the strings, the lyrics, any thing but what she had seen. âIt has to be true, Iâm counting on you, to be my wings and my eyes.â You sang together. You smiled as the girl began to play, really play. Her fingers danced over the strings with almost effortless grace and precision. It was mesmerizing, even to you, who had seen it.
âThatâs it, just play.â You said softly, and she nodded. âFocus on the music, let everything else fade away, play until your fingers bleed if you have to, just play.â You said, and Larissaâs breath hitched. She could hear something in it. Something broken and begging, you were begging the girl to be alright, to keep going until she was.
âIs this what you do?â Wednesday breathed over the music, and you nodded.
âWhen I can, that or I focus on someone else, someone, calm.â You hesitated, and Wednesday locked eyes with you. You clenched your jaw for a moment, you knew what she was doing, what she was going to do.
âI donât want to hurt you.â She rasped, and you just shook your head, your own fingers dancing over your own strings.
âDo it if you need to, I give you permission, hurt if you have to, just get out of your head.â You grimaced, and Larissa and Enid stared at you in shock as the girl began to glare, playing faster, playing harder. You kept up with little more than a breath. âBe cruel, Wednesday, you can be cruel to me if it takes away the pain.â You said, bracing yourself.
âAs you breathe into your silence,â she sang, looking to you desprately. She wanted something. She wanted to know that there was hope, that there was something beyond this pain. You would bear your heart to show the girl that there was more to life than pain.
âThereâs a voice that comforts me.â You replied. You both were changing the lyrics, speaking through them to eachother.
âShe will never understand you.â The girl sang, and it didnât take much to realize she was speaking about Larissa. Just like it didnât take much for her to realize it was Larissaâs voice that you had clung to throughout the years. Larissa realized this to, if the hitch of breath that she gave was any indication.
âYet she offers empathy.â You countered, and the girl played faster, her eyes narrowing. You hummed, rising to your knees outright to keep up, instead of sitting back on your heels.
âWings of feathers, tails and fin tips.â Wednesday almost sang to words painfully. It wasnât about you and Larissa. It was, in the sense that seeing you two interact gave her hope, yet as her eyes flitted from yours, to Larissaâs to Enidâs, it became abundantly clear that the girl was terrified of being too different from her beast friend. That the visions she had would keep her from ever being able to truly be close with her. âYou know they work so differently.â She shook her head, and you just smiled as gently as you could, despite the pain inside you.
âShe gave me more than I could ask for,â you sang. It meant something. It meant that despite everything. There were still things you could have. Still love, in some form, you could have. âIndistinguishability.â You finished, and the girl took a deep breath in. You werenât the same, you would never be the same as the others you surrounded yourself with. But you had learned, through the years, that pain is pain, and you had all been through it.
âSo carry me, through these walls, mother of mine! Show me the world outside,â you sang together, and the girl nodded, her eyes tearing up.
âIt has to be true,â she whispered. âIâm counting on you.â Her voice sounded strained, like she really was begging. You had made her start singing to regulate her breathing as playing regulated her mind, but as she calmed she was loosing her energy, and with that came the grief afterwards.
âTo be my wings and my eyes.â You finished for her, and the two of you continued to play, your music dancing together, creating a world of your own that you could focus on.
Larissa and Enid watched in amazement as the song eventually came to a crescendo, then an end, leaving the both of you panting and sitting in silence.
âI hate you.â Wednesday breathed, and you shut your eyes. Larissaâs breath hitched, she knew what the girl meant to you, that she was perhaps the only one who could hurt you with such a statement. âI hate you for giving this to me, for telling me that it would be ok!â She yelled, and you cringed. âHow dare you!â She yelled, laying her instrument to the side and standing up. Your arms fell too, until your fiddle and bow were in your hands, limp towards the floor and by your sides. âHow dare you give me hope?â She cried, sinking to her knees and collapsing into you, clutching onto you as she sobbed. You breathed in slowly, letting your own instrument fall and wrapping your arms around her as you sat back on the floor.
âHope is all we have, Wednesday. Hope is all we have.â You sighed, holding the girl and rubbing her back gently. Larissa and Enid watched in stunned silence as you held the girl in your arms, lifting her until you could encompass her fully as you turned to face them. âMusic, it helps. It can be something to focus on.â You explained, and both of them nodded. âAnything to focus on, really, there- there is a reason I used to spend days on end working.â You sighed, holding the girl.
âI can see where Wednesday gets her talent from.â Larissa breathed, and you just shook your head, holding the girl close.
âWe all need something.â You sighed, looking down at her as she stilled, just laying in your arms. âLetâs go, honey, you can stay with me.â You breathed, and she girl stood numbly with your help, you propping her up as the mental exhaustion took its toll. âEnid, I think sheâll stay in my room tonight, thank you for bringing her.â You breathed, and she nodded. âI- Iâll see you tomorrow, Larissa.â You said softly, your eyes glancing to the womanâs lips one last time before you left the room, leaving shock in your wake.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 11 - Sweet as Peaches
(Larissa is interrupted by Wednesday and brought into one of the most intimate settings she has ever seen you two in. One that ends with her nearly broken open.)
Larissa could barely sleep, she tossed and turned as she thought of you. It wasnât fair, she laid in her bed, her sheets now stained with your presence, with your scent, it was all too much. She wanted you there again. She knew she shouldnât. You had gotten what you needed, now you were with Wednesday, that was how it was supposed to be. You were with your family, and she was alone.
She managed to get maybe an hour of sleep in before she heard a knocking at her door. She groaned, staring at the ceiling for a moment and debating if it was really worth answering.
She looked at the clock, it was just after four in the morning, there was no reason for anyone to be awake.
Her heart faltered, unless something was wrong with you. She was out of her bed and ripping the door open before she knew what was going on, only to come face to face with a very unbothered Wednesday.
âIs she alright?â The headmistress panicked, and Wednesday raised a brow.
âMy aunt is fine, I simply wanted your⌠assistance, with something.â Wednesday said, and the woman glared at her.
âMiss Addams, it is four in the morning, what could possibly-â
âMy aunt said I canât break into the kitchens again.â Wednesday responded flatly, and Larissaâs brows shot up.
âYouâve been breaking into the kitchens?â She asked, and Wednesday stared blankly. Larissa sighed, running a hand through her loose hair. âWhy do you need into the kitchens?â She asked the young Addams, and the girl stared at her as if the answer was obvious.
âI need canned peaches.â She said plainly, and the headmistress stared at her in confusion.
âCanned- what on earth do you need canned peaches for?â She hissed, and Wednesday rolled her eyes.
âI know you like my aunt, and I know she trusts you, she wouldnât have taken your hand last night otherwise. Now would you, please, help me.â The girl gritted, and the headmistressâs eyes went wide. Wednesday Addams, saying please, what a surprise. She nodded slowly, almost mystified by the girlâs odd behavior.
âOne⌠moment, Miss Addams.â The woman said, stepping back into her rooms and quickly changing and shifting slightly until her hair and makeup was as she usually wore it. When she stepped out into the hallway again, the young girl gave her a long, almost threatening look.
âIs everything alright, Miss Addams?â She asked, and the girl just ignored her, walking towards the kitchens, forcing the woman to follow her. Wednesday made it to the kitchen door, she looked mildly annoyed by the fact that she couldnât just pick the lock, instead waiting for the tall woman. Larissa just sighed, opening the door for her and allowing her in. She knew that she shouldnât be doing this, yet the lengths the girl would go to in an attempt to follow whatever rules you had clearly given her was charming.
She was also painfully aware of the fact that the girl would break into the kitchens regardless. Wednesday seemed to know where everything was, a fact not unnoticed by the older woman. She immediately went to the large pantry, pulling a can of peaches and a box of cake mix, before walking into the walk-in refrigerator, emerging with a stick of butter.
âCare to enlighten me as to what youâre doing?â Larissa sighed, and the girl shot her a hard glance before collecting a glass pan and spatula.
âShe likes peaches, canned peaches.â The girl said, and Larissa furrowed her brows.
âYour aunt likes canned peaches?â She questioned, and the girl nodded, mostly ignoring her. âShe can grow fresh peaches any time she likes, why would she like canned peaches?â The woman asked, and Wednesday glared at her before going back to her task.
âI donât know Miss Weems, why would someone who grew up in what essentially amounts to a prison like the sweetest canned food you can get?â The girl said angrily, and Larissa reeled back a bit, swallowing. Wednesday clenched her jaw for a moment, seemingly forcing herself to calm down. âI apologize Miss Weems, I have known when she has been hurt before, but Iâve never witnessed it myself. It is regrettably, affecting my disposition.â The girl stated, and Larissa took a breath, almost feeling bad for the girl. She knew you two were close. You were the only one she had seen Wednesday actually look happy to interact with, nearly loosing you just have been the hardest thing the girl had ever experienced.
âShe is through the worst of it now.â Larissa tried to ease her, and Wednesday nodded, quickly going back to her task.
âThat doesnât make it better.â The girl said, and Larissa nodded.
âNo, but it does mean that we- that you didnât loose her, Miss Addams.â She replied, Wednesday caught the mistake, looking up at her.
âWhere in the United Kingdom did you grow up?â Wednesday asked her, and Larissa startled at the question.
âI- excuse me?â She asked, that was a complicated question. She tended to field any questions about her life before Nevermore, but that was far too personal for her tastes. âI suppose it doesnât matter. My aunt likes Earl Grey, she used to make it for me when I stayed with her in Cambridge. She drinks it every morning. Considering youâre English, at least enough to have the accent, youâll probably have a better shot at making tea she actually likes then I do.â The girl said, and Larissa tilted her head slightly, staring at her for a moment. The girl was giving her a task, she was trying to include her, it seemed.
Larissa stood for a moment before heading to the stove, taking out a kettle she thankfully had stocked in the kitchens when she began working here. She used to come down late at night to drink tea when she couldnât sleep. There was an electric kettle in her room, naturally, however it never felt the same.
âYou donât have to start yet, this will take a bit less than an hour.â She said quietly, and Larissa sat, watching the girl begin to slice the butter into pads.
âWhat are you making?â She asked gently, and Wednesday bit back what she was sure was less than a kind reaction, choosing a kinder one, despite the visible effort.
âPeach cobbler, bad peach cobbler. Sheâll eat the peaches straight out of the can if sheâs tired or working.â Wednesday said offhandedly. Larissa felt a slight smile pull at her lips at the admission, the girl did care for you, enough to tolerate her presence, even seek it out rather than breaking the rules you had imposed, it seemed.
âDid you also learn that in Cambridge?â Larissa asked, and Wednesday shook her head.
âNo, that was Switzerland, she made it at two in the morning one night when she had gotten back from work.â The girl answered, focused on her task. Larissaâs eyes widened, you had gotten back from work at two in the morning, that wasnât a normal hour for a botanist to keep, certainly not one working at a university. Then again, that last call you had made that day didnât sound like a university, yet you were undoubtedly talking to someone you had worked with.
âTwo in the morning?â Larissa repeated, and Wednesday looked at her again, narrowing her eyes a bit.
âShe was at the hospital, she flew in back to the university in Zurich that night.â Wednesday said. Larissaâs brows furrowed.
âWhat hospital had she been needed at that she couldnât take you, let alone would have been important enough to leave you alone in Zurich?â The woman asked, highly concerned. Wednesday thought for a moment, her eyes flickering from the headmistress to the door a few times before settling back on her task.
âThat is a question for my aunt, not me, Miss Weems.â The girl said, and Larissa puzzled as she looked at her. She watched as Wednesday set the oven, before dumping the cake mix on top of the peaches and adding butter in the pan.
âHow old were you?â She asked in concern, only to jump when she heard a voice behind her.
âIt was last summer, she was sixteen, and I had a colleague stay with her, and I was back within six hours.â You hummed, walking to your niece and pulling a slice of peach out of the baking dish before she had the chance to put it in the oven. âYouâre going to make her think Iâm irresponsible.â You winked to your niece, and she scoffed, rolling her eyes.
âRight, because she isnât already aware that youâre mad as a hatter.â The girl deadpanned, and you smirked, doing a little bow with an imaginary hat.
âMad and irresponsible are different things, mien liebchen, and if you get me fired Iâll have to go back to Europe.â You teased, and both Wednesday and Larissa seemed to panic a bit. Larissa felt an ache in her chest at the idea of you leaving. She shouldnât, you didnât even work at the school full time, yet the idea of you leaving was almost unbearable.
âYouâre supposed to be sleeping!â Wednesday hissed, and you rolled your eyes.
âIâve been sleeping for three days.â You hummed, a spark in your eyes when you ate the stolen fruit. Wednesday pulled the pan away from you and you pouted almost comically.
âYou really should be resting.â Larissa argued, standing to escort you back to bed before you raised a brow.
âAnd allow my niece to tell you half stories until you ban me from your school? Never.â You teased, despite the exhaustion behind your eyes, and the woman sighed deeply at your antics. She wanted to pick you up and take you back to bed, to hold you there until you both fell asleep, yet watching you interact with someone so freely made her heart bloom in a way. It was breathtaking.
âCobbler?â You asked Wednesday, and she nodded, placing it in the oven and coming back to sit with you and Larissa at the table.
âYes.â She answered, and you smiled at her gratefully. âHow is Mr. Jenkins?â Wednesday asked you, and Larissaâs head snapped to you at the mention of the manâs name. That was the name of the last man you had called when you were⌠when you were dying. Your eyes went wide.
âOh shit,â you whispered, pulling out your phone from the loose pants you were wearing and dialing a number. It rang for a moment before you heard a man snarl in a thick Scottish accent on the other line.
âI donât know how the fuck you got this phone, but I promise you if you laid a hand on Ophelia I will fuckin gut you like-â
âItâs me, Jenkins.â You said quickly, and there was silence for a moment. Then you heard something. A choked sound, a sob.
âOh, thank fuckinâ Christ,â the man cried, and you laughed breathlessly, aware of the two others in the room watching you. Larissa watched as your body shifted, relaxing slightly as you spoke to the man.
âCareful, people will think you miss me.â You said, and he laughed.
âYou never fuckin do that again, you hear me!â He yelled, and you chuckled again. Larissa just stared at you in shock. You were laughing. About your own death. As if this was normal.
âYeah, I donât plan on it.â You murmured, and he took a deep breath in.
âAre ye alright?â He asked you, and you huffed, stretching your neck from side to side.
âTired as all get out, fucking colder than the alps, and stiff from laying in bed for a few days, but yes, yeah Iâm alright.â You hummed, and the man laughed at you. Larissa, on the other hand, was only concerned.
âI- you need to talk to the girls.â He said, and you swallowed.
âYeah, yeah Iâll call them, but Iâm with your favorite braided menace currently and-â you glanced to Larissa for a moment, unsure. âAnd someone else I need to be with for the time being.â You added, making Larissaâs breath catch as she looked away, a slight blush on her face. She didnât know what that meant, but it meant enough to have her mind racing at the thought.
âTiny Addams?â The man asked, and you rolled your eyes, turning the phone to speaker and placing it on the table.
âKeep it clean and above the table, Jenkins.â You warned, and the man chuckled.
âTiny Addams!â He yelled, and Wednesday almost seemed to smirk, much to the headmistressâs surprise.
âMr. Jenkins, do you still have that revolver?â Wednesday asked, and you scoffed, rolling your eyes.
âWeâre in a school, please donât get her expelled.â You groaned, and Jenkins laughed. Larissa, was staring at you in mild horror.
âAlright, Iâll behave ye fuckinâ hardass, alright!â He cursed, and you pinched the bridge of your nose, sighing deeply as Larissaâs eyes widened at the language your former colleague used.
âI asked you to keep it clean too, but why would we ever listen to me? Itâs not like I was your boss for twenty years or anything.â You deadpanned, and the man laughed, ignoring you. Larissa, on the other hand, caught that. You werenât just involved in a hospital, you were in charge of at least something. Though she had no idea what this man would do at a hospital. Jenkins continued, talking to your niece as if you never spoke.
âYeah, I still got that revolver, you still a bloody sharp shooter?â He asked the young girl, and she smiled.
âOnly when I have something worth aiming at.â She retorted, and you glared at her.
âThe both of you are going to get me fired.â You sighed exhaustedly, and Wednesday smirked as Jenkins chuckled.
âLike anyone has the fuckin balls to fire you, Phil. Youâre a goddamn class fuckin bonnie genius with a right hook like a fuckin boxer-â the man began, and you banged your head on the table.
âI can only keep up with your Scottish when Iâm drunk or youâre talking at least in a modern vernacular!â You groaned, and he cackled.
âNane would fire ya, lass.â He said, leaning into it. Larissa just stared wide eyed at the very odd conversation.
âConsidering Iâm working at a school and not a lab yes, yes I can be fired.â You countered.
âEh, you could always go about it the old fashion way.â He snickered, and your head shot up, a blush staining your cheeks.
âJenkinsâŚâ you warned, your cheeks growing a little redder as Larissa raised a brow.
âAye, ye just poison âem, or hang âem, or fuck âem, or sometimes all three!â He suggested, and you went red as a beet.
âFergus Jenkins, I swear to god if you do not get your tongue in line I will get on a flight over there and beat some sense into your sorry, blood-sucking ass, do you hear me?â You threatened, and both women at the table with you just stared in shock. Larissa knew you were tough, she had seen you fight even, but this was a different kind. There was almost camaraderie in it, you liked this man, you knew him well. The fact that he had casually suggested murder, however, was mildly horrifying. Yet you were treating it as if this was somewhat normal.
âDid you have to use my first name?â The man cringed, and you chuckled.
âIâll tell Moxie youâre middle name if you arenât careful.â You challenged, and you could practically hear him panic.
âWeâll Iâll- Iâll teach Mirella how to shapeshifter into a fuckin bear!â He threatened, and you scoffed. Larissa, on the other hand, looked to you. Shapeshifters were rare, very rare, and the fact that you knew one, other than her, well, she had known you had worked with them, but knowing actual names felt different.
âFirst off Mirella is the most talented- oh,â you hummed, falling silent for a moment. Wednesday actually snorted. You glared at the girl, swatting her for her mischief. âAlright, second most talented shapeshifter Iâve ever met, and she can easily, easily do a bear.â You snarked. âYou want to impress me, have her pull off a full corporeal person, with voice, and a clean and quick transition. That, is actually difficult.â You smirked, and the man groaned.
âAye, now I get a fuckin lecture.â He sighed, and you laughed.
âSecondly!â You added, and the man groaned. âI know damn well youâve worked with me long enough to know that shape-shiftER is a classification, you dumbass. So unless you want me to drag you back to DAY ONE of HOW NOT TO UPSET THE KIDS, I highly suggest you remember the correct terminology.â You smirked, and he groaned.
âI fuckin know the terminology, Iâve heard you scream âI need morphine, they wonât stop shiftingâ enough times to scar anyone.â He gruffed, and the teasing smile fell from your face. It was silent for a moment as you looked up to Wednesday, the girlâs brows furrowing. That was odd. That wasnât just odd, that was scary.
Larissa looked to you in a mixture of sadness and fear as she realized what that meant. That meant that no, what you worked at certainly wasnât a normal hospital. You looked to her slowly, the color draining from your face as you realized what had just happened.
âNot morphine, Jenkins, not morphine.â You sighed, more tired then she had ever seen you. She had seen you die, and the look in your eyes as you looked to her when that man spoke about what you had seen, what you had said, it haunted her. Jenkins cleared his throat. Wednesday looked to you strangely, but you just ignored her.
âAye, but I canât say the other stuff and keep it above board.â He said, and you hummed.
âLike any of this is above board,â you scoffed. âIâll remind Mirella to kick your ass if you slip up in front of a kid, you old bastard.â You hummed, and he chuckled.
âWhy donât you come kick my ass, doc? Youâd do more damage even if Mirella was a bear.â He laughed, and you made it a few seconds before you burst out laughing.
âThe best you could come up with was âMirella do a bearâ sheâs twenty not thirteen!â You cackled, and Larissa just shook her head at you. You were laughing, over shapeshifting things. And you were right. Shapeshifters were perhaps the classification of outcast with the most misinformation about them, yet you, you were right. You even knew the terminology. âThatâs like asking me to grow a grass bush. Yes, itâs large, but itâs very simple.â You chuckled. He sighed.
âNot all of us fuckin raised a gaggle aâ misfits, Doc.â The man shot, and you rolled your eyes.
âYou are always with me when we pick them up, and itâs not my fault when they wander down into the lab, I think I actually specifically asked you not to let them down, but sure, blame me.â You sighed tiredly. You rolled your neck out, the exhaustion creeping back into you.
Larissa noticed. She wanted to go to you. She wanted to pick you up and hold you, to keep you safe until all of the pain faded. Your words had her mind raging, but the exhaustion in your eyes, the pain behind them, that she wanted to take away. Yet last night, last night she had made it very clear that she couldnât have that. Last night she had sent you away, and now here you were, opening yourself up, once again.
âEnough, too much, itâs- no more talk about things you can get me arrested for.â You chuckled, and the man scoffed.
âFuckin smartass.â He mumbled, and you laughed a bit. âFine, Iâll tell Tiny Addams about the time we were in a pinch and you were so fuckin high I had to physically put you in your chair while you hallucinated a six foot tall-â
âAaaand, thatâs enough of that, thank you Jenkins.â You groaned, quickly saying goodbye to the man before hanging up. Wednesday looked at you. You did your best to maintain eye contact as you turned absolutely red. Wednesday raised a brow as you staunchly avoided looking at Larissa.
âYou have type.â She said, and you glared at her, blushing.
âIâll kill you.â You wheezed, and Larissa turned scarlet as Wednesday raised a brow.
âYouâre predictable, Iâm disappointed.â She said, giving a sidelong glance to the headmistress. Larissa looked positively mortified.
âAh-Ah, absolutely not, if you have ire to give, you save it for me.â You hummed, turning the girl to face you once again. You stood, leading the girl up and beginning to twirl her in different directions with your hands, making her bite back a laugh. âI am, in certain ways, and yes, there are undoubtedly certain things I find attractive,â you began, and Larissa gaped at you as you effortlessly disoriented the girl.
âMiss Florere, I donât know if this is-â she began, but you chuckled, shaking your head and making the woman close her mouth in frustration. She had cut you off too many times, that was the reason she told herself as she begrudgingly allowed you to speak.
âHowever!â You interrupted, and she glared at you as you continued messing with Wednesday. âYes, I am certainly attracted to strong women, but the affinity has always been much more for character than physical strength.â You explained, and Wednesday pulled away from you finally, her head spinning.
âThat was unnecessary, and you are insane.â She growled, and you smirked.
âIt shut you up.â You winked, pulling her back to the table and sitting down. You flicked your hands, a few seeds falling from your palms onto the table, and Larissa watched cautiously as you worked. You bloomed one into a orchid, right on the table, amusing your niece. It was beautiful, more simple that she knew you could create, but beautiful, and it took Larissaâs breath away. âBeauty, is important in this world, yes. And at least in my opinion on the, remarkably few, despite what your mother or Jenkins says, affairs I have had have involved women who I find very beautiful.â You hummed, and your gaze shifted to the second seed. A daylily bloomed this time, and Wednesday tilted her head at the resilient flower.
âHemerocalis, known to be resilient and adaptable.â She said, and you smiled, lazily flicking your fingers and making it bloom brighter, despite the tiredness you showed. Larissa fought the urge to stop you, you should be resting, not using your ability to illustrate a point.
âWell done.â You hummed to your niece. âThe strength of character, the person, matters far more to me than any looks do.â You explained, and she sighed, relenting. You pulled your hands back, and as your ability left the plants, the orchid withered instantly, but the daylily stayed. Wednesday, however, looked to the third seed.
âAnd this?â She asked, and you hummed. You looked at it and Larissaâs breath was stolen as an absolutely magnificent Juliet rose bloomed right in front of her. Her favorite, you had remembered. She looked to you, a faint dusting of pink settling on her cheeks as she looked at it. She couldnât meet your eyes. She pushed you away, and you did this.
âBeauty, and strength of character are two parts of it.â You began. âBut love, my dear, is neither common nor expected.â You hummed, and she looked in amazement to it.
âI havenât seen this one.â She breathed, and you nodded.
âJuliet Rose, seventy petals, nearly impossible to bloom fully without someone like me around, and absolutely breathtaking.â You hummed, the nearly glowing pinkish apricot colored flower on the table in front of you.
âEnglish?â She asked you, and you hummed, nodding at just staring at it. The irony was not lost on you. Your eyes flickered up to Larissaâs for a moment, and you nearly took her breath away. You looked wild, yet the honesty in you was so compelling, and the gesture was far from lost on her. You were allowing her to watch you, to witness you, as you were. She may push you away, but she couldnât resist the magnetism of being under your spell. Wednesday, however, broke the moment.
âWho are your girls?â She asked you, and your eyes went wide. You searched for the words for a moment, looking far away.
âYou heard that, did you?â You hummed, and Larissa stared at you strangely. You were hiding something, something serious, it seemed.
âI have exceptional hearing. And Mirella.â Wednesday deadpanned, and you sighed.
âSome of the girls from the hospital, I was, I was the one who mostly took care of them after they were Ah, found.â You said carefully. Larissaâs brows furrowed, and you swallowed, looking to her for a moment. You couldnât tell her. Legally, amongst other reasons, no matter how much you wanted to trust her. Trust. That was a bold thing. You didnât know if you were still capable of it, but when you looked at her, you thought you might be.
âFound?â Larissa asked you, and you smiled sadly.
âI canât tell you any more.â You breathed. âUnder law, I- Iâm not able.â You said, and her eyes widened a fraction. As did Wednesdayâs.
âWere you an assassin?â The girl looked practically excited with the question.
âHardly,â you chuckled. âI was an in-house researcher and medic, for an institution, that helped children, thatâs all you need to know.â You said softly, and she almost looked disappointed.
âI suppose you couldnât afford to teach and be an assassin.â The girl said, and you rolled your eyes.
âIâm still a good enough shot to keep you safe, donât you worry.â You teased, and she scoffed.
âI donât need your help being safe.â The girl said, and you raised your brows, shrugging.
âVery well then, I suppose I can head back to Cambridge when Miss Weems finds a new botany teacher.â You said, deliberately not looking at her for a moment. Both of them snapped their heads to you, Larissa looking mildly terrified as Wednesday seemed to regret everything. You snorted, covering it with your hand before coughing in an attempt to collect yourself. âCalm yourselves, youâve got me for at least a little while.â You breathed, looking away before your face saddened for a moment.
You wanted to stay. You almost wanted to stay forever. You could imagine it, forever, here at Nevermore, with the woman you had been dreaming of since you were young. Yet in all likelihood that would never happen. You were good at many things, but love, love was not one of them. If you had looked to Larissa you would have seen the same thoughts crossing her mind as her throat closed up with emotion.
âWhy canât you give shapeshifters morphine?â Wednesday asked, and you sighed, closing your eyes. Larissa cringed, she knew it shouldnât be done, as doctors had told her for most of her life. Doctors in general were nearly impossible as a shapeshifter, very few knew what to do with her, and fewer were respectful about it. You frowned slightly, deffering to Larissa with a hand gesture. The action surprised her. She knew you likely knew the answer, however you were allowing her to say what she wished. It wasnât your abilities that you were exposing, so you left the choice to her.
âYou can, if youâd like.â You hummed, and she blinked a few times, furrowing her brows.
âI- I donât know actually.â She admitted uncomfortably, and your brows drew together in concern.
âYou see a doctor regularly, donât you?â You asked, your voice surprisingly, worried. It made the woman flush, you worried about her. You cared. It was a silly thing, really. She had never had someone ask about her doctors appointments, or to make sure she had tea when the nights got late and she was working. No one had ever done some late night baking with her, and the domesticity of it all overwhelmed her in a way she didnât expect.
âOf course, Iâm aware there are certain drugs I cannot take, no one has ever been able to tell me why, however.â She said, and your brows shot up.
âOh my god, fucking- sure, great, wonderful, thank you, healthcare system.â You breathed angrily before closing your eyes and calming yourself. âGod I want to do something stupid, youâre lucky Iâm tired.â You groaned at the woman. She raised her brows at the outburst, but you just calmed yourself down after a moment. âYou can, be given morphine, I mean. The reason it is dangerous to give shapeshifters morphine is because without running a blood test, a doctor cannot tell if you are in your natural state or not.â You explained, and she tilted her head curiously. âIf you were to take a dose based on whatever form you were to take at the moment, it could either not work or kill you depending on if someone gave you too much or too little. That is the danger, the dosage, not the drug itself.â You explained, and she stared at you in shock for a moment.
âHow on earth do you know that?â She eventually asked, and you smiled a bit.
âI had to. And I wrote a paper on it thirteen years ago.â You answered, and she just shook her head at you. Your mind amazed her. She looked into her eyes, the swirling grey almost mesmerizing her. It was beautiful. You, were beautiful.
It was silent for a moment, the three of you just sitting as you waited for the cobbler to cook. You looked down to your arm, fiddling with the bandages there. You realized that you didnât know who had done it, well, you had an idea, you just werenât awake.
âDid you do this?â You asked Larissa, your gaze enough to slightly startle the woman. She swallowed, you looked even-tempered, but her mind raced at the idea of doing something wrong. She immediately jumped up, taking your arm on instinct to inspect her work. You jumped slightly at the touch, but you didnât pull away.
âDid I do something incorrectly?â She worried, her hand running over the bandage. You couldnât help the color that stained your cheeks as she touched you. You had just been in her arms last night, but still, after years of not feeling any sort of touch on your skin, her pulling up your sweater to inspect the bandages had you shuddering. You just shook your head mutely, staring up in shock at the woman as she fussed over you. She sat next to you, pulling a chair close so she could remove the bandage, inspecting her work.
âAny pain?â She asked you, and again you just shook your head, staring at the surprisingly neatly stitched up wound, her hands caressing so close to it, over your other scars.
She was touching your scars.
You felt your heart race, your breathing become slightly deeper as she touched you, unable to form thoughts, let alone words. All you knew was her hands, her hands were on you, and for the first time in years it felt good.
âOphelia, are you alright?â She looked to you, worry on her face at your reddened skin and wide eyes. You opened your mouth a few times to say something, but couldnât find the words, leading the woman to lean forward, placing the back of her hand on your forehead to see if she could feel a temperature. She would have touched your skin had Wednesday not caught her arm, holding her a breath away from you.
âYouâre overwhelming her.â The girl warned, and Larissaâs eyes snapped to her, the look on the young girlâs face murderous. Larissa could see you in her, she realized. She could see where the girlâs dangerous protective streak had come from. That, aparently, was enough to get you to form words again.
âNo, sheâs, sheâs fine, just a little out of my head, is all.â You hummed, taking your nieceâs arm away from the headmistressâs. Wednesday looked between the two of you carefully, but seemed to allow it. The girl stepped away, and you stood, walking over to the oven under the guise of checking it. Larissaâs heart dropped. She had gone too far, she overwhelmed you, she made you uncomfortable, now you wouldnât let her back in. She started to panic. You would never let her close again, she would-
âPlay me something.â You said softly, and Wednesday furrowed her brows, but pulled out her phone, connecting it to the speakers in the kitchen, much to Larissaâs surprise, considering she shouldnât have been able to get into that network. You nodded as slow, smooth jazz began to play. âLittle faster,â you hummed, and Wednesday picked something faster. âOh, I fucking love Fleetwood Mac.â You smiled, raising your arms over your head and beginning to dance. Larissaâs jaw dropped as you swayed to the music, smiling as you began to dance in the kitchen. Wednesday just shook her head, but you pulled the girlâs arms and forcing her to dance with you.
You were out of your mind. Insane. Mad. Whatever the word was. You were dancing. At four in the morning. In the kitchen. That you shouldnât be in. Yet you just danced, like nothing in the world could stop you. She had just been boggled by your apparently very detailed and applicable knowledge about her classification, a very rare classification, and now you were dancing in the kitchen, and bloody hell, she loved it.
âAuntie,â Wednesday complained, but you just shook your head, twirling the girl about before you released her, allowing her to do her own thing while you went to Larissa. You took her hand, making the tall woman gasp as you twirled yourself under her, before leading her hands around your waist and swaying with her for a moment. You craved her touch, you couldnât help it. Barring Wednesday, and a few other children, she was the only person you had ever actually enjoyed touch from. You didnât understand it, and you couldnât bother to as you danced despite your exhaustion. Your eyes were closed, you were just listening to the music, but the beauty you held was still more than enough to strike the woman. You were out of your mind, clearly, dancing in a kitchen instead of resting, yet she felt an almost magnetic pull to your madness.
She breathed in sharply when your body brushed against hers, making your eyes snap open as you looked up to her. You froze for a moment, breathing a little faster as you looked up into her gorgeous eyes. She was stunning. A light blush played on her cheeks as she looked down at you surprised. You wanted to kiss it until it spread all over her body.
âHeaven help me,â you whispered, pulling away and going back to your neice before the moment could last too long to be considered appropriate. You just danced languidly, Larissa watching you with flushed cheeks as you moved about to the music. You twirled a bit, seemingly grounding yourself as you whirled around, laughing at nothing. You really were mad as a hatter. It was beautiful.
Wednesday went over to her, standing next to the tall woman.
âIf you hurt her, I will kill you.â The girl said, making Larissaâs eyes snap to her.
âMiss Addams, Iâm sure I donât know what you-â she began, choking on her words, as Wednesday cut her off.
âShe just let you touch her bare hands. Not just that she actively sought out your touch. If you donât know how much that means then you should evaluate her interactions with others more carefully.â The girl hissed, quickly moving away when you came close again. She took the cobbler out of the oven, and you practically squeaked in delight, the sound calling Larissaâs attention, despite the fact that her mind was still running a mile a minute.
You had sought out her touch, again, even after she overwhelmed you. There was almost an innocence to you in this moment, one that made her watch mystified as you dished out clumps of cobbler into three dishes, scrambling around for cutlery until you found spoons, plopping them in the bowls and sitting at the table, next to Wednesday, across from Larissa. She swallowed, looking down at the bowl.
âI shouldnât infringe upon your time together,â she said, biting the inside of her lip. This was too much. Sitting with you and your niece, eating your favorite treat, this was too much.
âPlease stay.â You whispered again, and Larissaâs eyes lifted to yours. You were looking to her truthfully, honestly, you were asking. Your eyes seemed to almost reach for her, the comfort she provided. She had been giving it to you for most of your life, even if she hadnât met you until recently. âAt least try it, you donât have to eat the whole thing, and you donât have to stay if you donât like, but I would- Iâd like you to, if youâd like.â You said carefully, and Larissa swallowed, relaxing a bit.
You still wanted her there. Releif washed over her, and she nodded, smiling lightly as she tentatively took a bite of your nieceâs creation. She was pleasantly surprised when the warm concoction hit her tongue. It was sweet, very sweet, but there was a sense of home to it, almost. It made her sad and joyful all at once. She longed for a warm home, the kind where a tired mother would make this after work, or a father would in an attempt to appease his children. She longed for the feeling of home that she never quite new, yet she basked in the little slice of it. It was almost like she had been given a tiny bit of home as a gift. She looked up to you, swallowing down the dessert and her emotions as she saw the twinkle in your eye.
âGood?â You asked her, and her lips twitched slightly before she smiled.
âSurprisingly satisfying.â She conceded, and the warm smile you broke out into nearly took her breath away. You nudged Wednesday happily, making the girl nearly push you away before finally leaning into you a bit.
âThank you, darling.â You said gently, and she nodded.
âItâs your favorite.â She replied nonchalantly, and you chuckled, looking up at Larissa and smiling.
âAnd thank you.â You added, and she shook her head, immediately brushing it off.
âNo, I- I didnât do anything, I just allowed her into the kitchens.â She said, and you smiled at her, the familiarity of it nearly making her heart stop. There was that smile again, the one that felt like it was just for her.
âThat was more than you had to do.â You said softly, and she blushed a bit, nodding and just accepting your thanks rather than arguing more. âDid you tell her why this is my favorite?â You asked your niece, and she shook her head. You nodded. âI appreciate you allowing me to make that decision.â You said softly, and Wednesday sat up, finally going back to her own bowl.
âBetween the two of you, there are so many secrets I can barely speak.â The girl quipped, and you furrowed your brows, blinking a few times as Larissa tensed.
âYes, well, I canât exactly share a lot of my old occupation, now can I?â You said, a little uncomfortable, and Wednesday rolled her eyes.
âI wonder who would win at poker.â She added, and you fixed her with a look. Larissa stiffened, glaring at the girl. She allowed Wednesday to get away with far too much, and with you there, the girl got away with murder.
âHilarious.â You deadpanned, and she stared right back.
âI mean between what mother has said about either of you, you could form a club.â She said, and you tilted your head as the mood shifted. Larissa was beginning to get very uncomfortable, and your eyes darted from her to your niece as she shifted in her seat.
âWednesday, I think thatâs enough.â You said gently, and the girl narrowed her eyes. The girl got a particular look in her eyes, one that told you that she was up to something. You knew the face, it was her âIâm about to do something stupid based on a hunchâ face, and you gritted your teeth as you thought of whatever it might be.
âAre you nervous Iâll bring up the fact that neither of your parents wanted you?â She asked calmly, and your eyes went wide. She was joking, you both knew she was, but that was too far. That was much too far. Larissa felt her heart crack open. Wednesday shouldnt know that. The only person she had ever told was Morticia, and she had sworn never to tell-
And she had told Morticia. Of all the stupid things she had done, she had told her fucking roommate in a moment of weakness, and now a student knew! Now a student knew that even her parents had tossed her away. Just like Morticia had. Just like the others had after.she felt her face flush red, panic started to envelop her as she felt almost nauseous. Everything she had done, so much work went into keeping up her perfect appearance, yet this, this would shatter it irrevocably. All the work she had done, everything, she could loose it all.
What broke her, however, was the fact that you didnât even look surprised. You knew. You knew, that her own parents didnât want her. You knew, and the fact that you did felt like ice water being poured into her very heart.
âWednesday!â You warned, reprimanding the girl, bringing up your issues was one thing, but she could not go after her headmistress. âTaking shots at me is one thing, but you will not, insult your headmistress.â You corrected harshly. Larissa swallowed, she had never seen you speak to her that way. You were staring firmly at your niece, however you could see the blood drain from Larissaâs face. She had hit a nerve, a deep one. âApologize.â You said firmly, and she nodded, looking to the headmistress.
âIâm sorry, Miss Weems.â She sighed, and you glared at the girl.
âToo far, Wednesday. That was too far.â You sighed, and she at least had the sense to look mildly ashamed. She looked away, staring down at the bowl of cobbler. âIâm sorry, Larissa.â You swallowed, looking to the woman across the table from you. She took a deep breath in, attempting to collect herself.
âYou are not responsible for her actions.â Larissa managed, and your heart broke at the strain in her voice. Your lips parted slightly in distress as you just stared at her, unsure what to do, how to help.
âI do wonder who lies better though, a woman whoâs entire job was so secret she couldnât even tell me or a shapeshifter?â Wednesday added, and you saw red.
âWednesday Addams, enough!â You hollered, standing. The girl stopped at your sudden shift. âThat is the kind of comment I would expect from your mother, not you, now I know you know very well what was wrong with that, so I highly suggest you apologize.â You snapped, and she narrowed her eyes.
âSorry.â She said blankly, and you raised a brow.
âNot, to me.â You corrected, and she sighed as she looked to the headmistress, who was watching you both in shock. She had never seen you yell at your niece, and the fact that you did so on her behalf was certainly striking.
You were protecting her again, even if it wasnât from any real threat, and it sent shivers through her. She was used to those kinds of comments about shapeshifters, yet apparently they struck a nerve with you.
âI am sorry, Miss Weems, again.â Wednesday gritted, and you glared at her.
âDo you have any concept, any at all of how hard it is to deal with that?â You spat. Wednesday went wide eyed as Larissa stared at you in absolute shock. You were angry, very, very angry. You were holding it back, but the rage was palpable. âBecause the origin of that comment is not benign, not in the slightest, and if the idea of Newflight makes you sick it pales in comparison to what people who have said that very thing created.â You breathed. You were shaking, actually shaking. There were tears threatening to spill from your eyes as you stared at your niece with barely controlled rage. It took Larissaâs breath away. âYou donât know, Wednesday, and neither does your mother because if she can barely handle a slip of an idea of what happened to me I can gaudente that neither of you can handle what happens when I have a girl half your age on an operating table trying desperately to stitch up wounds that you canât even imagine in the hopes that she will somehow pull through enough for her to have a fucking shot at being able to use her ability without-â you cut yourself off, slamming a hand over your mouth when you realized you were screaming. You felt tears in your eyes and you turned, slamming them shut and running your shaking hands through your hair. You took a slow, very shaky breath, staring blankly at the wall. âIâm sorry love, Iâm very tired.â You breathed, your voice thick with emotion.
âAuntie?â The girl asked softly, and you turned around. You swallowed, setting your jaw as you finally looked at her. She looked horrified, almost as if she wanted sink into the floor right then and there.
âGo to your room, get ready for class, I donât care, but until you remember exactly why I wonât tolerate that I suggest you do some thinking.â You said softly, and the girl sighed. Then, and only then did you look at Larissa. Her lips were parted in shock, her eyes wide and misty as she stared at you. Fuck you wanted to go to her.
âWhat- what exactly did you do that makes it hurt you that much to talk about my classification?â She whispered, and you shut your eyes for a moment, exhaling deeply through your nose.
âI- I canât tell you that.â You choked, unable to look at her. It hurt. It physically hurt knowing. Knowing that you had helped so many, but you werenât able to help her.
âI wanted to see what you would do.â Wednesday said, and you whirled around, narrowing your eyes.
âWhat I would do?â You asked, and she nodded once.
âIf I insulted her,â she said, nodding to the headmistress. âI wanted to see how you would react.â She said, and you sighed, closing your eyes and shaking your head.
âDear lord give me the strength.â You sighed, before fixing the girl with another stern look. âYou are better than your mother. Do not stoop to her level of insulting people to get a rise out of them.â You warned.
âWhat, because mother compared her to a tree I canât get away with implying sheâd be good at lying?â Wednesday snapped, and you stood with such force the chair behind you toppled backwards. You were mad, you were beyond mad, and Larissa had half a mind to stop you before Wednesday actually experienced your anger. She didnât know why you were so angry. The only logical explanation for any of this was if the children you worked with were not so unlike you, and if that was the case, you had a far heavier burden to bear than she could even imagine.
âEnough.â You said firmly, and Wednesday blanched âYou know what, there is something I can tell you, actually.â You said slowly, and Wednesdayâs eyes widened a fraction.
âNo.â She said, and you stared at her, an almost hurt expression on your face.
âDo you think of me as a dangerous monster?â You asked her, only adding to Larissaâs confusion. If you went where she thought you were going, she was right on the money.
âNo, I think of you as my aunt.â Wednesday replied, and you raised your brows.
âI could kill you at any moment, I could flick my hands and release pollen that would have you in full anaphylaxis in seconds, I could coat my skin in sap that would burn your skin away if you touched me, I could call forth vines that could rip you apart with nothing more then a thought.â You said calmly, and Larissa gaped at you. She knew you were strong, and that you had the potential to be deadly, but she had never thought of it like that. âAm I a weapon to you, Wednesday?â You asked the girl, and she looked away in shame.
âNo.â She murmured, and you nodded.
âThen you do not get to accuse her of being a liar simply because of her ability. I have taught you better than that.â You said firmly, looking down at her through lashes holding back anger Larissa had never seen directed at your family. Neither had Wednesday. The girl nodded gravely. You turned to Larissa, your eyes betraying the shame you felt on behalf of your niece.
âI am, very sorry.â You said softly, and she took a sharp breath, her eyes flicking between the two of you. Not once, not once had she seen hurt like that in your eyes on behalf of anyone other than your niece. And it was for children of her kind.
âI would hope you donât speak to other students that way, Miss Addams.â The woman addressed the girl next to you, and your brows raised for a moment before you turned back to Wednesday.
âTake some cobbler to Enid.â You instructed, and the girl furrowed her brows.
âI want to stay with you.â She said, and you sighed deeply, calming yourself.
âAnd you can, but for now I need to speak with Miss Weems, take some cobbler to Enid, and get ready for class. Iâll see you at the end of your day.â You instructed, and the girl glared daggers at you as she dished out another bowl.
âDitching me to try to justify yourself to your employer is beneath you.â The girl snarked, and you tilted your head.
âTrying to correct my sisterâs mistakes is not.â You responded, and the girl stared at you for a moment. Larissa could feel the tension between you two, the energy flying about the room. She had never seen you truly fight with your sister, but if this was a stare down between you and your niece, then she shuddered to think of you and Morticia ever going at it.
âFine.â Wednesday gritted, taking the bowls and storming out of the room. You watched her go, sighing heavily and shaking your head before looking at the woman across from you. She was raging against the thoughts in her mind. She knew you knew things, things that she had tried her entire life to hide and forget. Yet you, you knew so much, more than you would tell her, and it terrified her. Her entire life was built upon the ruse of perfection. She was the first, and only shapeshifter head of a public institution, not to mention one for children. If there was so match as a crack in the facade, it all came tumbling down.
âIâm sorry, I didnât know she was going to-â
âHow much do you know about me?â The woman asked you, and your breath hitched. This was not an easy conversation to have. The answer wasnât simple, it couldnât be. Both too much and not enough, you felt like a stranger who had known her, intimately, for almost your entire life.
âI- Larissa, you donât want me to-â you tried, but she cut you off, and you felt your heart drop when you noticed the tears in her eyes. She was so tense, always so tense. She had to control it, she needed control, it was everything to her, it was how she got where she wanted to be, yet here you were, breaking all the walls she had so painstakingly built of control down.
âHow much.â She gritted, and you shifted on your feet, immediately moving to sit next to her. You felt the need to, despite every ingrained instinct, you needed to go to her, to help her through what you knew would be painful, what already had been for you. The action surprised her, she knew you didnât like to be close, even after everything, she knew it was still hard for you.
âLarissa that is not an easy question to answer.â You said tentatively, looking up into the womanâs eyes. She was trying not to cry. You could see her lip shaking, whatever it was she was trying to figure out if you knew, it hurt her, it hurt her more than you could imagine.
âTell me.â She rasped, and you looked down and away, nodding. It was not comfortable. It was painful, actually. You knew how much this hurt. You knew you had your hands in her very heart, she was bared open for you to see, and it broke your heart that you had seen it without her showing you.
âI- I know from Morticia that you were disowned very young, around the time you went to Nevermore. I know you changed your surname, but I do not know the original one.â You breathed, and she tensed, her breath shaking slightly, her eyes were red, hurt. You wanted to wrap her up and hold her close, to protect her from all of it.
The realization shocked you. You almost never wanted to touch anyone, let alone hold them. The idea was normally enough to make your stomach turn in fear. Yet now, with her, you just wanted to hold her close. You could feel your face heating up at the realization, your hands shaking slightly. Larissa caught the reaction, her eyes widening at your shaking hands, but you just tucked them away, swallowing down your own issues. You had to continue, you couldnât let your panic affect her now.
âI- I focused on you for a long time, and with the amount my sister gave me of you, I-â you cut yourself off, taking a deep breath in an attempt to center yourself. âI know that your father was cruel to you, I have seen visions of that, but itâs, Iâve never seen his face, or exactly what he had done, but Iâve seen you as a child curled up in a room with such, with such fear it enraged me that anyone would ever do that to their child,â you gritted, and Larissaâs face changed.
You couldnât look at her, you were looking away again, unable to meet her eyes as your own filled with rage so palpable it struck her. You werenât angry at her, the disgust that seized you wasnât for her. It was for those that had treated her cruelly.
Thatâs when it hit her, you had snapped at Wednesday when she had treated her cruelly. That was the first, and only time, she had seen you angry at the girl. You wouldnât harm Wednesday, you probably wouldnât even truly punish the girl, but you were, protecting her. It made her shudder, but it made her want to sob uncontrollably all the same. The fact that you could look at her, like that, knowing what you knew, it was like nothing she had ever felt. It felt like acceptance.
There was pain inside of you, but no judgement, and as she realized that unlike your sister, you understood. Morticia had made her ashamed of the fact, but you, you understood.
âI am sure my previous colleagues have a file on you, on your childhood, however I never looked for it I- I have seen so much of you that I didnât think it fair to pry.â You choked, your throat closing as you fought back tears of guilt.
It was then, and only then that you looked up at her. Your face dropped as you saw the tears streaming down her face, and you were up and wiping them away before you knew what you were doing. You cupped her face in your hands, hushing her as you cleaned them away, leaning down slightly until you were close enough to take her breath away. Tears began to stream down her face, she couldnât do it. She was breaking. You knew, you knew the disgusting shame inside of her and yet you touched her so tenderly it felt as if she may fall apart.
âYou are not alone. Not even close.â You whispered, and she felt something in her snap. Her arms wrapped around you, pulling you into her as she buried her face in your chest, sobs racked her body, shaking her as she cried, silent as she was, the vibrations still shook you to your very core. Your arms tentatively wrapped around her, rubbing her back gently as you hushed her. âYouâve carried this weight alone for far too long, Larissa, itâs alright, Iâve got you.â You whispered, holding the woman as best you could as she sobbed silently, âIâve got you.â You repeated, and she just nodded into you, her hands clutching onto the sweater you wore. You just continued, rubbing her back as the tears slowed. Her entire life she had felt so alone, so terribly unwanted. Yet there you were. You were with her, holding her, and she was far from alone.
It felt like hours. Larissa cried until she felt like there was nothing left in her, like her chest had been ripped open and her very soul pulled violently from her, as if it was laid bare before you, bleeding and ugly at your feet. Yet the tenderness with which you touched her, it made the pain lesson, as if you could beat it back with your warmth.
She shuddered in your arms, somehow pressing her face deeper into you. She breathed you in, the familiar earthy scent of petrichor and flowers greeting her, with the wild, almost dangerous undertone that was so uniquely you.
âWhat perfume do you wear?â The woman husked against you, and you cleared your throat at the question. That was certainly not what you expected.
âI- ah, Im not wearing any. I just sort of smell like certain flowers. It changes, depending on certain things I- I can change it if you like-â you rushed, and she just shook her head.
âNo, itâs, itâs nice.â She whispered, and you just nodded, running your hand over her shoulder. She froze, realizing what she was doing. She was wrapped around you, clutching you to her as she buried her face into your chest, your very warm, full chest. She could feel your breath shuddering, your heart racing as she held onto you.
She went rigid, immediately pulling away as a heavy blush stained her cheeks. Here she was, just hours after you had woken up, sobbing and hanging on you as she spilled her heart out onto your dark red sweater. She was out of all control, practically forcing you to comfort her, showing you parts of her she hid from everyone, parts of her that were weak, disgusting.
âI- I am so sorry Miss Florere, I didnât mean-â she panicked, only you feel you slip your bare hand around her jaw and tilt her head to look at you. Her eyes almost fluttered closed at the touch. Your hands, they were so warm, so gentle. Her breath stuttered as she looked up to you.
âDonât do that,â you whispered. Her jaw dropped. âPlease donât do that, it hurts me to watch you do what I used to do to myself.â You whispered, and her eyes once again filled with tears.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 10 - Hello Again
(When you finally wake, Larissa realizes exactly how much she had wanted you to. The only thing that interrupts you is the honesty you share with her and the girls, your words shocking her to her core.)
WARNING: MENTION OF PAST ABUSE/ LIGHT SMUT/ GRIEVING
She couldnât sleep. She just cliched onto you, holding your cold body and desperately praying you would wake up.
Larissa didnât know when she fell asleep, but it was late some point during the night, likely the early hours of the morning.
When she woke, there were salt stains on her face, she had cried through the night, even in her sleep, clutching onto you as if you would drift away if she loosened her grip. She could feel the sunlight streaming in through the window in her bedroom, yet she couldnât bring herself to move. She began to cry all over again as she clutched onto you, holding you like you would fly away at any moment.
Tears welled in her eyes as she listened to your heartbeat, it sounded slightly better today, not good, but better. It was better, she repeated to herself, that was something. It would have to be enough. For now, better was going to have to be enough.
She laid with you in bed all morning, it was late morning when she woke up, yet she refused to leave your side. The most she did was collect her laptop, working in a chair next to the bed. The school would have to go on like nothing had happened. To most of them, nothing had. Still you didnât move, didnât flinch, didnât speak, nothing. She waited for you, trying desperately to see if you would wake. The longer it went on the less likely you were to come out of it, she knew that much.
She had considered taking you to a hospital, however Morticia had advised her against it, you hated the places, and knowing your history, she understood why. There was one you apparently liked, in Europe, but you had never been treated there, only worked in it. Then again with how Morticia had described it, she half doubted it was a hospital at all.
Tich had said if you were going to come out of this, it wouldnât be there. You wouldnât have the fight there. You wouldnât want to fight there. Larissa couldnât help but beleive her. She just worked, her eyes tired as she scrambled to find someone to cover your classes. She would never admit it, but the moment you came on she had put the search for a permanent replacement on the back burner, too enraptured by you. She didnât want you to leave, she realized.
Yet now she was dealing with the likelihood you would die, hell, you already had, now she was just waiting to find out if you would come back. It wasnât fair. She never had the chance. She had kissed you once. Just once and even then she hadnât given you enough. She had let you walk away. She never held you, not truly. Not the way she wanted to. She wanted you tenderly, ravenously tenderly, in a way she had never imagined. It was almost unbearable.
She skipped lunch, just pacing about the room and making calls, sending emails, working through everything she could. She didnât want to work, but anything was better than doing nothing.
She needed to feel busy, in control, when she had none. She needed her control. Around dinner time she was sitting with you in bed again, her hand gently brushing the stray hairs from your face. Your hair was gorgeous, she loved it. She loved the wildness of it. Even now, as the life in you seemed almost gone, your hair was still wild. It gave her hope. She repeated the action, playing with your curls gently. She didnât know if she would ever be allowed this close again, she didnât know if she would ever have the chance.
Thatâs when she noticed it.
It shouldnât have been possible, but it happened.
She repeated the action, gently brushing your hair away from your face, and small red and white flowers bloomed in your hair. There were considerably less, and they were considerably smaller, yet they were there.
It nearly made her heart stop. It really was instinctual then, the way you responded to her. Even unconscious you reacted to her hands. White and red. She knew red, white she wasnât sure about, but red, red was a sign. You wanted her there. She nearly sobbed at the realization. You couldnât tell her, but your body could still show her. You wanted her. She had seen it before, but seeing it now, it floored her.
Warm, you had to be warm, that was the excuse she gave herself when she pulled you in close, wrapping her arms around you. She watched for any sign of the flowers fading, yet they stayed as she laid there wrapped around you. If anything, they almost seemed to bloom further.
If she held you tight enough it almost felt like you were there. It almost felt like you were with her. Almost. This time, when she slipped off into sleep, she stayed asleep. She finally slept through the night with you in her arms, with hope in her heart. You had a chance, she kept repeating to herself, and that is what stayed with her as she finally slept through the night.
It was late when she woke, the sun was setting. In any other case she would have been panicking wildly when she realized she missed a full day of work. But like this, like this all she could focus on was you in her arms. There was a moment, just a moment of bliss. A singular moment when the fading light hit her skin, when she could few you in her arms, smell your skin and hair, that felt like heaven.
She hissed as she felt you there, still unmoving. The reality of you being gone, or almost gone, slammed back into her as her arms tightened around you for a moment. She didnât open her eyes, she just curled into you tighter as the tears started to return. She didnât know how she could possibly have more in her.
âYouâd hate this,â She whispered to you. âIf you were here, really here, you would hate this, having someone hang on you like this. Iâm sorry, I just, I donât want to let go.â She whispered to you. Silence hung in the air for a moment, just a second more of pretending. Just a little moment of pretending you could hear her, just a second indulging in the fantasy would have to be enough. She took a deep breath in, trying to stop the tears from coming once more.
âI quite like it actually, youâre warm, and my hands are still numb.â You murmured, and the woman shot up, staring at you with tears in her eyes. You looked up at her tiredly, yet there was a small smile on your face, one that filled her with warmth even if you couldnât.
Relief flooded her as she looked at you, you were there. Not just your body, you. She nearly laughed as she cupped your face in her hands, holding you tenderly. Your breath hitched as she did so, unused to being touched in that way. Yet instead of pulling away, or jerking back as you almost expected yourself to do, you relaxed into her hands, turning into her palm slightly. You closed your eyes for a moment, your breath shaking as you just felt her there, felt her hands on you. For the first time in your life you loved the feeling. It felt good. She, felt good. When you opened them again, there were tears in her eyes.
âGood god, youâre even stunning when you cry, that canât be fair.â You breathed, and she just shook her head, pulling you into another tight embrace. You sighed, relaxing into her arms. Heaven help you, but you loved it. You loved her strong arms around you, holding you tight to her as if you might slip away any second.
âI thought you were gone.â She whispered, and you nodded.
âSo did I.â You breathed out, and she shook her head at you in wonder before it quickly faded to something akin to anger. Worry, you realized, she was worried about you. Someone was worried about you.
âWhy, why did you do that?â She rasped, and you took a deep breath. She was on the verge of anger, the only thing keeping her from blowing up being your considerably weakened state.
âI told you, didnât I? Iâve served my purpose, believe me, I would love to give more, but I- Iâve made things that became terrible Larissa, horrifying.â You swallowed, your mind going far away for a moment. Your eyes seemed to darken in horror, disgust even, and she took your hand, drawing your attention back to her. âYes, sorry,â you breathed. There were things you didnât want her to know, parts of you that you didnât want her to see. That, that was one of them. âBut I would rather die to find a cure than watch my creation kill you and countless others, if it came to that.â You sighed, and she swallowed, looking at you.
âDonât you ever- I mean ever, do that again, do you understand me?â She hissed, and your eyes widened slightly at the intensity. It sent a shiver through you as her hands tightened slightly with her conviction.
âYes.â You breathed, and she took a deep breath in, closing her eyes and seemingly calming herself. When she opened them again, the look in her eyes almost struck you.
She looked at you with such intensity you could feel the blush spread across your cheeks despite the fact that you were sure you were still missing volumes of blood. You were still cold, but she was warm. She was warm and almost, dare you say, safe. It was an odd feeling, being held by someone and feeling, safe, yet when she did it, it was the most natural thing in the world. Her eyes were looking at you as if you held the very world in your hands, and you were sure you looked much the same.
âBut it seems I havenât.â You breathed, trying to find the words.
âNo your- Morticia came and she, Iâm not quite sure but she used your plants to give you blood.â She explained, and you nodded. You closed your eyes, trying to see if you had access to the memory. It was hazy, but you could hear her speaking, even if nothing else.
Then you heard what she said. Your face hardened for a moment, your jaw working as rage filled you. Of course, of course your sister would attack Larissa the second the idea popped into her head. She never thought about the repercussions, she never seemed to even realize they could exist.
âFucking bitch,â you sighed, shaking your head. Larissa furrowed her brows.
âShe saved your life, what are you-â you cut her off, pulling her down to you until her lips were just a hair away from your own. Her breath caught in her throat, your hands were weaker than she was used to, but the action had caught her so off guard she almost fell into you, her hands bracing on either side of you as she leaned half over you. Her heart rate skyrocketed. You were so close. You were so close and you were awake, and you were looking at her in a way that had her heart beating faster as a blush settled on her cheeks.
âSheâs wrong, you know?â You said softly, and Larissa swallowed, your hands were wrapped around the collar of her nightdress, holding her close enough you shared the same air. She could pull away if she wanted, hell, she could still feel the difference in you, the exhaustion and weakness battering your body. You were never too rough with her, even now. You would be firm, but you always gave her the chance to pull away. It was almost as if you expected her too. As if you were terrified of not letting her get away. Larissa swallowed, her eyes flickering to your lips before she looked back up at you.
âWhat?â She breathed, her mind unable to focus on anything other than how close you were.
âYou are not pathetic, or needy, I on the other handâŚâ you trailed, and the woman swallowed. Her hand slowly wrapped around your waist, holding you up and close to her. You let out a soft sigh at the feeling, your eyes slipping closed for a moment as you felt her arm around you. God, it had never felt like that before. The woman gaped at you, the bliss on your face, the slight groan in the sigh that you let out as soon as she held you, it had her heart pounding in her ears. It was like the slightest touch was enough to have you looking nearly fucked out. It dawned on her exactly how starved for touch you were.
âOphelia, I-â She stuttered, and you hushed her.
âI know, you thought I was dying, I wonât hold you to anything, but if youâd like, Iâm aching to show you exactly how grateful I am for keeping me warm.â You whispered, and she nearly groaned. You were so close, your bodies tangled together. If it wasnât for the fact that she could actively feel you on the verge of shivering, the heat between you would have been overwhelming.
âNow?â She breathed, and your eyes flickered closed. You would try to explain it, for her. Yet it was like nothing you had ever felt before.
âLarissa, itâs any time youâre in the same room as me, you canât honestly believe I can ignore being literally held by you.â You swallowed, and her eyes widened. You sighed, looking back to her. âGod youâre beautiful.â You swallowed. âHow do you expect me to ignore something that pierces me every time I see you?â You asked her softly, and she swallowed. Of all the things you could sayâŚ
âYou mean it?â She asked, almost as if the idea was ridiculous. You shook your head softly, swallowing down the lump in your throat. How could she ever think you didnât? You knew who had conditioned her to think that way. You knew the people who had shaped her. The rage you felt towards them threatened to consume you, only to be overshadowed by the need to comfort her.
âIf I had the strength I would show you exactly how much I mean it.â You whispered, and her breath quickened as a blush stained her cheeks. She was heating up under your touch, her body warming yours in turn as you felt a familiar pull in your lower abdomen. Larissa, on the other hand, felt the ache in hers only double as you looked at her with such want in you that it took her breath away.
âI- I want, yes.â She managed, and you leaned in slightly closer, nearly meeting her lips again.
âYou want what, Larissa?â You asked her, and she stared achingly at your lips. So close.
âI want you to show me youâre real.â She breathed, and you hummed, taking your hand to her chin. When you pulled her in it was soft, gentle, but burning. Your lips met hers with a comfort, a sense of safety, she didnât know was possible. She ached for you, she ached for the home you felt like, the warmth, even now as it was dimmed. She groaned, wrapping her hand around and into your hair, pulling you closer. The little whimper you gave at the gesture had her aching to find out what else she could pull from you. It was slow, she knew you didnât have much to give her, but you gave her everything that you had.
âSo good for me,â you murmured against her lips, and her eyes went wide before she crashed into you again. The simple word had sent waves through her, making her nearly whine in need. It felt so good. It felt so unimaginably good to loose her control with you. She was exhausted, every moment waiting to see if you would wake had been torture, she had been wound tight enough to snap, and now here you were, pulling her into yourself and praising her for helping you. It drove her insane. Her body shook as you kissed her, your lips pressing onto hers again and again, waves of passion flowing from you and into her.
Your hands slipped from her collar to around her neck and shoulders, always on her nightclothes, never bold enough to trace her actual skin. Yet still, you were holding her close, she shifted, nearly pulling you onto her lap, and you smiled, sitting up and straddling her legs, making the woman gasp as her hands traced down your body. Your breath hitched as she gripped your ass, pulling you in more. She panicked at your startled reaction.
âSorry, I-â she whispered, instantly pulling her hand away, but you just shook your head.
âStop fucking apologizing.â You groaned, your trembling hand taking her arm and leading her back to where she was. Her heart thundered as she pulled you into her, your head swimming. You kissed, your tongue slipping into her and making the woman open her mouth slightly in surprise. She wasnât used to this, wasnât used to someone exploring her in this way. You moaned at her taste, holding onto her hesitantly. âYou kept me warm, stayed with me for so long,â you murmured, and she nodded helplessly against you. âSuch a good-â
You heard the yelling before she did, and you almost instantly pulled back, looking to the door just as you heard a voice that had to be Enid. She nearly cried out at the feeling of loosing your closeness once again. More, she needed more. She needed you!
âWednesday, you canât just storm into Miss Weems room-â she called, and Larissa immediately put you down, moving as fast as she could without shoving you off. The both of you sobered very quickly, Larissa staring at you redder than you had ever seen her and her chest heaving as she tried to calm herself. Your head was left dizzy as your body ached for her, your heart caught somewhere in between. Larissa just stared at you for a moment, as if she didnât know what to do. You nodded, wordlessly telling her you would follow her lead, a gesture that had her wanting to sink back into the bed with you right then and there.
Then the headmistress mask slipped back into place, she straightened her clothing, and you watched as Larissa turned back, walking to the door calmly.
She left, going to the room to appease the girls, trying to shove down whatever reaction you had just caused. It had to be that she missed you, that it was you, nothing else. She was always in control, she didnât need the praise, didnât need you to take the lead. She had taken the lead many times before, she was comfortable with it, she understood it. Hell, she was expected to do it. Yet the second that the word âgoodâ left your mouth, she could have sworn she was on the verge of begging. Her mind cleared as the girls accosted her, too distracted by their own discovery to notice her state.
âHeadmistress Weems, look, look at this!â Wednesday practically yelled, you could hear them on the other side of the door into the bedroom. They were in Larissaâs little living room, the two girls likely on the verge of pouncing her. You would have felt bad for the woman had you not so desperately wanted to see your niece.
You got up slowly, easing yourself to your feet. It was difficult, you were weak, very weak, and you hated the feeling. You had felt weak before, and you had promised yourself you would never feel that way again, yet here you were, staggering to your feet as you attempted to make your way to the door. You shuffled your way across the room and to the door, your feet feeling like lead.
âIt bloomed! She gave this to me Miss Weems and it bloomed! That has to mean something!â Wednesday yelled up at the tall woman. You nearly laughed, you loved the way she would notice everything.
âMiss Addams if you will just calm down-â Larissa tried in vain.
âNo! You listen!â The girl growled, and you quickly realized that she was very close to downright attacking the woman if you didnât stop her.
âWednesday, donât yell at your headmistress, Iâm too tired to get you out of trouble.â You smiled from the door.
The girl froze, slowly turning to you. The plant in her hands fell to the floor and you cringed, but she didnât care. She ran to you, wrapping her arms around you and holding you tight. You returned the gesture, your own arms wrapping around the girlâs waist with no hesitation. She was the only one, the only one you ever touched without hesitation. You cried. The both of you cried. You held her close, clutching onto her as she sobbed, unwilling to let you go. It would be alright, you reminded yourself, and you glanced to Larissa for a moment, noticing her own watery eyes at the way you interacted with the girl. It would be alright. She was quiet as she watched you, not wanting to ruin the moment. There were very few people you would touch, and she knew how hard it was for you. She wouldnât take away a moment with the one person you allowed close to you in that way from you, she couldnât.
Eventually you could breathe again, and you smiled down at the girl attached to your waist.
âMiss me?â You teased, and she just shook her head, refusing to speak and burying her face in your chest. âAlright, I know.â You whispered, moving and sitting on the couch by the fire. She didnât detach herself, sitting with you and holding you as if someone was going to take you away from her. You relaxed, slowly petting her hair and rubbing her back until the tears subsided. Enid stared at you, her own eyes wide and full of tears. You chuckled, waving her over.
âI know you have a no touching rule other than Wednesday, itâs ok.â She nodded, stepping back, and you raised a brow.
âMy dear you saw my body bleed out on the ground, if you would like a hug youâre welcome to one, but I understand the aversion.â You said calmly, and Enid went wide eyed. You smiled as she pounced on you, both girls holding you tight. Enid was carful to stay where she wouldnât touch your skin, only hugging you through the thick sweater Larissa had seemingly given back to you when you were out.
You glanced up at Larissa, the woman watching you with nothing but pure adoration in her eyes. It struck you. This was her home, you realized. Her students, she protected them like her own, and seeing you with them, it moved her. You knew what that felt like. Enid pulled away, smiling and sitting down on the floor by the fire. For once, you were thankful for Larissa and her constant need to keep her rooms hot as can be.
âYouâre not moving, are you?â You asked your niece, and she just shook her head. You scoffed, rolling your eyes. âEnid, you donât have to sit on the floor.â You chuckled, and she just shrugged, happy to lay by the fire.
âIâm good, floor is good.â She chirped, and you shrugged.
âFair enough, I was always a floor person.â You muttered, and Larissa raised a brow at you. âOh come on, I grow plants from the palms of my hand and can manipulate any from the actual earth, does it really surprise you I ran around barefoot laying in the grass whenever I could my whole life?â You asked her, and she sighed, shaking her head.
âI suppose not.â She swallowed. She was doing her best not to stare. She didnât know what to do, these were her rooms, but Wednesday was your family, Enid was here for you, and she was, alone. She took a deep breath, steadying herself. Of course she was, what was she thinking? She had helped you when you needed it, now it was time for you to go back to your family, that was the obvious answer. Yet it hurt. She had Nevermore, she had her students, she didnât know why she should care. Itâs not as if she had been in a true family for a very long time. She had moved on from it, ignoring the slight ache she felt when looking at girls or women with their mothers, yet you, holding your niece so tenderly, cracked her open so deep it almost felt irrevocable. It had been years, decades since she felt this way.
She took a deep breath, looking away before she revealed any of the pain the sight caused her. This was your time, she should go. She had to go. It was not her place to interrupt this. She turned to go find something to do, only to hear you call for her.
âAnd where do you think youâre going?â You asked, a slight smile on your face. She turned to you, furrowing her brows.
âWell I was going to go find something to work on, what with the past few days being as theyâve been. Youâre with your family, itâs fine, you donât need me, Iâll go.â She justified, turning to go again, and you shook your head.
âStay with me.â You said, and Enid looked to you in wonder as Larissa turned, staring at you. Her heart nearly skipped a beat. You were asking her, to stay. You didnât need her anymore, you had the fire, you were awake, you had your niece, and still you wanted her to stay? She looked at you confused.
âMiss Ophelia, I should really-â she protested, only for one word to cut her off. One little word that stopped her in her tracks.
âPlease?â You asked softly. She stared still. âIâd like you to stay.â You murmured, and her heart nearly broke open. So many times she had been sent away. Off out of sight, off to mind her own business, off to find something to do, off to school, off away from Morticia, off away from others she had wanted to cling to. Her own parents had disowned her, yet you, as tired and hurt as you were, asked her to stay. You said it as if it was so easy, so simple, just words. They were, she supposed, but to her they meant everything. Her eyes threatened to fill with tears, and she took a deep breath, gaining control of herself, she wouldnât cry in front of students. She couldnât.
âI suppose I can.â She conceded, and you smiled in relief. The look that had crossed her face when you asked her nearly broke your heart. It was as if she didnât believe herself worthy of even being there with you. That, you would have to talk to her about later, when the girls werenât around.
âCan she sit on the other end of the couch, darling?â You asked the girl half in your lap, and she just nodded, so you smiled to Larissa, raising your brows and gesturing across from you. The woman swallowed, slowly making her way to the other end. Wednesday was between you two, yet she could feel your presence reaching for her, your warmth, as she sat, crossing her legs elegantly. You looked away from the action. Enid was already mesmerized that you liked women, catching onto the fact that you liked the Headmistress would likely not be something the woman would enjoy. âThank you.â You said softly, and the woman just nodded, looking at you with an unreadable expression.
âAsk her questions.â Wednesday mumbled from her place buried in your chest and you laughed. Enid nearly bounced by the fire, trying not to burst into flames herself. Larissa raised a brow at the suggestion, but you just winked at her, making her look away quickly as you smiled at Enid. You were a madwoman, the headmistress knew this, yet she couldnât help but enjoy the rush that went through her when you conspired with her. You chuckled, looking to the girl.
âGo ahead, ask me anything.â You smiled, âIâm fairly certain Wednesday would just like to hear me talk to prove Iâm alive.â You deadpanned, and the girl didnât even bother denying it. Enid thought for a moment, wondering what she could ask. There were things she wanted to, almost needed to, but she wasnât sure if she should, especially with the headmistress right there.
âCaaaaaan, I ask you questions as my best friendâs cool aunt and not my teacher?â She asked, and you hummed, tilting your head to think for a moment. You turned to Larissa.
âAny objections?â You asked her, and she looked surprised. You were asking her opinion. You didnât just want her here, you were including her. She blushed a bit at the realization, unused to such a thing. She also thought for a moment, before she gestured noncommittally.
âI suppose as long as the questions arenât explicit. It is after school hours. The information you give her would be expected to not leave this room, however.â She spoke, and you nodded, smiling at her before turning to Enid.
âThink you can handle that?â You asked, and the girl nodded, thinking again for a moment. She turned a bright red and Larissa raised her brows at the student before she spoke.
âUmm, how did you Uh, know?â She asked tentatively, and you raised a brow.
âHow did I know what?â You asked her, and she swallowed, glancing nervously from you, to Larissa, to Wednesday, back to you.
âNevermind, itâs silly, I shouldnât even be thinking about-â she rushed, and you realized.
âOhhh,â you hummed, âthat.â You chuckled, and she blanched.
âYou donât have to! Iâm sorry!â She yipped, and you waved her off.
âThatâs alright, I donât mind.â You said gently, playing absentmindedly with Wednesdayâs hair as you thought. âWell, I was with my sister at a Museam, we were little, maybe nine or so. I was walking around looking at the paintings when I saw this beautiful woman standing looking at one.â You smiled. âShe was the most stunning creature I had ever seen, tall, dark hair, elegant and graceful. She sat, staring at the painting, and I realized as everyone else in the room was looking at the paintings, I only wanted to look at her.â You said gently.
Larissaâs face slackened a little bit. Hearing you talk was always wonderful, the way your voice and accent were distinctly your own. You didnât speak like an American, or any certain European, you just spoke like you. It always took her breath away.
âI think thatâs the earliest memory I have of the general feeling, of course there were others, the slight heart attack when a beautiful woman got too close, the general horror at the idea of marrying a man.â You shrugged. âGranted that was just me, there are many different ways and types of attraction.â You hummed, and Enid furrowed her brows.
âWhat do you mean?â She asked, and again you thought for a moment. Your brows raised slightly at her lack of knowledge, the girls were sixteen, the fact that she had no concept of it surprised you. Then again, with what she had said about her familyâŚ
âI happen to only like woman. Some women only like men. Some women like men, women, and those in between differently, some regardless of their sex or gender, it depends on the person.â You said, and Enid stared for a moment.
âWhat.â She flatlined, and you chuckled a bit before you realized the sadness in that statement. Even Wednesday turned her head to look at her roommate, forcing you to drop your hand to her back, rubbing gently.
âTell me about your family, Enid.â You said softly, and the girl swallowed.
âTheyâre great!â She said quickly, and you waited for more. âI mean, I love them.â She added, and you nodded.
âYou can love your family despite not agreeing with them, or understanding that they have faults.â You encouraged her. âI love my sister but that doesnât mean we always get along, let alone agree, on many things.â You offered, and she thought for a moment. You could feel Larissaâs eyes boring into you, making you swallow and blush slightly under the intensity of her gaze. You couldnât tell if she hadnât liked something you said or she was just staring, but either way, under any other circumstances you might have been on the verge of squirming in your seat.
âDo you love my mother?â Wednesday deadpanned, and you scoffed, rolling your eyes.
âYes, I do.â You sighed. âWe differ, in many, many ways. However that does not mean I donât love her.â You explained.
âShe is cruel to you.â Wednesday countered, and you hummed.
âMorticia can be harsh to those she doesnât understand. She will do whatever she feels she must to protect those she loves, her family. That she holds above all.â You said gently. âIf I were to threaten you, yes, Iâm sure she would do things to me that would horrify you, but you must understand this about your mother. She is gentle, in the same way she can be cutting. She will wield her love like a weapon if she must, and she has never intentionally harmed me for the sake of harming me.â You explained. âYes, she has hurt me, she will not deny that either, however she has never done so out of maliciousness, only in an attempt to protect that which she holds dear.â You explained, and the room went silent for a moment. Larissa just stared at you. The way you spoke was always entrancing, yet the way you could describe your sister, a woman who had hurt you, who had hurt her, it floored her. Your sister had always been black and white. You, were a beautiful swirling grey.
âPlease, continue Enid. Forgive my family and itâs wild dynamics.â You chuckled, scrunching your nose up in jest. The girl swallowed, trying to find her footing after watching you switch in and out of such intensities.
âThey- they love me, they just want whatâs best for me. They want me to do what Iâm supposed to do.â Enid began, and you smiled sadly as you recognized the feeling. âThey want me to wolf out, consistently, under my full control, and find a mate and settle down and have my own pack.â She breathed, swallowing. You nodded. âAnd I get that, I know that they think thatâs whatâs best, but what if it isnât?â She asked you, looking up. âI mean, you never had a husband, or children, and youâre still happy, arenât you?â She asked you, and your eyes widened a touch as you breathed in sharply. Happy, that was a difficult question. Larissa swallowed, staring to you. Were you happy? If you werenât would you leave? She didnât even know what you wanted out of the rest of your life, let alone if you were satisfied with it. She knew you were here because Wednesday needed you, but when she no longer did, would you go again? The question haunted her as you hummed, nodding.
âI am, yes.â You said after a moment. âI am happy with the things I have accomplished, I am very happy that I did not marry a man, and although I do enjoy children, I would not want my own.â You sighed. âIâve worked with and helped many throughout my life. Iâve gotten to watch some grow up even.â You smiled, your eyes going far away for a moment. There was a sadness to them, Larissa realized. When you spoke about that, it hurt you. She leaned closer, she knew you werenât letting on much, but the way you spoke, there was pain there, surrounding children, apparently, and she couldnât help the nervous curiosity it caused in her. âI like being here, I love being Wednesdayâs aunt. I might even say I may someday love this place.â You smiled, and Enid nodded. You paused for a moment, deliberately not looking at the white-haired woman on the other end of the couch. You shouldnât say it, certainly not in front of her. Hell you had just kissed her, yet here you were, giving your honest truth to the girls, her watching. You took a deep breath in, deciding to hell with it. âThe only thing I think about is that I would like to feel loved, truly loved, and to give my heart to someone completely, that I havenât done yet. I donât know if Iâd get married, but I would like to be with someone in that way.â You explained, and Larissa gaped as Enid nodded.
âSo youâd like to love without the expectations of proving it to everyone?â She asked you, and you smiled, nodding.
âThatâs a good way to put it, I hadnât thought of that.â You hummed, and the girl beamed, blushing up at you. Larissa nearly gaped at you. You spoke about it so openly, so fluidly. It was like poetry. She wondered how you could share that peice of yourself, what gave you the ability to show it to the world. You reminded her of the poetry she read when she was young. Heart-wrenching pieces she stole from Morticia, ones that made her feel like perhaps she wasnât so alone in the world. She wondered more if you considered her someone you may love someday. Would she love you someday? Was she falling for you now? The questions spun in her head as she attempted to listen to you speak, it was all too much. You were too much, yet she couldnât get enough of you.
âHave you ever been in love?â Enid asked, and you nodded. Larissa blushed as she realized she was far from a person who should be witnessing this conversation.
âAbsolutely.â You chuckled.
âIâve had my heart broken once or twice. Iâve learned, however, that the pain we feel is just our expression of that moment of love ending, not the death of it. I donât have regrets, well, not in that arena.â You smiled, and Enid giggled.
âWhat does it feel like?â She asked you, and you nodded, thinking for a moment. Larissa bit the inside of her lip as you remained silent, waiting with bated breath for your answer.
âFlying,â you breathed, closing your eyes and leaning your head back. âAnd falling! The falling is important. I suppose itâs different for everyone, but for me it feels like falling, careening towards something, and you donât know whatâs going to happen next but you canât bring yourself to stop.â You breathed, your words bringing a blush to the headmistressâs face. Even now, you somehow managed to light up more when you talked about it. âWhy would you? When theyâre a chance something incredible could happen.â You smiled, your eyes distant for a moment. Enid stared up at you in wonder.
âWoah,â she breathed, and you laughed.
âI have been in love three times, each very different, but I would not forget those experiences, even if they caused me pain.â You said, and the girl nodded.
âAlways with girls?â She asked, and you chuckled.
âAlways with women.â You corrected, and she nodded.
âDo you, worry, since you wonât have kids, that youâll be alone?â She asked you, and you swallowed. That one hit a little harder. You frowned for a moment before answering.
âSometimes.â You admitted. âSometimes I wonder if when I die I will be laying with no one else in the room, but I think that Iâve given enough of my soul to this world, I like to imagine it is with me, that it stays with what I still keep to myself. When I die, I will not leave my own children behind, but I will leave hundreds of other children and students. I will leave knowledge and information that has changed lives, saved some, even.â You said, and the girl nodded, almost star struck. âBut more important than anything, is that I have helped people in my life. I did what I loved, I persued my passion with almost reckless abandon, how could I regret my decisions when looking at the joy they brought me, the joy they brought others.â You smiled, and Enid nodded slowly.
âWednesday is right, you are nice to listen to.â She said, and you laughed, shaking your head.
âThank you my dear, but I am just a well educated nut, I can only give you my experience, itâs up to you to make your own.â You said softly, and she nodded. When you finally turned to look at the headmistress you were struck still. She looked like she may cry. Behind her mask of perfection you could see the emotion in her eyes, swirling into oblivion, into you. You took a deep inhale, resisting the urge to reach for her. You wanted to, more than anything, but you doubted the woman would allow you to in front of her students. What you had said had hit the woman harder than she ever expected it to.
Enid took what you had said in, silent for a moment before she decided to ask more. Wednesday, instead, asked the next question.
âTell me about Newflight.â She mumbled into you, and you sighed, closing your eyes for a moment. You knew it had been a matter of time before she asked again, but you didnât expect it to be now.
âWednesday, you know I donât want to-â You began, only to be cut off.
âPlease?â She asked, looking up at you. âI want to know where it is they want to send me. I want to know what my mother is so scared of, what youâre protecting me from.â She said, and you swallowed. You couldnât deny her, you never could. Larissa took a deep breath, staring at you nervously. She felt like an outsider witnessing this, like she shouldnât be here. You made no move to ask her to go or to leave yourself however. You just sat, thinking for a moment. She watched as the firelight flickered on your face, seeming to reveal the darkening of your eyes and the hollow points of your face as your mind shifted to the institution that once held you. You took a deep breath in, preparing yourself.
âFirst off, Newflight doesnât exist anymore, it was shut down, unfortunately there are still three places like it in the world.â You swallowed. Both girls as well as the headmistress watched you as you tried to find the words. âI was sent there during your motherâs first year of school, she came here, I went there. When they take you in the first thing they do is cut your hair, give you a uniform, and lock you in your room for three days.â You explained calmly. Enid stared at you in horror as your niece just listened. âIt is designed to break you, to rip you from your abilities and to beat you into submission. The goal is to produce an âacceptableâ student, and later adult. For me, that meant a housewife to a man, a mother, and a woman who couldnât do anything other than grow flowers.â You swallowed, your eyes going far away as you stared at the fire. âThey starve you, drug you, beat you. You attend classes in homemaking and are constantly being subject to âtreatmentsâ to strip you of your abilities.â You swallowed. You had talked about it many times, you had to on certain occasions, yet you still didnât enjoy it. Your voice was cold, factual, loosing the ease and beauty it had held just moments ago. The comparison was striking. âYouâre permitted one shower every three days, and itâs cold, the soap stings your skin, and you wash your hair with the same bar.â You sighed. âTerrible for the curls.â You muttered, looking to the girls, who just stared at you wide eyed. âMost die in three years, or are taken out of the program a shell. Their former abilities gone, along with their sanity.â You swallowed. Wednesday looked up at you.
âHow long weâre you there?â She asked you, and you swallowed.
âSix.â You answered, and you saw the moment the tears started to fill her eyes. Larissa gasped. Six years. Six years you were kept in that place, brutalized and tortured. For six years you had been made into the living skeleton she had seen in the bed, the first six of the years your sister had been with her.
âHow did you do it?â She asked you, and for the first time since you began the story, you looked at her. There were tears in her eyes, the same ones filled with horror. You smiled sadly, reaching your hand over the back of the couch for her, around your niece. She stared at it. Now? You wanted her touch now? She didnât understand. Yet the moment her hand was in yours she relaxed slightly, and she realized you hadnât done it for yourself.
âMy sister sent me letters.â You smiled. âEvery week. Sometimes I would get a vision from them, that was always a riot.â You chuckled, and she blanched at the idea of what all you could have seen. âI read countless stories of her, her escapades with boys, her insufferably intelligent roommate, oh the drama!â You chuckled, and Larissa just shook her head at you in wonder. You could laugh. After everything you had been through, you could laugh about it. âShe wrote me before she and Gomez got engaged. She wrote me about boy drama, girl drama, class drama. She wrote me about the many, many years you won the Poe cup! I actually got a vision one year of your team finishing first. The orderlies were less than amused, but I was rather happy with the idea.â You chuckled. âIâve seen you play the piano, for the record, I used to refrigerate the vision of you playing âMoonlight Sonataâ nearly every night.â You hummed, and the womanâs jaw dropped. âYou play beautifully.â You smiled, turning your face back to the fire before the intimacy of the gaze was too much for you. Your hand, however, remained in yours. âI read every letter like it was a lifeline.â You said calmly. âIt often was.â You added, and she squeezed your hand, calling your attention to her again. You smiled at the gesture, nodding slightly before looking back at the girls. Youâd rather stare into her eyes forever, yet you knew you couldnât in front of them. âThat and Iâm far too stubborn for my own good.â You smiled, and Wednesday chuckled through teary eyes.
âThatâs why you donât like conversion camp, isnât it?â Enid asked you, and you nodded.
âI am of the school of thought that forcing anything to do with an ability upon a child is cruel, abusive, even.â You said gently, and she nodded. âThere are cases where one must learn to control it, but the methods used in places like that are, that is not what theyâre for.â You swallowed, and the girl nodded. âAre we done with that then, Iâd rather talk about something less depressing since, you know, Iâm alive and all that.â You smiled, and Wednesday scoffed. She just rolled her eyes.
âIs all love as disgusting as my parents are with it?â She asked you, only half joking, and you barked out a quick laugh. That was not what you were expecting from the girl, but you would take it. Larissa loved the sound of your laugh, she decided. The second she heard it, the freedom in it, she decided she loved it.
âNo, of course not. Your parents are disgusting because we are related to them, but the fact that they are, like that, does not help.â You muttered, and the girl glared against you. âLove takes many forms. For them, itâs more physical, primal.â You grimaced, and the girl on your lap gagged. âAnd sometimes it is like that,â you continued. âBut sometimes it is soft, sometimes quiet. It can be subtle or sudden. Desperate or hidden, there are many types of love, girls.â You smiled. Larissa swallowed, heating up once more. She couldnât help but imagine you like that.
She imagined you primal, pulling her close and taking what you wanted from her until she was helpless to do anything but bask in the sheer force of nature that you were. She imagined you soft and quiet, your hands grazing her shoulders as she sat with her morning tea, a quick kiss on the cheek before you sat down next to her, adding honey to your own cup. She imagined the subtlety of you glancing at her across a room, a knowing look in your eyes as she spoke with whomever about anything. She imagined the sudden way you could have her, sweeping her off her feet and kissing her as if it was the last thing you would ever do. She imagined you desperate, begging for her as she kissed over your neck and shoulders, tracing every inch of your scars with her lips. She imagined the hidden glances you could give her, hiding from others in the dark of your rooms. With each idea her heart beat faster, the ache in her chest growing. She couldnât do this- she couldnât want you like that. She only snapped out of it when Wednesday spoke again.
âHave you been in all of them?â Wednesday teased you, and you rolled your eyes.
âThe fact that your mother has told you anything about me having any type of affair still haunts me, child.â You smirked, and the girl huffed in lieu of laughter. âBut no. I have been in love like that, quick and primal, however I canât say Iâve experienced much of the tenderness and adoration they have for each other. Moments of it, yes, but I have not lived in it in that way.â You answered her, and again, she gagged. You chuckled âAnything else?â You asked the girls, and Enid thought for a moment. She had a question, even if it was silly.
âHmm, whatâs your favorite flower?â She asked you, and you smiled, chuckling a bit. You glanced to Larissa, who was too busy watching you speak to even realize you were looking at her. âWhite irises.â You spoke softly, the comparison to the woman sitting across from you lost on her as she simply stared at you in bewilderment.
You were beautiful. The more you talked about love the more she wanted to- no, she couldnât. Kissing you was one thing, but that? Love? Love wasnât in the cards for her, she knew that. She had tried. She had tried to love others, she had given her heart away time after time, always only to find pain. Even her parents never gave it freely. Her parents had been the first ones to cut her off from it. Then there had been Morticia, and others followed after her. Love had to be earned, it was a price. She simply had nothing more to give.
âAre you alright?â You asked her quietly, your thumb running over her hand, and she snapped out of it, realizing she was staring.
âI, yes, of course, just tired.â She muttered, and you nodded. That wasnât it, you could tell that wasnât it, but you allowed her the space.
âWe should head to bed girls.â You hummed, and Enid pouted.
âNot leaving.â Wednesday gritted, and you sighed.
âWednesday, I donât know if I can cary you right now.â You sighed, and she groaned, standing and waiting for you.
âOh, so this is going to be a thing?â You asked her, and she glared.
âSay a word to anyone and Iâll put weed killer in your classroom.â She gritted. You narrowed your eyes.
âIâll paint your half of the room neon pink.â You retorted. She faked a gasp, grabbing her chest.
âIâll poison you.â She breathed, and you raised a brow.
âGood luck with that.â You smiled, still not getting up, and she smirked, taking Enid and going to the door. âShower and pajamas first I may be exhausted but you are not tracking whatever the hell you did today into my bed!â You yelled, and the girl rolled her eyes as she left, leaving you sitting with Larissa next to you.
Silence hung in the air for a moment as you refused to take your hand from hers, you didnât want to leave her. You wanted to stay with her again, in her arms, in her bed, yet the only reason she had done that was the fact that you could have quite literally died had she not, you reminded yourself.
âSheâll stay with me tonight.â You sighed, looking to the woman. âI- I canât tell her no, not after everything.â You swallowed, and she tried to smile. You had to go. Your time with her was done. She knew it would come, and now it was over. She stood, finding her professionalism.
âOf course, Iâm glad youâre alright.â She said politely, folding her hands in front of her. You furrowed your brows. She was, cordial.
âLarissa, I-â you began, standing, but she cut you off.
âNo, itâs, its quite alright, I understand. Go be with your family.â She said, and your heart fell.
âI, I have to go with her but that doesnât mean that I-â you tried, but she just shook her head, stepping away from you. It was good, she should end it now before it went any further. She had loved your sister once and seen where it had gotten her. She had loved others too, and it lead to the same place. She was not made to be loved, she was made to be strong, she told herself, ignoring the pain the familiar statement caused.
âPlease go.â She said softly, and your eyes widened as you looked up at her. She couldnât take it, you in just the sweater she had put you in, your bare legs and uncovered hands almost falling to her. She wanted to drop to her knees, to feel every inch of you, yet she knew she couldnât. She had her moment with you, she had her kiss. It was time to let it go. âPlease.â She repeated softly, and you felt the ache in your throat. She was pushing you away, now. Now she was sending you away. You swallowed, trying to force down the tears that threatened to come.
âOf course.â You swallowed.
âGoodnight, Larissa.â You whispered, the pain in your voice clear, even to her, as she left.
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Fresh Cut Roses - Chapter 9 - Going Down
(Larissa watched helplessly as you give everything you have for her, as you slip away into nothing. As you fall away however, things she never could have imagined are revealed.)
WARNING: BLOOD/GRAPHIC PAIN/BLEEDING OUT/DEATH/KNIVES
âYouâre insane.â The man said through the massive wall of plant life you had created to stop the spread of your own creation. He was right, but now wasnât the time to discuss that.
âYes.â You muttered, creating a pitcher plant to work in, somewhat ignoring him.
âDo you actually dance while you work, I heard that somewhere.â The man asked, and you tried to laugh as panic flooded through you. He was distracting you, you realized. It would be welcome in a moment, you knew what you would have to do, but not yet.
âI do, yes. Normally.â You swallowed. Larissa looked up again when she felt the shift in the air. There was a small smile on your face, a pained one, but it almost looked like, hope. She saw the plants you were creating, the pitcher, the plethora of others, vines holding everything at the height you needed it. It was incredibly intricate, insanely so. Your precision, even when you seemed to be loosing it, was breathtaking.
âWhat are you doing?â She asked, her voice empty. You swallowed. She sounded broken. It ripped into you like nothing you had ever felt. Worse then that, she sounded like she had given up. You took a deep breath in, steadying yourself. She would not sound like that. You would make it so she would not sound like that. It may very well be the last thing you do, but you would find a way.
âIâm going to stabilize what he has, what you might have been exposed to.â You said, your throat tight. She gasped, a chance, she had a chance. She stared at you, a flicker coming back to her eyes. You steadied yourself. Thatâs what you were doing this for, it was worth it.
âCan- can you do that?â She asked, and you tried to smile.
âI can try.â You nodded, and she breathed out in amazement. âMay I- May I borrow your phone?â You asked her, and she furrowed her brows. âI have some calls I have to make.â You got out. She didnât know what it meant yet, you realized. Peter knew what you would have to do as soon as you said it. Without the proper equipment, you would have to give more than you had to give. You would have to give more than there was. She, on the other hand, had no idea.
She stood, bringing the phone over to you as she clutched the mask to her face still. There were loops and loops of vines, running through various plants and pitcher plants, an intricate system you had created, one vine leading to a final pitcher, what you would make, and another leading to you. She looked at them all in amazement. This is what you could do, this is what you used to do.
âWhat- how does this work?â She asked you, and you tried to smile one more time. You were acting strange, you were still incredibly nervous, that made sense, but there was a sense of finality she didnât understand.
âYouâll see.â You breathed, you were shaking, she realized.
âOphelia, what do you mean?â She asked you, her concern growing again. She had been zoned out for who knows how long, you had decided you were going to try to fix it and set all of this up since then.
You smiled sadly at her, trying to nod in encouragement.
âClose your eyes, Larissa, this isnât the fun part.â You whispered, and she looked to you.
âOphelia, what?â She tried, stepping closer, and you shook your head.
âIf we want to do this we have to start now, and, and I need you to close your eyes.â You grimaced. She shook her head, wrapping her arm around herself. Something was wrong, something was very wrong. You shouldnât be scared, you should be excited. âPlease, I just need you to do this, please?â You asked softly, and slowly, slowly she turned away from you, clutching your handkerchief to her face as she did so. She heard you hiss, heard your shuddering breaths. Whatever you were doing, it wasnât pleasant. Her heart stopped, however, when she heard you try to speak after Peter asked you something.
âYouâre really doing it, arenât you?â Peter asked, and you swallowed.
âThi- this would be a- a lot e- oh fuck- easier if you werenât talking.â You grimaced, your voice coming through strained by tears. Larissa gasped, she went to turn around but you yelled. âLarissa, donât. You donât want to see this.â You choked, and she shivered. Whatever you were doing, you were going through hell to do it. You cried out, nearly screaming in pain as you sliced the skin off your forearm, exposing the blood vessels there. âHah- I- Iâm in.â You stuttered, and the man swallowed. He knew what you were doing, he had seen you sit in your lab before draining blood for hours on end, but this, this would be at a level even he couldnât fully comprehend.
âKeep talking, you canât pass out yet.â He reminded you, and you cried out as tears streamed down your face. It hurt. You had stuck yourself countess times, but slicing the skin off your arm to reach into your own blood vessels was a level you had yet to experience.
âNot yet.â You repeated, almost screaming through your teeth as you cut into yourself, pulling away the arteries. You pulled one of the vines closer, shoving it into your arm and beginning the process of webbing it to you. You could do it, but it was excruciating.
You grew the plant inside your body, connecting directly to your blood supply. You tried to stay silent, you did, but you groaned and cried as you finally cut the artery, fully spreading the plant inside your skin to direct the blood up into the elaborate contraption you had made. You could feel the plant growing into you, it was ripping you apart from the inside of your very veins. You nearly gagged as the pain washed over you, threatening to heave. You couldnât, you had to breathe and get through this, it wouldnât hurt for long.
You took in a deep breath, stilling the plant inside you. You shook as you stopped, trying to calm yourself. Tears were streaming down your face, there was blood on your hands, and your mind was split in a hundred different directions as the blood slowly drew up the plant. It had begun. You panted, leaning back against the wall and dropping the knife.
âAlright.â You gritted. âItâs not pretty, but, it- itâs over. You can turn now, Larissa.â You wheezed. She snapped around to face you, her eyes going wide.
The woman gasped in horror once again as she turned. There was blood all over your arm, your blood, and a plant growing into you. It was actually growing into you, you had grown it into your very flesh, and she could see the blood slowly being siphoned from your body through it.
âWhat, what is this?â She breathed, moving to you and kneeling in front of you almost instantly. You would have blushed at the show of care had it not been for the amount of blood you were quickly loosing.
âIt- it works from my dna, my plasma. I can use that and, and the plants Iâm running it through to modify it enough to work as a stabilizer. It, it will stop it.â You breathed. âIâm going to stop it.â You panted. Your voice was breathy, weak. It was a whisper of what you would normally use to speak to her, your normal voice was beautiful, it was somehow enthralling and soothing to the woman at the same time. You didnât speak with an American accent, you had lived most of your life overseas, yet it wasnât quite English either. Your voice had been changed by the languages you had conducted through it, yet now, now it sounded stripped bare.
âSheâs going to die.â Peter said, and you shook your head.
âHey, donât spoil my ending, you bastard.â You breathed. It was already harder to focus, splitting your mind to each plant, each one taking the place of a different piece of lab equipment, running a specific function. It was dizzying.
âYouâre going to bleed yourself dry, and then youâre going to die, Ophelia, you know that.â He said, his voice almost somber. Larissa looked to you in horror, but you just shook your head, leaning back on the wall behind you. You were tired, already. It had barely begun and you were exhausted. Yet you swallowed it down, instead focusing on the man speaking to you.
âCareful, you almost sound like you might miss me.â You smiled, the toll already being taken. It would take a while, an hour maybe, but it was already starting to show what doing that was going to do to you.
âOphelia,â Larissa breathed, and you looked up at her, smiling tearfully.
âHey, itâs ok.â You smiled. âI know what Iâm doing, itâs ok.â You repeated.
âOphelia, you canât.â She choked, and you shook your head.
âYes, I can. And Iâm choosing to.â You began. âIâve done a lot, alright. Peter can tell you.â You laughed before you looked at her again. Your eyes were shining with unshed tears, but your conviction was strong, despite the exhaustion already starting to show through. âI- Iâve served my purpose in this world. You, you have so much more to do, Larissa. You matter, so much more than you think you do, you- you change students, you change their lives. If I had been to a place like this, I- god I canât imagine what else I might have done.â You smiled. âYou light up the sky.â You breathed, and her eyes started to water, tears beginning to gather in her eyes. âMmm, no tears.â You hummed. You stared at her for a moment, scanning her crystal blue eyes, almost as if you werenât sure if you wanted to say wherever came to your mind next.
âOphelia,â she whispered, her heart nearly breaking. It was too soon, she had barely gotten the chance to know you, she had only just kissed you and it felt like- it had never felt like that before. She couldnât loose you now, not after everything, not this soon.
âI know we havenât known each other long, not in this life at least- or I suppose you havenât known me, but I, Iâm grateful, for my time with you.â You smiled. âIâm grateful that I got to meet you, the real you.â You breathed. The woman took your hand, and tears began to stream down your own face. God she was beautiful, it almost broke your heart to make her cry. âI- I have to make some calls.â You swallowed, and she nodded.
âIâm staying with you.â She breathed, and your breath hitched. âIâm here, alright? Iâve got you.â She swallowed. You closed your eyes, nodding as tears streamed down your face. The woman was breaking you. You were already dying, but that, that statement cut you deeper than any knife ever could.
âOh, you donât know how long Iâve wanted to hear someone say those words to me.â You whispered, and her heart broke as she realized it was too late. The two of you didnât even have a chance. She had hesitated, she had pushed you away, she had been unsure, and now she would never have the chance. You steadied yourself, trying to fight back the tears she had caused. Of all the things she could say, you didnât expect that. You wanted to wrap the woman up, pull her into you and tell her everything was going to be alright. Yet you couldnât, so you moved on, you forced yourself to move on. âCan you, can you call Tich please?â You panted, and she nodded, wiping a tear away before using her spare hand to call the woman.
âMy darling Issa, has my sister fully ensnared you yet or are your tastes still, darker?â The woman purred, and you nearly laughed at her. Always with the flirting.
âLarissaâs here, but- but itâs me again, Tich.â You croaked. You heard her gasp. You were strong, but even you would show the amount of pain you were in.
âOphelia, Ophelia whatâs wrong?â She asked, and you tried to smile once more.
âHey Tich.â You breathed, and you heard the cry that occurred in your sisterâs chest. She recognized the sound, you realized. She knew what you dying sounded like.
âOphelia, you havenât sounded like this since, you sound like-â She stuttered, and you took in a shaky breath.
âI know, I know.â You began. âI had to make a decision, ok? Iâm gonna fix a mistake I made a while ago, but itâs too late for me to get out of it, alright?â You swallowed.
âOphelia!â your sister panicked, and you shushed her. You had to calm her down. There was no sense in her panicking too.
âHey, hey, itâs gonna be ok.â You swallowed. âEverythingâs gonna be ok.â Your words were cut short as sobs took them from you, your throat tight. âYouâre about to be really rich.â You chuckled, and you heard her sob.
âNo, I- Ophelia please!â Her own throat was closing up now, the pain was there, she was hurting. You could hear how much she was hurting. But you had one more thing to ask of her.
âI want you to do me a favor Tich, ok? I want you to tell Larissa my story, Wednesday too when sheâs old enough, ok?â You swallowed, and your sister cried on the other end of the phone. âThereâs also, well, I need you to do something else for me.â You choked, and a barely audible âmhmâ was your only response. âYouâre going to be kind to her from now on, truly. And respectful, got it?â You panted. âThatâs a hard combination for you, but- but youâre going to treat her as if-â you couldnât, you couldnât say it, but your sister knew. You knew she knew. You had a suspicion she knew more than she let on, as well. Whatever it was between the headmistress and you, your sister had seen it years before you ever met the woman, and she had used it to her advantage.
âOk, ok, I know.â She repeated, and you nodded.
âI love you Tich.â You said, and the woman sobbed.
âI- I love death.â She said, and you chuckled.
âI know.â You smiled darkly, despite the pain.
âBut this is too soon.â She begged. You sighed.
âItâs ok. It will be ok.â You swallowed. âItâs time to say goodby, Tich.â You breathed, your throat closing up. The woman took a deep breath in through the phone, trying to control her tears. She knew what she had to do. You couldnât hang on much longer, and there was one more call you had to make.
âOphelia, I, I love you, and Iâm happy that youâre my sister.â She managed, and you sighed in relief. What an odd thing for her to say, yet the warmth from the statement ever so slightly eased your rapidly cooling body.
âI love you too Morticia. I- iâll see you again, beyond the grave.â You chuckled, imitating her gothic demeanor. She laughed back, the sound strained by tears. âI love you Morticia.â You breathed, and she choked back another tear. âGoodbye.â You said softly, dragging your finger to hang up the phone. Even the littlest movement caused an exhaustive amount of torture. Larissa stared at you, tears streaming down her face above the cloth she still clutched to her nose. She was watching you say goodbye. This was the end. You were fighting to stay awake, and the fire in you still showed, it was breathtaking, and the most deeply despondent thing she had ever seen.
âOphelia, I-â Larissa began. But you shook your head.
âOne more, I can do it, I need you to call Wednesday.â You breathed, and the womanâs heart stopped. Your sister was one thing, but WednesdayâŚ.
âPlease,â you panted, and she did as you asked almost instantly, dialing the number until Wednesdayâs phone rang.
âMiss Weems, I think we both know that the halting of classes was caused by something other than a gas leak, might it have anything to do with-â
âWednesday,â you rasped, and the girl stopped.
âAuntie, Auntie whatâs wrong?â The girl asked, and you swallowed.
âIs Enid there with you?â You asked, and she swallowed.
âShe is but-â she began, and you interrupted her.
âI need you to put me on speaker, ok?â Every second you were getting colder, more tired. You didnât have long, not sounding lucid anyway.
âOk.â Wednesday swallowed, and you nodded.
âEnid, I need you to do me a favor, ok? I know you donât know me that well, but you do know Wednesday, and I need you to keep her in your room, ok?â You panted, and you heard Enidâs whimper through the phone, she could tell, she knew something was incredibly wrong. âPromise me, please?â You nearly begged the girl, and you could hear Wednesday beginning to pace.
âOk.â Enid said, and you nodded, exhaling in releif.
âThank you.â You swallowed. You had seen many strong girls in your line of work, and if anyone could take on what was about to happen, it was your niece and her best friend. âThank you Enid.â You nearly started crying again. You couldnât, not now. Wednesday couldnât know you were scared. Hurt, maybe, but not scared. âHey Wednesday, I- we have to say goodbye.â You swallowed, and Larissa felt her own throat close up for you. You were dying. You were saying goodbye to the girl you loved, who you would give everything for, and it nearly made her sob. She pressed the handkerchief closer to her mouth, cutting off the sound.
âWhat- I, I donât understand.â The girl said, and you swallowed, closing your eyes.
âYour mother will explain it to you, but for now all you have to know is that this was my choice, Wednesday, I made this decision, no one else. I chose to protect those I chose to protect.â You tried to smile, your voice fading a bit. You had made this choice countless times, yet never were you positive you wouldnât come out of it. You had suspected it, known that you would could die, but this was the first time you actually knew you would.
âNo, no- whatâs happening, where are you?â She asked, and you sighed.
âIt doesnât matter, the decision was already made, baby.â You whispered, and you could hear the girl trying not to cry.
âNo, no!â She yelled, and you cringed.
âWednesday, I donât want to fight about it, I want to tell you something.â You breathed, and Larissa just stared at you, her own hands shaking as she watched you fight to stay awake. âWednesday, life, is going to be hard for you.â You sighed, and she could see the pain written on every inch of you. âYou are going to have to fight in ways that most wonât, you will see things you donât want to see, hell, the things you will know,â you breathed, loosing your train of thought before pulling yourself together again. âBut listen to me when I tell you that does not make you who you are. What you do, who you love, who you help, that makes you who you are Wednesday, always remember that.â You sighed.
âNo. Youâll be there to tell me, you have to!â The girl gritted, and you heaved in another breath. Cold, you were so cold.
âI love you Wednesday. Very much. Iâll always be with you.â You smiled, and the girl nearly screamed out in frustration.
âWhere are you?â She screamed, and you tried not to sob.
âSay goodbye darling, itâs time.â You rasped, and there was silence for a moment. You waited. You could wait. You would wait for her as long as she needed. You would prolong this for as much time as it took her to say goodbye, you could do that. You heard the shaky breath she took before she found her words.
âGoodbye.â She whimpered, and you nodded.
âGoodbye Wednesday, I love you.â You breathed, hanging up the phone. Silence rang out for a moment, Larissa staring at you in shock.
The sob that pried itâs way from your chest was like nothing the woman had ever heard. You cried, your body giving everything left to the tears, your very soul shattering. You didnât regret it, but saying goodbye, it hurt. You took a few shaky breaths, trying to calm yourself down. Larissa watched as you dialed one final number, a gruff voice on the other line coming through.
âHello?â The man asked, in a thick Scottish accent.
âThis is Medic A. Going down.â You breathed, and there was silence for a moment.
âPhil,â the man breathed, and you shook your head, tears streaming down your face. âPhil where are you, we can come-â he began, but you just took in a pained breath, your entire body shaking with the effort.
âGoing down, Jenkins.â You panted, and the man cleared his throat, choking something back.
âThank you for your years, Medic, thank you, thank you for everything Ophelia.â He whispered, and you nodded.
âGive them my best.â You whispered, hanging up the phone. You seemed to relax slightly after that. It was done. After everything, it was done.
Larissa stared at you in shock as you laid there, the strange interaction leaving her speechless. Whoever you had just called, whatever the hospital was and whatever kind of medic you were, it was a side of you she did not know. It was a side of you she would never get to know. Silence surrounded you for a moment, but you knew you couldnât let go, not yet.
âDoes it hurt?â You heard from the other side of the wall, and you wanted to scream.
âFuck you.â You gritted, and the man cringed.
âWill it- will it be enough?â He asked you, and you laughed dryly.
âYes, it will be enough, you fucking asshole! It will be enough for her, for you, and your family. Youâre welcome.â You spat, and silence overtook the room for a moment.
âYour name is Larissa, isnât it?â The man on the other side of the wall asked, and the headmistress swallowed.
âYes,â she managed, not able to take her eyes off you.
âHold her, Larissa.â He said. You didnât have the strength to yell at him anymore. âSheâs loosing blood fast, sheâs probably freezing. Hold her, if you can stomach itâ The man said. You were out of it, too out of it to really listen to him until you felt her arms around you. You gasped, trying to look up at her as she sat next to you, lifting you onto her lap.
âYou, you donât have to.â You swallowed, and she shook her head. Then you realized that it was both arms, both of her arms were around you.
âLarissa!â You gasped, looking up at her bare face and lips. âNo, no, donât!â You cried, and she shook her head. She would do this for you. You were already laying down your life, she could hold you, she could protect you, keep you warm as you gave everything you had.
âIf I was exposed then I was already exposed, it doesnât matter.â She breathed, holding you close. You shivered in her warmth, and the woman took off her jacket, holding it around you. You were freezing, you already felt colder, and when your hands desperately clung to her arms, she realized for the first time since she had known you, they were cold.
âTiredâŚâ you murmured, and her hand came to your face, slowly brushing away the hair falling there.
âI know,â she breathed, and you shuddered at the touch, turning into her slightly. It broke her. Why now, why if all times, only now would you let her hold you this close. Only now would you let go of whatever it was that prevented you from touching her.
âKeep her awake!â Peter called, and you groaned.
âItâs Larissa fucking Weems, sheâs the most gorgeous women Iâve ever met, Iâm gonna be awake you asshole.â You slurred, and her eyes bugged a bit. You looked up at her. âHow did you get so beautiful?â You whispered. âDid you crush stardust into your hair? Make your eyes from hydrangeas?â You whispered, and she swallowed.
âOphelia,â she breathed, and you hummed.
âAre your lips made from roses? Theyâre soft, like the petals.â You breathed, and she shook her head.
âStop, stop this, you shouldnât have to make this choice.â She whispered, tears forming in her eyes.You shrugged, the movement uncoordinated as you struggled to retain consciousness.
âI already made it, and youâre going to be ok. Peter can help, the liquid in the last pitcher plant, it should be injected. Like a vaccine.â You nodded sleepily, and she held you close. You were cold, she realized, your body was going cold. âNot much longer, I donât think. I canât feel my hands.â You whispered. âIt doesnât hurt anymore.â You breathed, and she cried. She had just found you, it wasnât fair. She had just now found you and here you were, dying in her arms. You said things to her she had been wanting someone to say her entire life, why was it just now that she found the person she wanted to say them. She leaned down, kissing your forehead gently, and you smiled. Your eyes started to droop closed.
âStay awake, just a bit longer, stay with me, Ophelia.â She breathed. âPlease, stay with me.â She swallowed. âI know what I want now, I want you to stay, please, please just stay with me!â She whispered, her voice breaking at the end. She felt the moment you gave out. She felt the life begin to fade from you.
âNo,â she whimpered, your body was limp in her arms. âNo!â She screamed, shaking you. The wall of plants behind her started to shrivel, revealing the man who had done this, who had caused all this. Yet even her anger couldnât pierce the sadness. She clutched your body, holding you close as the man tore through the shriveling plants, getting to the final pitcher plant before it started to collapse. She ripped the vine out of your arm and put her hand over it, trying to hold the wound closed. It didnât matter, there was barely any blood left in your body, you couldnât bleed out. âNo!â She screamed, shaking you. You were limp, cold to the touch, the warmth and light in you gone. The man behind her started bottling the solution you had made, and she looked to him, rage flooding her. âYou knew she would do this.â She growled, and the man looked at her, his own eyes full of shame and pain.
âI have kids, I- I have kids.â He said, pulling out a syringe from his bag. He shot himself up first, then loaded it again. She was still holding your body, all the plants in the room dying when he injected her. She could barely even feel it. All she could feel was the weight of you in her arms. âShe always had a weak spot for kids.â He murmured. âEven- even when she was with mine.â He rasped. Peter came to your side for a moment, kneeling down next to you. Tears came to his own eyes. âGod, why are you so fucking stubborn? Why? Why canât you just be selfish, for once in your fucking life! Why did you have to make them right!â He nearly screamed at your body. There had been a time where you two were close, when you had considered each other family. âI- I am so sorry Ophelia.â He breathed, biting back his own tears. âIâm so sorry.â He repeated.
The man left, opening the door on his way out. âIf itâs any consolation, she knew the school wouldnât be affected, she did it for you.â He said, and Larissa just gaped down at you. You did this, for her? You bled yourself dry for her? âSheâs protected a lot of kids but, but Iâve never seen her go near that far for someone she actually⌠she cares about you more than you could ever know.â He muttered, leaving her there.
The woman screamed in anguish, it was too much. Why would you do that? You barely knew her? Why would you-
âMiss Weems where is my-â Wednesday froze, staring at your body in Larissaâs arms. âWhat,â she breathed. Enid ran in behind her, immediately gasping and slamming her hand over her mouth. It barely even looked like you. Wednesday walked to you, numbly, sinking to her knees in front of you. Enid gagged, running from the room as fast as she could. She couldnât even look at the pale, cold version of you laying in her headmistressâs arms.
âAuntie?â Wednesday whispered, and Larissa couldnât even look at the young girl. All she could do was stare at your sunken face. The two of them stared for a moment, the silence of the room threatening to swallow them alive. The office was darkened as it felt like the light was snuffed out with you.
Enid rushed in once again, with a handful of hawthorn. She ran to you, her hands shaking as she gagged, picking up your mangled wrist and crushing the berries, shoving them in. She nearly fainted, but stayed strong, doing her best to hold on.
âEnid, she, sheâs gone.â Larissa whispered, and the girl just stared.
âShe canât be, sheâs, sheâs so strong, and sheâs smart, and and sheâs talented and safe.â The girl whimpered. âPlease Miss Weems, sheâs safe!â Enid cried, and Larissa bit back tears as she pulled both girls close. Even Wednesday let her, sinking into her side as she cried silently, and still. The three of them stared at your body for what felt like hours, watching as nothing happened. Larissa eventually stood, helping both girls up after she gently laid your body down, brushing your hair away from your face once more. One more time, she said to herself. One more time she would touch you in this way.
âWe need to, to call her next of kin, I- I think.â She stuttered. The woman was normally so composed around students, but now, now she felt lost, she had no idea.
âMy mother.â Wednesday said harshly, her voice shot from crying. Larissa nodded, picking up her phone to dial, just as the Addamâs family hearse slid to a stop in the driveway she could see from her office window.
âSheâs already here.â The woman said, and went back to the girls. Wednesday was still clutching onto you, just as Enid sat next to her, her hand on her friendâs shoulder. Larissa just stared, her eyes red with tears as you laid on her office floor, surrounded by the dead plants that you once grew so beautifully.
Morticia ran into her office, stopping stil in the doorway. She gasped, her hand flying to her face as she took in the scene before her. You were laid out on the floor, your wrist smeared with blood and hawthorn as her daughter clutched onto your body desperately, Larissa standing behind the both of them, her own eyes rimmed with red as tears still wouldnât stop flowing from the normally serene woman. It was a shocking sight, the normally composed woman ripping apart at the seams.
âWed- Wednesday, go to your father.â She said, her voice low. The girl glared at her mother.
âIâm not going anywhere.â She bit, and Morticia swallowed.
âWednesday Addams, now.â She commanded, and Larissa looked up at her, that was not a tone she used often. Both girls slowly stood, leaving the room and shutting the door behind them. Larissa stared at your body, but Morticia rushed forward, instantly kneeling next to you. She took your hand, the one unmarred by what you had done, and placed a hand over your heart. âYour soul is still here, Iâll give you the blood, you need to take it.â She whispered, and Larissa gaped as your sister picked up your knife, slashing her wrist and taking the remains of the vines woven into your body into her own. There was nothing, for a moment, and Larissa sighed, stepping forward.
âMorticia, I- itâs over.â She nearly cried again, but Morticia simply held on, waiting for something, it seemed.
Then the vine moved. ďżź
It almost seemed to reach for her. Larissa gasped as she watched it tangle into Morticia, staring at it in wonder.
âThey love her, Larissa, just as much as she loves them.â Morticia whispered, staring down at you. âThey carry a bit of her with them, even if she canât- even if she canât control it.â Tich choked. Larissa was by your side in a moment, helping her old roommate hold your body up. She shifted you into her lap, holding you close as Morticia stayed connected to you. Within a minute the plant had run out of the remnants of your ability, shriveling again and falling from Morticiaâs wrist. The wound stopped bleeding, and still you laid, not moving. Larissa felt a tear run down her face, god, she didnât even know she had that many in her. She would have thought they would have run out.
âPlease.â She whispered, leaning down into you slightly. She tucked her face into your shoulder, her cheek pressing against yours. She cried. Tears fell as she pulled you closer, wrapping her arms around you and desperately trying to somehow pull you back into your body. Morticia watched as her old roommate curled into you, holding you tighter.
âOh.â She breathed, and Larissaâs head snapped up, looking to her. âSo thatâs why.â Morticia said, looking at the woman.
âWhat?â Larissa hissed, and Morticia glared with more vileness and detest than the headmistress had ever seen in her.
âYou. Youâre why.â She spat. âYouâre why she gave in.â Morticia sneered at the woman. âShe gave fucking everything for kids she didnât even know but YOU! For you she had to give her life!â She screamed. She was getting louder, her eyes almost black in hatred as she stared in pure hatred. âYou. She gave it all up for YOU.â She sneered. âGave her life for some gargantuan, needy, desperate-â she was cut off. Gasping as something pricked her. She looked down to see a web of thorns extending from your hand, poking into her stomach. Morticiaâs eyes went wide.
âYes,â she breathed. âYes!â She cried, plucking the thorns away and taking your hand. âI still know how to get a rise out of you, huh? Even if itâs just on instinct.â She smiled, and Larissa gaped. She looked down at you, you hadnât moved, but the thorns that had sprouted from you were there. Morticia placed her hand under your nose, smiling gleefully. âSheâs breathing!â She said, and Larissa gasped.
The pale woman stood, lifting you in her arms. Your body was still limp, but it looked less, sunken. She carried you tenderly to her rooms, laying you down on the bed. Morticia followed her, watching at a slight distance.
âIâm sorry, I didnât mean those things.â She said as Larissa placed you down. You were still barely breathing.
âYes, you did.â She replied, and the woman swallowed.
âBut it worked, didnât it?â She asked, and Larissa nodded.
âWe will see.â She tried, not wanting Morticia to see her cry anymore. She had cried too much, far too much. She felt like she didnât have anything left to give, and she certainly didnât have any to give in front of Morticia.
âShe likes being with you, you know.â Morticia said softly. âShe loves to be held, if she can tolerate the person doing it.â She said. âIf you can tolerate touching her.â Was the last thing she said before leaving the room, going to take care of her daughter. She wouldnât tell Wednesday yet. Not unless you woke up. Your heart was barely beating, it just had to survive long enough for you to produce more blood.
Larissa cared for the wound on your arm with the most gentle touch she could muster, slowly removing your bloody clothes until you were in nothing but your bra and underwear. She tried not to look, Morticia should be the one caring for you, yet she had left it to the taller woman for some reason. It was almost as if Morticia knew you would rather have Larissa touching you than her. She wrapped you gently in the sweater you had left with her, she knew she had to keep you warm, you were at risk for hypothermia with all the bloodloss. The colder you were, the less likely you were to recover.
She added a few more logs to the fire before staring down at you in her bed, unsure. She knew she was to keep you warm, and she she knew what Morticia had said. Yet she couldnât bring herself to do it. She couldnât make her self touch you, not without your permission. It felt like, a violation. It felt like a crime to treat you in that way. Like it was wrong to even graze your skin without your clear permission.
Hours went by as she sat next to you, watching you like you could slip any moment. You could, in fact, which was why she was with you at all. She knew it should be someone else, it should be Morticia, yet as you laid there, unmoving, she couldnât think of possibly leaving you like this. She couldnât.
She slipped into the bed with you, pulling your body close, trying to warm you. At least that is what she told herself when she wrapped her arms around you, pulling you in until she could practically feel your heartbeat. It was faint, but it was there, and she held onto it as she waited, praying it wouldnât stop.
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