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#TURNING SAINTS INTO THE SEA
eldhuug · 1 year
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made this in an hourlong haze
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invisibleblooky · 5 months
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how dare you have the audacity to be in love in front of me
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impatentpending · 2 years
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Okay, so I literally binged "Turning Saints into the Sea" yesterday and finished the whole story. Can I just say, I ADORE how you write Tobey! You make him this perfect mix of intelligent, suave, childlike, and a lovestruck dork and I can't get enough. The way you have him call Wordgirl and Becky "My darling" SHSUAJSHSS MY HEART!! Please write Tobey more I beg!! -🖤 Anon
Oh my goodness, thank you so much!!! I'm having a blast writing TSITS, and there's certainly more WordGirl (and tobecky) to come after :D
Tobey is such a fun character to write because he's one of those unabashed villains that I've always adored playing with, but at the same time he's very sweet and charming, especially to his darling WordGirl/Becky.
Last chapter of TSITS is a bit delayed, alas, because I'm working on pieces for @/tobeckyweek!!! I'm hoping to write something for all seven days, but the one I'm working on something for @/clarissasbakery's evil WG AU is turning into a MONSTER (in the best possible way) so the others may be only 1-3k, or I may wimp out and just make a playlist or something for the other days ;p
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bitchassmcgrass · 1 year
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first thing I’m gonna do if I ever get an apartment or a house is putting up a bunch of soundproofing foam up on the walls because I’m gonna be blasting music and HOOTIN and HOLLERIN up in that bitch!!!!
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fhwa · 2 years
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why do my friends get to live out their queer fantasies and never me
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piratekane · 1 year
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Beatrice sighs as her pen runs out of ink. This is the second pen today and she’s starting to feel like there is something working against her. But, that seems illogical. The more logical conclusion is that Ava has used her pens. She has a tendency to use them until they’re nearly dry and put them back in Beatrice’s backpack, thinking she’s doing a good job returning them to where she found them.
Not maliciously. There’s nothing Ava does that is malicious. Beatrice knows she’s probably thinking: I borrowed this. I need to put it back. And then she does and Beatrice opens her backpack at the student center the next day, intent on getting some work done while she waits for Ava, and finds her pens dry.
She looks through her pencil case but there isn’t another pen, just a precisely sharpened standard pencil, two black mechanical pencils, a yellow highlighter, a soft white eraser, and her red pen - used to make corrections only. She debates using it.
No. It would ruin her notes.
Instead, she pulls out her laptop. She’ll just continue her notes there and transfer them to her notebook later. The extra repetition will be good for her. Her professor asked her a question she wasn’t quite prepared for and she knows she’s going to be thinking about it all week until she has a chance to redeem herself in the next class.
Her screen comes to life and she sighs. This one isn’t born from frustration like her last one; this one is an acceptance, an admitting to herself that, despite what she’s looking at, she can’t help but feel a rush of affection for it.
Ava has changed her desktop background again. This time, it’s a picture Camila took last weekend. Ava is in a white shirt and white shorts, a white sweatband around her forehead. All of it is stained in neon paint. She’s holding a fake plastic trophy high above her head with one hand, the other looped around Beatrice’s neck, the two of them squished into the frame. Her own clothes are soaked with the same bright colors.
How she agreed to something called a Color Run... The idea of running through cannons of color had not sounded appealing, but Ava had come home with a flyer she found on the bulletin board outside the cafeteria and presented it to Beatrice alongside a bulleted list of reasons why Beatrice should say yes.
She let Ava go through the list: one, you love to exercise. Two, it’s advertised to make the world ‘healthier’ and you’re always telling me I need to start making better choices. Three, imagine if we got Lilith to agree to come and someone blasted her with a color cannon?
The third one hadn’t been convincing. Lilith would never agree to something like that.
Beatrice didn’t tell her that the list didn’t matter; she was going to say yes the moment Ava handed her the flyer and looked at her with those eyes, the ones that always made Beatrice feel like she could free fall and not care what waits for her at the other end of it.
And she had to admit, it was rather fun. The white clothes they bought were completely ruined, but it had been worth it to see the way Ava beamed the whole run, sprinting ahead to circle back around her. She had thrown her arms wide when the color cannons went off, soaking in the powder. Beatrice soaked in her happiness in return.
It hasn’t been long. Spring is fading into summer quickly and Ava has been living with her for two months and every single moment has been filled with the kind of happiness that Beatrice could have only dreamed about when she was younger. The kind of happiness that made each day feel like it was worth waking up for.
She hadn’t gone looking for this, hadn’t expected something like this to just fall into her lap - or literally crash into her table. It’s illogical to think fate sent Ava into her orbit, but if she was pressed, she could admit that each of them must have been in the right place at the right time. Serendipity, Ava said with a rakish smile. We were destined to meet.
If there was such a thing as serendipity, it must be working in her favor.
She opens a word document, the cursor blinking at the top of the page. She titles it Anthropological Theories of Religion and flips through her textbook until she finds the correct page. She likes this class, likes how as she continues through her degree program the class gets smaller, more intimate. She typically likes the professor, though she feels thrown off by her now.
Halfway through a word, her world goes dark. Warm hands slide over her eyes, fingertips pressing against her skin. 
She smiles nearly instantly. “Ava.”
“Not Ava,” says a low voice. But it’s clunky, a poor imitation at something deeper.
Beatrice plays along for just a moment, indulging Ava and a part of herself that likes to make Ava happy. “Oh? Well then. I suppose a stranger has found it appropriate to put their hands on me.” She curls her fingers around a thin wrist, one her hand already knows the shape of, and tightens slightly. “I do know how to disarm you.”
“You could try.”
Beatrice tightens her grip in response and hears a slight exhale that glances against the shell of her ear. A fingertip skates across her brow briefly and then Ava is letting go, pressing a kiss to the top of her head before she sits down heavily in the chair next to Beatrice.
“How did you know it was me? What if I was… Mary?”
Beatrice spares Ava a glance. “Mary knows better. You, on the other hand…”
“I’ve never known better.” Ava says it with pride. “Especially not when it comes to you.”
Beatrice feels her chest tighten. She wonders if Ava knows, if Ava understands how something so simple unspools the tight loop Beatrice keeps around her heart. A part of her thinks Ava must. Ava is able to read her so thoroughly. From the moment they met, Ava has seen through her so effortlessly. It’s thrilling, to be seen like that. 
And it’s devastatingly terrifying.
“Yes, well,” she says quietly.
“One day, you’ll use that to your advantage.” Ava spins Beatrice’s textbook towards her, reading a few of the section titles before she turns it back towards Beatrice. “But you’re also too nice for that, so who knows.”
Beatrice straightens out her textbook out of habit more than anything else. “You’re late.”
Ava smiles sheepishly. “I got caught up.” She doesn’t give an answer past that.
Beatrice nearly frowns. Ava doesn’t owe her any more of an explanation. She just usually gives one.
“But I’m here now!” Ava takes off her backpack, resting it on the floor before she opens it and takes out her own laptop. “I thought you didn’t like typing your notes? Muscle memory or something, right?” 
“My pens are out of ink.” 
Ava’s cheeks flush. “That’s my fault, isn’t it.”
“It’s certainly not mine.” She says it without any malice. “I just need to start carrying more pens.”
Ava still looks guilty. She fishes into the pocket of her jean shorts and unearths a stick of gum, three paper clips, and an uncapped pen. She spreads them out on the table and nudges the pen towards Beatrice. It’s not the tip she likes, thicker than she usually uses, and it’s blue. If red would ruin her notes, this would change the physical shape of them.
She takes the offered pen and closes her laptop. “Thank you.”
“Anything for you.” Ava smiles and scoops the paper clips up, putting them back in her pocket. 
Beatrice will find them later when she does the laundry and she’ll add them to the jar of pocket-trinkets she keeps of all the things Ava leaves behind in her clothes. It’s made up of coins and paper clips and pen caps - all things that Ava swears she’s going to put in proper places but never remembers until Beatrice is pulling them out of the washing machine.
Ava takes the gum and breaks it in half, offering it to Beatrice. She has coffee and this gum is spearmint. The combination will taste horrible. But she puts the gum in her mouth and smiles when Ava does.
“So, listen to what MacKay did today.” Ava tells the story animatedly, face shifting as she plays each character. Beatrice doesn’t catch every word, too focused on the rise and fall of her voice and the way her hands move as she goes on. Beatrice finds herself smiling along, not at all caring about some girl named Carina or Professor MacKay and whatever argument they’ve gotten into this week.
Ava is halfway through her story, body gearing up to drop the punch line, when her face shifts and her eyes cut over Beatrice’s shoulder. Beatrice frowns, turning to look. A boy is approaching their table, hands locked around the straps of his backpack as he strides towards them.
“Hey, Ava!” he calls.
Beatrice looks back at Ava. She knows this boy, at the very least. But her face is unreadable - a feat Ava doesn’t manage to accomplish very often. He comes closer and Beatrice’s frown deepens.
“Ah,” Ava says quietly.
Ah?
The boy slows as he reaches their table, a smile on his face that someone might find charming. She studies Ava’s face. Does she find it charming?
“Hey, Ava,” he repeats. His voice is smooth, slightly accented. A traitorous part of her thinks of the time that Ava said she liked accents. “I was hoping to catch you after class.”
Ava smiles. “Sorry, JC. I was in a hurry. Had a lunch date.” She hooks a thumb in Beatrice’s direction. “JC, meet Beatrice, my best friend. Beatrice, this is JC. He’s my biology lab partner.”
JC. She’s never heard of him before. Ava talks about everyone and everything. Some nights, she talks until she falls asleep on the couch, her Hobbes stuffed animal clutched in her arms. It’s almost as if she collects stories all day just to tell them to Beatrice later. She knows about every one of Ava’s classmates, is - secretly - invested in her Literary Theory classmates, Robert and Nayara, and their on-again, off-again relationship. She knows about the librarian Ava likes, who doesn’t mind her iced coffee, as long as she uses a paper towel and keeps it away from the books.
But she’s never heard of a JC, or anyone who might use the initials JC.
And it’s not that Ava isn’t allowed to have friends. She is. She has plenty of them. She always says hello to at least fifteen people when they go out, either here to their favorite table in the student center or in the library or walking to the cafeteria if they’re getting lunch between classes. Ava loves people, loves knowing things about them. Beatrice loves that about her.
She just thought she knew all of them. Or has heard of them before. She certainly thinks she would have remembered hearing about Ava’s lab partner. It's odd, now, that she hasn't.
JC smiles at her, his eyes taking a moment longer to shift away from Ava. “It’s nice to meet you. Ava has talked a lot about you.”
Beatrice hides her smile at that. “Nice to meet you,” she says politely.
He completely turns from her, his job of mirroring her politeness gone, his job done. Beatrice finds herself studying him. He’s attractive in a conventional sense. A strong jaw, a good smile. Camila would have many things to say about him and Beatrice works to keep her voice out of her mind. She focuses on Lilith instead. 
Boys, she would probably sneer. Beatrice agrees.
JC runs a hand through his hair, pushing it back a little. Beatrice watches Ava’s eyes follow the motion and fights a visible frown. JC notices, though, and seems to preen a little in a way only university-age boys can when they find themselves to be attractive. She takes a centering breath. She doesn’t know JC. She’s sure he’s a nice person. She’s also sure he’d be a nicer one if he wasn’t standing at their table right now.
“I just wanted to know if you gave any thought to my question.”
“Ah,” Ava says again.
Ah?
JC doesn’t seem bothered. “I know your rule on dating your lab partner. It’s a very specific rule but I think you should give me a chance.”
Dating echoes in Beatrice’s head like a slow siren, like the slow spin of a lantern in a lighthouse. It illuminates JC, floating in the ocean in her mind, with his charming smile and his hopeful eyes. Ava appears next, face unreadable. They rotate around and around until they’re in the same frame.
She blinks and Ava is staring at her, a slight wrinkle in her forehead.
Beatrice keeps her face neutral, unsure of what else to do with it. She certainly can’t shout no. She absolutely will not encourage it. She’s stuck in a sort of limbo where she isn’t sure what comes next and so she waits, poised and ready to do whatever is needed of her.
Ava’s frown deepens.
JC takes the silence and runs with it. “If it’s because you’re worried about things being awkward if it doesn’t go well - and that’s a big if - then you don’t need to worry.” His smile widens and he leans one hand down on the table, his whole body angled towards Ava now. “What do you say?”
Say no, she thinks. Tell him to go away.
Ava has been living with her for two months and Beatrice has been in love with her for at least half of that.
It took some getting used to, this feeling. It took many nights laying in bed staring at the ceiling and pretending like the feelings she had for Ava were just a friendship. An intense one, born of their proximity and Ava’s natural affinity for people in general. 
But love is friendship caught on fire, she’s read before. And her friendship with Ava is a living, burning thing. She knows their love would be incendiary, scorching everything she thought love looked like before.
If - and it’s a big if - Ava ever wanted to love her back.
Why would she? Why would she give up a world of possibility for Beatrice? She’s certainly nothing special. She’s disciplined, polite, considerate to the needs of others - all the things her parents wanted her to be. Ava wants someone free, a little brash, selfish in the right ways. Beatrice is none of those things, can’t even begin to think of how she could be. But Ava deserves to get what she wants after all those years of being denied even the simplest of things.
Beatrice just doesn’t have the qualities Ava could want. Friendship is one thing. Being in love with someone is another. Beatrice is hyper aware of the difference.
It doesn’t stop her from dreaming about it, though. It doesn’t stop her from wishing for it.
“What’s the worst that could happen? We spend the rest of the semester ignoring each other?” he asks, smile charming.
Yes, she thinks. What’s the worst that could happen between them? They could spend the rest of the lease ignoring each other. Ava would never look at her the same.
She’d have to go back to living her life the way it was before Ava - not the worst, but not as great as this.
“I don’t know,” Ava finally hedges.
Yes, Beatrice exhales in her mind.
JC leans forward a little more. “It doesn’t need to be anything big. We could go for one of those iced coffees you like. At the cafe near Venable?”
“She likes the one near the English department.”
Beatrice frowns. Surely that wasn’t her voice. But Ava and JC are both looking at her. So it must have been her. There’s a slight smile on Ava’s face, a slight frown on JC’s. Beatrice clears her throat.
“I’m sorry. I just…”
JC recovers. “The one near Eldridge Hall, sure. I know someone who works there. She can sneak us a pastry.”
Ava hasn’t looked away from Beatrice. “I don’t know,” she repeats.
Beatrice swallows. It’s fine. Ava is - well, not quite a grown up, but certainly not a child. Despite her propensity for Saturday morning cartoons on Beatrice’s Hulu account - which is ruining the algorithm of her suggested shows - and sleeping on the couch upside down like a toddler and eating, God help her, shredded cheese out of the bag after finishing half a gallon of milk without even pouring herself a glass, she is not a child. 
She can make her own decisions. And if that decision is- If it’s- Well. Beatrice swallows past a knot forming in her throat. Well. She can do what she pleases. Including this probably-very-nice-boy in front of them. She’s allowed to do that.
So she smiles tightly, her lips pressing together thinly, and tells herself to get it together. She keeps her focus on Ava and loosens her mouth and it feels a little more natural. She inhales through her nose. She can tell Ava that she’s free to do whatever she wants with whoever she wants.
“You do like a free pastry,” is what she ends up saying.
Ava’s forehead pinches, the corners of her mouth crinkling. “I do,” she says slowly, confused.
“An iced coffee and a pastry.” Beatrice says it just as slowly. “Both things that you enjoy.”
“I do,” Ava repeats.
Beatrice nods encouragingly. Her head feels like it’s on a spring, up and down and up and down. She’s worried it’s going to roll off. 
JC looks between the two of them, confusion on his face. Beatrice sees him out of the corner of her eye and her smile tightens again.
Ava is still staring at her, still frowning slightly. Beatrice forces herself into her most diplomatic smile. 
Don’t you get it? she wants to ask. Don’t you understand what I’m trying to say?
But Ava misses it. Because she breaks Beatrice’s gaze and focuses on JC instead. Beatrice thinks her smile is slightly dimmer. Or she’s just hoping it is. But it still doesn’t ease the pain of knowing there is a smile and it’s aimed at JC. 
She opens her mouth, but he beats her to it. “Listen, you have my number. I’m done with classes this evening. And then you’ll meet me for coffee, okay? And you won’t regret it.” 
Ava says nothing. JC pushes back from their table and smiles, hooking his hands back around the straps of his bag. His eyes wander to Beatrice and he nods politely before turning in a lazy circle and heading back through the crowd as the student center starts to fill up as afternoon classes.
Beatrice looks away instantly, busying herself with adjusting her notebook. It doesn’t need to be straightened out. In fact, she pushes it out of place and the pen Ava loaned her starts to roll across the table towards the edge. She reaches for it at the same time as Ava does.
Their fingers tangle and the pen is trapped under Beatrice’s palm. She pauses, every nerve exposed, and looks up to find Ava already looking back at her.
She smiles, mouth still wound too tight. “I’ve got it.”
“Do you?” Ava asks curiously.
Beatrice frowns, looking down. Their fingers are still slotted together, still laced over the pen. Of course she has it. It’s right there, scratching blue ink against her palm. 
“Because it seems like you’ve lost everything else,” Ava continues. “Like your cool, for instance.”
She pulls back minutely. “My-” Her eyes narrow. “What do you mean by that?”
Ava shrugs a shoulder. She only does that when she has a secret, when there’s something that Beatrice missed, a cue she didn’t read. “You do like a free pastry,” she mocks, her voice pitched low in a terrible approximation of Beatrice’s accent. “What gotten into you?”
“Oh.” Beatrice bristles. “Well, you do.”
“I know that. You know that.” Ava pauses. “Why does JC need to know that?”
Beatrice doesn’t have a good answer for that. So she makes one up. “Your potential suitors will need to know things about you. That is less a trivia fact and more of a necessity.”
Ava snorts loudly. Beatrice looks around, but no one seems bothered by the sudden noise. “My potential suitors?” She shakes her head. “Bea, honestly. No one talks like you do.”
She doesn’t make it sound like an insult. She never does, never has. She seems more entertained than anything, but not in a way that makes Beatrice uncomfortable or self-conscious. It makes her feel seen. And she loves to be seen by Ava. It uncoils some of the tension in her shoulder that she knows is radiating into her hand, tense under Ava’s touch.
Ava doesn’t move her hand. “Well, thanks to you, I think I’m going on a date tonight.”
Thanks to me. Thanks to the way she said Ava would enjoy herself. Thanks to her, Ava is meeting someone who isn’t her for a coffee at Ava’s favorite cafe where she only brings Beatrice. One of our places, Ava always tells her with a smile. 
“You can say no,” she reminds Ava, her whole body locking up again.
Say no, say no. She feels each word burn in her throat. But why would she? Why would she pick someone like JC over me?
Ava is still looking at her curiously, head tipped slightly as she studies her face. Beatrice holds still, face perfectly impassive from years of practice. She doesn’t move, doesn’t blink, doesn’t open her mouth and tell Ava that JC seemed nice but she deserves something better than nice; something spectacular.
Then again, she’s not sure that Ava would feel that way about her.
So she forces her face to relax. Works through each muscle until she’s smiling slightly and nods encouragingly. “But if you like him and can see yourself enjoying your time, you should say yes.”
“Do you want me to?”
The question cuts through her with the intensity of a perfect lightning strike. She pulls back slightly, the only indication Ava’s hand tightening over hers when it starts to slide away. Ava’s face has gone from curious to a level of seriousness usually reserved for her more difficult homework assignments, or when she’s trying to figure out something Beatrice said. 
“I don’t… I don’t think that’s my decision.”
“Well, you’re my best friend.”
Beatrice has never hated a description more in her life. She fights the visceral reaction she feels come alive in her chest. She is Ava’s best friend. She’s admitted that more times than her parents have told her they love her. The first time had been a surprise to both of them, almost too soon after Ava moved in. But it felt natural. Ava slotted into the unknown hole in her life like she had always been there.
But she’d set their whole foundation on fire if it meant one day she could be Ava’s best friend and, and, and.
She widens her smile, feeling like she’s playing a part. “Of course. But I suppose… Well, there’s no harm in trying, is there?”
Ava’s hand slides away now and the feeling that she said the wrong thing rushes in on her. 
“A very diplomatic answer, Beatrice.” She pats the top of Beatrice’s hand before she pulls it into her lap. “Remind me again why you’re not running for student government?”
Beatrice doesn’t smile. She simply touches her notebook, arranging it’s already perfect line. She looks down at the chunky-tipped blue pen sitting on the page, so out of place against the neat, thin, black lines of her notes. Suddenly the idea of writing with it feels overwhelming. 
“I think we better get to lunch.” She puts the pen in front of Ava. “Camila said she was going to meet us there.” 
She needs the buffer, needs to put space between them. Camila is the perfect distraction. Mary and Shannon would know instantly that something was wrong - and they’d corner her until she said what. But perhaps they might not; Shannon seems supernaturally in tune with her and there’s rarely a thing she needs to tell her. Lilith would read Beatrice’s hesitation and be annoyed. Or think it’s Ava’s fault and be cagey when she doesn’t need to be. Camila would be too polite to acknowledge the tension Beatrice knows is radiating off her.
Ava, mercifully, doesn’t argue with her or point out that Camila isn’t meeting them for another 15 minutes and the walk only takes 5. She pockets the pen again and packs her things away, waiting for Beatrice to zip her bag closed.
They walk inches apart, shoulders to themselves. It’s the longest 5 minutes of Beatrice’s life.
~
The door opens slowly. Beatrice looks up from her book, the one she’s been reading since Ava left; the one she hasn’t been reading at all. Ava slips through it, back turned to close the door quietly behind her. When she turns to the living room, she gasps.
“Beatrice.”
Beatrice blinks. “Why are you sneaking back in?”
Ava is still taking deep breaths, hand pressed to her chest. “I thought you’d be sleeping.”
“At…” Beatrice checks her phone, frowning. “Eight o’clock in the evening?”
The tips of Ava’s ears go red just enough for Beatrice to notice. “Well. I didn’t look at the time.”
Beatrice looks out the window at the golden sunset. “It’s still light out.”
“You’re an early sleeper.” Ava sounds like she’s grasping at straws, the pitch of her voice rising.
“Not that early,” Beatrice says flatly. She slips her bookmark into her book, grateful to be closing it. “8 hours a night are important, but if I went to sleep at this hour, I’d be up at four in the morning. That’s too early, even for me.”
Ava toes off her shoes, kicking them towards the shoe rack at the door. One of them lands on the rack but the other bounces off it and away. Ava sighs, fixes it, and runs a hand through her hair when she straightens up.
“How-” Beatrice stops. She suddenly needs to be busy, needs to have her hands moving. She could open her book again, thumb through the pages. But tea sounds better. She stands, crossing to the kitchen and filling the electric kettle.
“I got you a coffee.” Ava pulls out a stool tucked at the breakfast bar, leaning forward with her chin in her hands. “But some kid on a skateboard crashed into me when he cut a corner and took the coffee down with him.”
Beatrice pulls two mugs out the cabinet, dropping a tea bag in each. “Are you okay?” 
“Just my pride.” Ava shrugs when Beatrice looks back. “But I’m disappointed. I got you a mocha chip frappuchino. Lucy put in extra chocolate chips.”
Something flutters in Beatrice’s chest, a sudden thought that overwhelms her: maybe Ava does these things because she feels it too. She pushes it down and smiles. “I do like when Lucy makes my drinks. But, maybe next time.”
Ava is quiet long enough that Beatrice wonders if she left. The kettle starts to whistle and she fills the mugs, balancing them carefully as she carries them to the counter Ava hasn’t moved from. She’s just uncharacteristically quiet. She hums a thank you and curls her hands around the mug, hissing when she finds it’s too hot.
Beatrice can’t help the fond smile; Ava is always rushing into things.
It’s why Beatrice knows Ava doesn’t feel the same way. She’s not rushing into this, not caught up in a whirlwind like she is with everything else. 
“Aren’t you going to ask me how my date was?” Ava finally asks.
I don’t want to know.
“How was your date?” she asks politely.
Tell me it was the worst date you’ve ever been on. Worse than the one you told me about where the boy slurped his pasta and sauce got everywhere; worse than the one where the girl tried to cast a love spell on you.
Ava shrugs. “It was… nice.” She blows on her tea. “JC is a good guy. I knew that already. But it wasn’t… groundbreaking.”
Beatrice is patient, letting her tea cool on its own. “Does a date need to be groundbreaking?”
“World-breaking.” Ava says it so quickly and fiercely, Beatrice has to blink. “It should be life-altering.”
“That seems like a lot to expect for a first date.” Beatrice points out. “At a coffee shop. With your lab partner.”
Ava shrugs. “Maybe I just have high expectations.”
Ones Beatrice can never live up to, it seems.
She smiles, hoping it looks warm and friendly. “You’ll have a hard time finding someone with an outlook like that.”
“I don’t know.” Ava takes a sip of her tea, hisses again. “I mean, a lot of things in my life have been like that. Getting out of the orphanage. Getting into school. Meeting you.” She’s staring at Beatrice now, a smile on her face.
She curls her hands around her mug and fights the way it burns her skin. She’s hardly earth-shattering, hardly worth that much. There’s no way she could be. But Ava is so earnest all the time, means things so completely. And if she’s saying that, Beatrice has to acknowledge that Ava considers her something great. A great friendship that Beatrice could never, ever risk.
But she feels herself flush all the same. “I’d hardly call it that.” She hedges around her next question. “So, no second date?”
She wonders if Ava hears the way her voice trembles; she can certainly feel it in her chest. 
But Ava doesn’t seem to, too focused on taking another, slower, sip of her tea. This one apparently doesn’t scald her tongue. She grins up at Beatrice, hunched over the steaming mug. She’s brought her legs up on the rungs of the stool and her knees are around her ears. Ava clutches the mug tightly to her chest.
She’s in love with a menace. 
“I don’t think so,” Ava says after a minute. “I mean, I don’t really have a reason not to, but…”
Beatrice breathes in deeply, steadying herself. She’s not a reason for Ava to say no. She knows that. “That’s not very encouraging,” she says instead.
Ava shrugs. “I don’t know. I’m not looking for anything to change right now. I want things to stay exactly as they are. Things are perfect. And if I went out with him again, I’d just be, I don’t know. Pretending.”
She takes another measured sip of her tea. She feels like she’s walking in the empty space between the points of knives. “You wouldn’t be happy.”
Ava shakes her head softly. “No, I wouldn’t be. How could I be happy if I was pretending all the time?”
Beatrice knows. Because she is. She’s pretending from the moment she wakes up to the moment she falls asleep alone and all the seconds in between. She’s pretending that everything she’s feeling isn’t consuming her from the inside out.
All the books she read as a child, all the romances novels she devoured in her bed with a flashlight illuminating the pages - none of it described the way it feels now. Love is friendship on fire had seemed like such a childish thing to say. Something arbitrary and insignificant. But now she understands what it’s supposed to mean, what she could never understand before with anyone else.
“You couldn’t,” she admits. She’s not lying.
Ava’s eyes are still piercing, still searching her face. She wonders what Ava is trying to find and she keeps the truth as far away from her as she can. Either she finds something else or she gives up, because her face breaks into two and she’s grinning.
Ava slurps her tea, smiling wider when Beatrice looks mildly disgusted. “Alright. The way I see it, we have two options: we have a sleepover night where you let me braid your hair and I let you paint my toenails.” She laughs when the mild disgust turns into outright horror. “Or, I get you back into that really nice sweater you were wearing earlier and we got off in search of a replacement mocha chip frappuchino?”
Beatrice abandons her tea almost immediately. “Do you know what time Lucy’s shift is over?”
Ava jumps off her stool, landing lightly on her feet. She doesn’t bother with sneakers, socked feet sliding into sandals. Beatrice thinks about telling her how ridiculous it looks: her mid-calf socks usually hidden by her high-top sneakers, and a pair of black slides; her jean shorts where the pocket hangs just a little too long past the hem; her crop top with How you lichen me now? hand-stenciled on the front, from the one botany club meeting she attended; her hair half-pulled back in a high top-knot; a crooked grin on her face.
She’s the most beautiful woman Beatrice has ever seen in her life.
And one day, someone else is going to get to call her theirs. Beatrice will be left with the empty space where Ava used to be, her own space in Ava’s life filled up with someone else. Someone better. Someone she wants to rush headlong into the future with. Someone she sees a world of possibilities with.
Beatrice will be happy for her. Or, she’ll exhaust herself pretending.
“Milady,” Ava says, mouth tripping over the sounds. She holds out her arm. “Will you accompany me on this chip?”
Beatrice rolls her eyes. “You hardly made an effort that time.”
Ava’s smile doesn’t falter. “One of these days, I’ll impress you, Beatrice. You’ll see.” She wags her finger at Beatrice. “And then you’ll realize how special I am. You’ll never want to lose me.”
“No,” she says quietly. Ava slips away to grab her phone, abandoned on the breakfast bar. Beatrice waits by the door, holding it open. “I don’t suppose I ever will.”
It’s inevitable. She’ll lose Ava to someone who loves her out loud, someone good enough for her. But she’s going to bury greedy hands into the moments in between and hold on for as long as Ava lets her.
“I think I’m going to tell JC it was nice, but we won’t go out again,” Ava says conversationally as they exit their apartment building, headed towards campus. “He was nice, but… I’m looking for better.”
“You’ll find it,” she says, believing it wholeheartedly. She unthinkingly maneuvers Ava around a crack in the sidewalk. “You just need to be patient.”
“Patience isn’t my strong suit.” Her hand slides to Beatrice’s, their fingers slotting together for a fleeting moment. “I don’t know how much longer I can wait. But I'll try.”
Just keep waiting. Wait forever, her mind screams. Don’t find anyone before I can be who you need me to be.
Ava takes in her silence and laughs. Beatrice frowns, not in on the joke, but doesn’t protest when Ava laces an arm through hers, pulling until their pressed together from the shoulder to their elbows, digging into each other. There’s no space between them, not for a slip of paper or a secret.
Ava hums softly, some tune Beatrice doesn’t know, but would guess is some new song on the radio that she’s never heard. Beatrice lets it bubble in her chest, sinks into it’s familiar warmth, and hopes that whatever God is watching over her lets her keep this moment for as long as she can.
And if he isn’t, she hopes he’s just not paying enough attention to realize she’s living on borrowed time and that she’s running out of it.
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snackugaki · 1 year
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ohno it was only supposed to be a throwaway design to bully an old man how did it end up like this, how did it end up like this
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beliscary · 4 months
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im too slow to finish this for this solstice so have a snippet of wip ft. terence and bahamut talking
"Each time I return," the dragon wondered, pressing against Terence's pilgrim kiss, "I am astonished to find another that burns so. I should know better. There is always light."
There—the crack at last. Quicker and cleaner than he had expected. Kinder, also. Gently, Terence felt for the fracture inside himself. He pried it apart, breaking it in truth, and folded those ancient eyes within his heart, placing them beside Dion's strained, precious smiles.
No one will look here, he promised. No one has ever thought to.
“It will be a cruel work.” The proud creature did not flinch from the truth, though there was pain in it. He and Dion were well suited to each other, after all. “Do not say you did not know.”
“I've always known.” He ran a hand over the dragon's skin.
“I wonder if you will believe that, at the end."
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nhasablogg · 2 years
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Jealousy (Turning Saints Into The Sea)
Fandom: The Song Of Achilles
Characters: Patroclus/Achilles
Summary: Patroclus has a moment of weakness, but Achilles is there to reassure him.
A/N: For the anon who wanted some Achilles/Patroclus!
Words: 700
Patroclus wasn’t a jealous person. Since he was attached to Achilles’ hip it would’ve left him with nothing but grief, with the praise and the prophecies and the applause this golden-haired boy was given. Perhaps he’d once wondered what it would be like to be on the receiving end of that, instead of being a disappointment as he’d grown up to be known, but he saw the way the expectations broke Achilles a little. Saw the doubts flicker across his face as they were laying side by side at night, when everything felt scary and fragile.
So no, Patroclus wasn’t a jealous person. Not like that. Not for this.
But sometimes he found the neverending stares, the way they all reached out in the hopes of touching the best of the best, to be frustrating. Other times he felt proud to be the one to be standing beside him.
But recently it was more of the former.
“You’re jealous.”
He’d hoped Achilles hadn’t noticed - he’d tucked denial just beneath his tongue in case he did - but he’d had the type of week that’d left him an open book. Whatever emotion he’d been feeling had probably been visible to anyone, but Achilles, who could touch his temple and know exactly what he was thinking as if his pulse gave it away so freely, had probably detected it before Patroclus had even identified the feeling as jealousy.
He wasn’t smiling out of amusement more than he was grinning incredulously at him now. “I believe this is only the, what? Fifth time in our lives I’ve seen you be jealous.”
Patroclus attempted to spit out some of the denial he’d prepared, but it sounded weak even to his ears. “I’m not?”
“Oh, come on now.” The grin turned amused, nearly playful. Achilles enjoyed this. Enjoyed seeing Patroclus care so visibly, as if he wasn’t aware of just how much he meant to him anyway. “I saw the way you looked at them. You were glaring, Patroclus.”
He huffed, but found he couldn’t really look Achilles in the eye. He’d been exhausted, already annoyed at having to leave their sanctuary for a few days, just to find people gawking at the man he could only call his in private. Achilles hadn’t encouraged them, of course he hadn’t, but there were only so many times Patroclus could watch both men and women smile and bat their eyes at him before it got to him just a little.
“Did I really glare?” he asked now, horrified at the idea, but Achilles merely rolled his eyes and stepped closer, arms encircling his waist to pull him in.
“A little,” he said. “But I don’t think anyone realized why. Except for me.”
“You’re too observant,” Patroclus said, hoping despite knowing otherwise that the blush that was spreading over his face wasn’t too visible.
Achilles’ smile softened into something fond. “I like that you’re jealous,” he admitted, stroking a finger over Patroclus’ cheek. “And I like that you’re being shy about it.”
Patroclus leaned forward to hide his face against Achilles, feeling his chest rumble as he laughed. “Stop.”
Fingers prodded at his back, causing him to squirm. “Don’t hide. It was cute.”
“You’re terribly smug about this.”
“Of course.” He moved both hands to Patroclus’ sides to squeeze at the soft flesh beneath his clothes. “Don’t hide,” he repeated, and Patroclus emerged giggling in an attempt to get away from the ticklish sensation, but succeeded only in giving Achilles access to his midriff. He poked the skin only a couple of times, but Patroclus, already tired, already on edge out of embarrassment, found himself curling up and all but collapsing as Achilles tickled him. They both fell to the ground, Patroclus in desperation and Achilles as he tried to follow, and soon their laughter mixed together and kept going, even though the tickling stopped.
“You have no reason to be jealous,” Achilles finally said once they’d calmed down, a hand running through Patroclus’ hair to move it away from his forehead. He pressed his lips there before Patroclus replied and stayed until he finally said, “I know.”
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wonderinc-sonic · 4 months
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Heard another fanfic writer mention getting quoted by fans on twitter, 1 dead and injured 🫠
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impatentpending · 2 years
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Metanoia – A Turning Saints into the Sea Playlist
The journey of changing one’s heart, mind, or way of life
for day three of @tobeckyweek, I proudly present (a curated version of) my TSITS playlist! Two songs for every chapter posted, in order, and three for the chapter that is yet to come.
youtube link here!
Shallow / wrapped up in books
burnin’ for you / Medicine (royal sugar)
only the good die young / starry eyes
apocalypse / I’ll be good
people will say we’re in love /  I don’t wanna talk about it
I don’t know how to love him / please please please let me get what i want
Mary on a cross / hit and run / Mr. Brightside
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tehriz · 1 year
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i had a moment today and if the rest of y’all got here two decades ago don’t mind me but
is mr. brightside
mister
bright side
as in, finding a bright side
because even though he’s dying of jealousy the bright side is he can watch?
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daisy-billy · 2 years
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Jealousy, Turning Saints into the Sea: a Bellarke Moulin Rouge!AU
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summary:
It was only a kiss, how did it end up like this?
Clarke's a star trapped under the control of Cage Wallace. Bellamy's a broke composer who takes a job at the Moulin Rouge as a last ditch effort to save himself and his sister. Their love could ruin both of their lives, but it might just save them instead.
A Moulin Rouge!AU
(LINK IN REBLOG)
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mountinez · 1 year
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just saw a pic of him pulling r*mos shirt, seriouly i can't catch a break
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roomy-ghosted · 1 year
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gillion would fuck so hard with mr brightside, i can imagine him BELTING the 'destiny is calling me' part so hard.
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falsementor · 10 months
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the thing that saddens me the most about mac's situation with the lady bone demon is... him not even knowing HOW to go about untangling the mess she made of his mind. the vengeful thoughts he acted on back durring JTTW, he doesnt know how to explain what happened there. you could ask him why he did it, why he tried to kill swk's companions, why he did what he did, and he wouldnt know how to answer that with complete accuracy. deep down he knows something was seriously off with him, but it was also such a traumatic point in time for him that his memory has blurred those events, its kind of like. a haze. and its kind of emotionally compromising for him to dig into the meat of the why, too.
but he wont deny what happened or his transgressions. in fact, i think its actually easier for him just accept that version of events than it is to unpack the can of worms with LBD being involved. its easier to just say "yeah i did that".
and thats why he has such a warped idea of right vs wrong, and why he catagorizes himself & others as 'the hero or the warrior'
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