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#plleeease let me know
gooberdude101 · 10 months
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Shredding the gospel of the best smoothie known to man IM TELLING YOU ALL. Also I eyeballed this so
Frozen strawberries, enough to fill a little less than half of the blender
Frozen nectarines, at least enough to cover the layer of strawberries, but go wild tbh
A tube of yogurt, I used strawberry but whatever flavor will work
Soy milk, fill to the top of the strawberries but maybe more or less (this probably also works with other milk varieties too though)
Optional honey and maybe basil but I didn’t add those so idk if they would actually work
BE FREE!!! EMBARK!!!!
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ttheeemmmmbb
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iiiiii am W E A K AND FEEBLE plleeease let me kiss them on the faceplate, just a little, a tiny smooch. so they know i love them so so so so much
i stfg if they hurt this droid i am going to fucking CR Y SO SO MUCH I NEED TO SEE THEM SAFE AND HAPPY I'M SO NORMAL ABOUT THIS UNNAMED DROID I AM SO NORMAL ABOUT IT I AM SO NORMAL ABOUT THEM
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writer-ish · 3 years
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grace (Mason x f!Detective)
Some of you may know my new co-obsession (along with @playchoices) is @seraphinitegames‘ The Wayhaven Chronicles and one (1) grumpy Greek vampire in particular.
Anyway, this little drabble was in my head after completing the Book 3 Demo for the millionth time and now you all need to be subjected to it as well. Enjoy? (Takes place sometime after Book 2, but before “that scene” in Book 3)
tags: @utterlyinevitable , @ethansramsey , @otherworldlypresents , @aworldoffandoms , @raleighcarrera , @ejunkiet , @starrystarrytrouble , @terrm9 (reply or dm for add/removal!)
grace
Pairing: Mason x f!Detective (Grace Bennett) Length: 3.2k words | Rating: T (Language) Summary: A detective and a vampire try not to catch feelings for one another OR denial is not just a river in Egypt. 
“It only ever works if one of you cares more than the other.”
It was something Tina had said once, in a rare, cynical moment, fresh off a break up.
The two of them had gone out for drinks post-patrol one night and, as the evening wore on, Tina’s mood had descended in direct correlation with the growing number of empty glasses around them. Still, it hadn’t been until the cigarettes came out that Grace had really known they were in trouble.
“Trust me, Gracie.” Her friend had punctuated her words with haphazard gestures, cigarette wobbling precariously between two fingers, a fine dusting of ash drifting down to the table. Taking a drag, she’d released a thick plume of smoke from her mouth and nostrils before continuing.
“There’s no such thing as equal when it comes to love. There is always the giver and the receiver. The one who cares more. Who loves more. And—”
At this, she’d pointed the glowing ember at the end of her cigarette right in Constable Grace Bennett’s face.
“—You better hope it’s them and not you.”
Former Constable, now Detective Grace Bennett hadn’t thought about those words much in the subsequent years. Relationships weren’t really her forte, after all. There had been the disastrous two years in college with Bobby — in hindsight, one could hardly attribute “love” to anything that had happened between them — and, more recently, a few first dates that sometimes turned into second dates before fizzling out completely.
Hardly the stuff of romance novels.
So it was unfortunate that Tina’s old advice had chosen to rear its ugly head in her mind now, of all times, when Grace had found herself in a—situation where love was the absolute last thing she wanted to consider.
It wasn’t that she didn’t care about Mason. Of course she did.
What else would you call almost incurring the wrath of an entire civilization of ancient Estonian mirror creatures at the expense of saving his miserable life?
It was just that things were...
Complicated.
Leaning against her beat-up silver hatchback, she willed the pounding of her heart to settle as the night spring air enveloped her in its cool breeze. She took deep and even breaths in and out of her nostrils, contemplating just how complicated things were, exactly.
First of all, wasn’t dating a colleague generally frowned upon?
Grace had never broken that rule in all her years on the force and she hadn’t had any intention of doing it as a detective, either, never mind as part of her mother’s top secret supernatural government agency.
Not only that, but what if said colleague had also made it abundantly clear, in more ways than one, that they weren’t looking for anything exclusive or serious in any capacity?
Had, in fact, made it a point to preface almost every sexual encounter with some variation of those very words?
And to even further complicate matters, what if said commitment-phobe colleague also happened to be supernatural themselves? More specifically, a vampire who was a few years shy of his centennial?
What then?
And yet — bear with her, here — let’s say, said commitment-phobe centenarian vampire colleague also looked at her as though she were the only human on this planet that he gave a damn about, the only one who could make his smile curl up on both sides, the only one who warmed those steel-grey eyes into molten embers, the one who—
Her train of thought cut off abruptly as she heard the doors open to the police station. There was a thick fog cutting the night air, the warmth of the day lazily giving way to the coolness of the night, imparting an almost dream-like quality onto an otherwise ordinary parking lot.
Grace waited, peering through the haze, until the object of her musings appeared. His unruly dark waves swung around his cheeks, just barely brushing his collarbone as he stalked towards her, hands buried deep in his pockets. His shoulders were hunched up close to his ears, which she knew was scant protection from the cold he must be feeling.
Her heart inadvertently gave a little pang at the thought and she could’ve sworn she saw his gaze narrow slightly as it happened.
She continued to take him in while she could, eyes lingering on the crystal around his neck that seemed to glow from within, a warm cerulean pulsation, before drifting over his leather jacket, burgundy henley, and worn-in jeans, half-tucked into his partially laced boots.
“Thanks for waiting,” was the first thing he said once he was in ear-shot.
Any passer-by might have thought he was sincere: Thanks for waiting for me by the car. For not leaving when you could have. Thanks for offering me a ride.
Grace, however, understood the sarcastic undercurrent of his words. Thanks for leaving me in there to deal with your mother and the rest of the agents. Nate’s disapproving glances and Felix’s gleeful ones. Thanks for ditching me.
There was never any true bite to his words, though, not anymore—even the borderline derisive ones. Instead, he stopped about a foot in front of her and straightened, his full lips quirked slightly, an unlit cigarette dangling between them. She had to crane her neck to look up at him and his grin grew wider.
“Ready to go, sweetheart?” he murmured, taking the cigarette out of his mouth.
She cleared her throat, unable to stop the blush from creeping up her neck. 
Even after all they’d been through — all they’d done — she still couldn’t prevent the slow crawl of heat that always seemed to accompany his presence.
“Yeah,” she said gruffly, turning to open her door and hoping maybe this time he hadn’t noticed.
One glance at the way he rolled his lips, hiding an ever-growing smirk as he rounded the back bumper of her car to go to the passenger side, told her that there was no chance she had been that lucky.
They got in quietly and she started the ignition — on the third try, ignoring his snort and slow headshake — before they were off.
“You know,” she said after a beat, even though she kicked herself for always being the one to break the silence, “I don’t think I need a babysitter anymore. Things seem quiet now.”
Mason scoffed.
“Things are never quiet,” he replied bluntly. “There’s just the hurricane or the eye of the storm.”
She felt his eyes on her after a moment and she held her breath, waiting for him to continue.
“Why? Getting sick of my company, sweetheart?”
“No!” she blurted out quickly—too quickly. “It’s not that, it’s just—I mean, I feel bad for you, to be honest. I’m sure there’s other things you’d rather be doing—”
“There’s nothing — and no one — else I’d rather be doing right now.” He’d said the words casually enough, as though completely unaware of the tumult they would cause within her system, his head still tilted languidly against the headrest of her passenger seat as he watched her.
“Well—” She fumbled for words. “That’s—I’m glad.” Nice one.
He chuckled low in his throat. “What is it about you being flustered that just gets me going?” He shook his head. “I’ll never know.” 
She couldn’t help the little laugh that escaped her. “I hate it,” she admitted. “You make me feel like my brain is constantly short-circuiting.”
“I’ll take that compliment.”
She took her eyes off the road briefly to look over at him. Sure enough, he was still staring right at her with a little smile quirking the side of his mouth up. She couldn’t help the return smile that she felt crinkling up the corners of her eyes.
His face changed slightly, smile dropping.
“Jesus, sweetheart, keep smiling at me like that and you might need to pull over.” He fiddled with a fresh cigarette before popping it in his mouth. She waited a beat, but the lighter never came out.
“We’re here anyway,” she said, pulling into her apartment complex and finding a spot easily. “You’ve officially completed your chaperone duty.” She hazarded a glance over at him. “Did you…” She cleared her throat. Be bold, Gracie.
He’d already turned his whole body in his seat, one hand braced on the dash, the other elbow digging in beside his headrest. He watched her carefully, amusement dancing in his eyes.
“Did I?” He pretended to mull over the incomplete question. “The answer is most likely yes, I have.”
He leaned closer until she could feel the warmth of his breath swirling in the space between them. No longer imbued with the scent of burning tobacco, instead it had a sweetness to it, a freshness that reminded her of an unopened pack of cigarettes before they had been tainted by a flame.
“I have, I would have, and I certainly will again,” he continued, leaning forward even closer.
Grace bit her bottom lip and his eyes shot down to it immediately, seemingly transfixed by her tooth caught in the flushed redness of her mouth.
“Finish the sentence, detective,” he murmured, eyes still fixed on her, the cool grey seeming to emanate with a glow all its own.
“Did you want to come in?” she breathed, her own eyes darting down to his mouth in return.
His hand cupped the back of her neck, fingers tangling in her dark hair as he pulled her towards him.
“Always,” he said against her lips before capturing them with his.
Grace felt herself drowning in the moment, the same rushing vortex of emotion she felt every time they kissed. She’d thought it would get easier — that it had to — that it wouldn’t feel so all-consuming, so vital each time.
But as his lips slid over hers, tongue stroking and tasting and always drawing more and more from her, as she carded her fingers through the tempting obsidian waves of his hair and tugged him closer still, the desire to devour him too persistent to ignore—
She knew she was in deep. Too deep. She cared—too much. And there would be no getting out this time — at least not with all her vital parts attached.
* * *
Mason never thought he would like anything more than fucking.
It was intrinsic to his very being, the combustive need for release at all times — not just sexually, but entwined within his very existence. A need to be released from the hold of his senses, from the overpowering strain of existence—the sounds, the smells, the sights. All of it.
His desire to remove himself from the harshness of reality was a constant endeavour — and sex just happened to be the easiest and most pleasurable way to do it.
But he had to hand it to his little detective.
The sex was good, that was for sure. No doubt about it.
But the kissing—
In his almost one hundred years on this planet — at least the ones he could recall — he couldn’t remember ever being this affected by goddamn kissing of all things.
It had to be the little noises she made. Murmurs and moans against his mouth that he wasn’t even sure she was fully aware she was doing.
Or the way she pulled at him, drawing him closer each time so she could press her body against his, feel the length of her torso flush with the entirety of his.
She reminded him of a little burrowing creature, nuzzling at his jaw and neck, gripping the collar of his shirt, squirming to get under, over, inside him.
He squeezed her tightly — moderating the full extent of his strength, obviously, but still forcing her to emit a small breathless gasp at the feeling — and pulled her across the console towards him.
“Settle,” he murmured against her ear, dragging her fully into his lap. It was an effort — her legs kicked the dashboard, the radio, and the glove box before she could tuck them under herself as she buried a giggle into his shoulder.
“This car is not made for that sort of lateral movement,” she informed him, shifting to try and get comfortable.
“Oof,” he grunted as her knee hit his midsection. “God, you’re heavy.” It was patently untrue, but he knew he’d get some sass back for a comment like that and he found himself eagerly anticipating it.
She didn’t disappoint. Leaning back, she braced her hands on his shoulders, a lock of dark hair obscuring half of one of her hazel eyes. A street lamp illuminated her cheeky, exasperated grin as she tilted her head and regarded him.
“Is that so?” She wiggled around purposefully and he groaned in unspent desire as her perfectly round bottom found all the right places in his lap. “Would you care to file a complaint?”
“Christ, no,” he muttered, pulling her towards him once more. “Let’s get out of this aluminum death trap and go upstairs.”
Kicking his door open despite her protests to be careful, he tightened his hold on her and lifted them both out of the car, bracing his legs on the pavement as he stood.
He knew she was anticipating that he would release her, drop her to her feet and continue forwards to her apartment, likely with her trailing behind — his long strides swallowing up the pavement much easier than her shorter ones — but he found himself enjoying the steady, rapid beat of her heart against his shoulder, the comforting heft of her in his arms. He found himself hardpressed to let her go.
So he didn’t.
“Mason!”
She let out a gasp that dissolved into a laugh as he hefted her higher up and over his shoulder, unable to stop himself from giving her ass a playful slap as he carried her to her door. She kicked her legs ineffectually, thumped his back lightly with her palms as she squirmed. He only held her tighter against him.
“Stop moving, detective,” he ground out, the cigarette dropping out of his mouth as he turned his head to bite whatever part of her was closest to his cheek.
She yelped as his teeth made contact with the side of her upper thigh, hard enough that she’d be able to feel it through her jeans.
“Keep it up and it’ll be harder next time,” he promised, carrying her effortlessly up her steps. He paused at her front door. “Keys?”
“They’re in my pocket,” she grumbled and he made a big show of patting her bottom — both sides, thoroughly — before pulling them out of the pocket with the obvious protrusion and unlocking her door.
He let them in and kicked the door shut behind him, then took two strides into the small space and deposited her unceremoniously on the couch.
“Geez,” she spluttered, moving her hair out of her face. “What are my neighbours going to think?”
“Sweetheart, I hate to break it to you, but with the noises you’ve been making lately, they’ve already drawn their own conclusions,” he drawled, crossing his arms and regarding her with a half smirk.
She just shook her head at him, her eyes glittering with mirth—and something else, something less easy to discern or define. 
Before he could decipher it further, she threw him off with another question:
“What’s gotten into you tonight?” 
Her tone could have been accusatory in nature, but instead there was only a mild sense of awe and a greater sense of amusement. Regardless, it still took him aback.
What, exactly, did she mean by that?
He admitted to himself that there had been a certain feeling of—levity, about him tonight. An air of calmness, of — dare he say — happiness, at the thought of walking out of that station and seeing her waiting for him. Of knowing that he got to go home with her. To hold her. To taste her. To fuck her.
And then to leave her.
“Into me?” He regarded her warily, before moderating his reaction and his tone. “I’m more concerned with getting into you tonight, detective.”
“I have a name,” she retorted, sitting up and smoothing her shirt out. “You haven’t used it once since we left the station.”
Yeah, she had a name. He knew she had a fucking name. Grace. How ironic.
“Call me Gracie,” she’d said to them once and he’d almost puked.
What in the everloving fuck was someone like him doing with someone called Grace? “Grace” meant kindness. Charity. Good will. “Grace” meant mercy.
Mason had never had, nor had he ever wanted, anything to do with mercy.
And this girl—woman in front of him tonight, was the embodiment of her name. Everything kind. Everything compassionate. Everything merciful.
He crossed his hands behind his back so he wouldn’t have to look at them.
“Are we doing introductions again?” he snapped and then immediately regretted it when he saw the stricken look on her face.
All of a sudden, everything felt too overwhelming, his senses in overdrive as he lost his grip on her presence, her heartbeat. Instead, he felt a tidal wave of unwelcome sensations: the smell of the toast she’d made that morning, some flowers she had in a vase that were on the cusp of dying, the light he’d turned on when they walked in shining right in his eyes, the conversation and heavy footsteps of the people in the apartment above them— 
Compulsively, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a cigarette, placing it between his lips, ready to light it.
Her eyes followed him, watching him closely. He didn’t know if she realized that something had changed in his demeanour or not, but her gaze on him made him itchy, too, in a different way.
Shaking his head to clear his thoughts, he bit down hard on the cigarette, crushing the filter.
“Should I leave?” he muttered, feeling his shoulders hunch. Knowing he looked and sounded petulant and hating himself for it, but being unable to moderate his emotions enough to lift up the necessary shields.
She continued to regard him silently, those all-knowing hazel eyes, wise beyond their years, stripping him down to his scars — external and internal.
He suppressed a shudder.
“I’m going to shower,” she said eventually, “and wash off the grime of the day.” She gestured around the apartment. “Feel free to stay and get comfortable.” Then, she swallowed hard and met his eyes briefly, before looking away and shrugging. “Or go. It’s up to you.” She walked towards the bathroom, tossing her jacket on a chair as she went. “I’ll be a few minutes.”
The bathroom door closed — and locked, decisively.
It would be so easy to just bounce. Two steps to the door and then minutes before he could make it back to the warehouse. To his own bed. To the rest of his unit. Where things were easy and no one would ask questions. He could even go to a bar. Find another warm and willing body to lie with. One with a sensible and meaningless name, like Michael or Jennifer, whose eyes would be as empty as their head and who would smell all wrong and who he’d leave behind without looking back even once, because he didn’t give a shit about them.
It would be so easy.
So fucking easy.
Mason heard the shower turn on.
He thought about how she’d feel when she came out of that shower — thought, too, about her skin flushed and damp, only a towel wrapped around her, just because he couldn’t help himself — knowing that she’d given him an opportunity to stay and he’d chosen to go. 
He found himself caring, for the first time, about how his actions might affect another person’s feelings. 
He looked at the front door. Then he looked at the couch.
And he sat down.
Thanks for reading! I have a smutty part two planned, let me know if that’s something you’d be interested in. 😅
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tiusder · 3 years
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So, shifting... If anyone can help me out with a few questions, I'd GREATLY APPRECIATE YOU!!
I haven't shifted yet but because I want all my Dr details to be set and scripted so I can visualize awhile before I try to shift. But I need my clone to do some specific things while I'm gone. Can we script that our clones are good at something? I'm already a very good writer, but can I script that my clone doesn't get writers block or is better at writing than I am?
Also, is shifting, in any type of way, a form of witchcraft? I see that sometimes and if it is, I really can't shift but I'm so intrigued to do so, so if anybody knows plleeease let me know!!
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