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#anderperry imagines
heliads · 2 months
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If requests are still open :) Something for dead poets society, just sth with the gang having a good time, maybe trying to stage a play in the woods? Tbh just a everyone lives and is happy AU with fluff and winter and hot tea! (while I love this book I havent read it in a very long time...)
ok consider an everyone lives au but they are not 100% happy. (i am incapable of not writing angst my apologies) also this is movie dead poets society not book because i have not yet read the books whoops. hope you enjoy xoxo
'and it's not tonight' - dead poets society
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Todd Anderson is looking out the window at a gray, blustery morning, when they ask him if he’s going to be alright. It wasn’t quite certain before then. It’s not quite certain now, either, even after he answers.
“Of course,” he says somewhat unconvincingly, “Why do you ask?”
Behind him, Charlie Dalton raises a dubious brow. For once in his life, he’s holding himself back, but the situation requires discretion, and who is he to mess up at a time like this? He’s already been warned about treating Todd like a glass doll rather than a paper mache target, but even Charlie can tell that now is the time to pull a few punches. The hollows under his friend’s eyes are far darker than they were a couple of months ago. He wears unease like a well-traveled coat, thin at the elbows and rubbed raw at the seams.
“Look at yourself,” Charlie answers at last, “You’re exhaustion walking. And don’t tell me otherwise, I’ve got eyes.”
“I should hope so,” Todd remarks, and permits himself a small curl of his lips up into a half-smile. Half-smiles are good, though. Almost there to the real thing. So he’ll tell himself, at least.
Even a half-smile can let Charlie know that he’s alright. The other boy breaks into a well-intentioned snorting laugh. “Hey, ask any girl in town and they’ll tell you I’ve got beautiful ones. ‘Sides, Anderson, you know everything’s alright. The stuff with Neil was cleared over, right? He came back.”
“He came back,” Todd repeats somewhat weakly.
“Yeah, yeah, he came back,” Charlie confirms, walking over to clap his friend on the shoulder, shaking him a little bit just to mess with him but mainly to get his affections across. “He’s a little more tired than he used to be, and we’re all plenty scared from what could have happened, but overall we’re glad to see him again. His parents realized they messed up in the nick of time, and even if they wanted him under watch for a little bit, he’s back and we’re back and everything’s alright. Capiche?” He asks dramatically, wiggling his eyebrows for a bit of flair.
“Since when are you Italian?” Todd asks doubtfully.
“Since the situation requires it,” Charlie answers him, and slings an arm around the boy’s bony frame. “Come on now. The snow’s cleared up, and even if all that does is remind us how little grass grows on our campus, it means we can go into the woods again. I’ve been talking to the boys and we all agree that it’s time to dust off our finesse with literature. What do you say, Todd? You up for another rousing poetic exchange tonight?”
Todd jerks his head up and down in a hasty agreement. “Yeah. Neill’ be there?”
“Yeah, and me, and Knoxie, and everyone else you forgot to mention,” Charlie says in a tone of mock outrage. “God, you live with the guy, don’t you? Can’t you spare some excitement for the rest of us, too?”
Todd rolls his eyes, and finds the grace to elbow Charlie in the ribs. “Spare me the self-indulgence, Dalton. I’m glad to see all of you.”
“Don’t I know it,” Charlie affirms. “It’s been a while since we were all together, yeah?”
Todd blows out a low breath as they walk back towards the halls. It has been a long time, or it felt that way, at least. After the– after the incident after the play, in which Neil was found in his father’s study with a gun in his hands about to blow the trigger, it was decided that all of the pupils of Welton Academy would go home for a short period of time to clear their heads and come back ready to face the end of term. 
Mainly, Todd thinks it was so rumors couldn’t spread about just what happened with Neil Perry to take him out of school, and he’s glad for it. Neil doesn’t deserve to have everyone whispering about what happened to make him decide that the best thing for his life was to end it. Neil deserves the world, and none of them could give it to him.
That was the worst part of it all, Todd decides. The guilt, how it wrapped around him in wires as strong as the heaviest chains of iron. He couldn’t escape it. If he was really Neil’s friend, he would have known. If he was really Neil’s friend, Todd could have stopped him. If he was really Neil’s friend, Todd wouldn’t have found out about the attempt the next morning, quietly awoken from drowsy sleep by a Charlie Dalton with eyes like a stricken soldier as he lurchingly informed Todd that Neill Perry had tried to kill himself the night before. And none of them had known. And when his father had taken the gun away, Neil fought and screamed for it, worse than he did when he tried to convince his parents that he wanted to act, louder than he protested that he would be sent away to military school.
And then they were alone. At home. The worst place for boys to be. Should you grieve the friend who is not dead? Do you call each other on the phone, and ask if you have been playing any sporting games with other boys your age, or if you have given any thought to the fact that your friend might not have wanted to die if you had praised him more in class, or clapped louder when he performed, or said something– anything– to this beautiful, brittle boy?
They don’t say any of that. They think it quite loudly, but unspoken thoughts do not travel well over the telephone. The flittering ghosts of would-be words tend to get lodged in the coils of wire from receiver to housing, across the street and over the miles of terrain until they reach the abode of the boy on the end, who also has a lot to say but won’t. And then they both stay silent. And they both know exactly what the other wanted to say anyway. That is how friendship works.
They came back, though. Welton sent out a series of letters to usher back the pupils, even had its secretaries working overtime to call the people who never seem to answer their mail. There was another rush of cars and luggage to the dorms, and then they were settled in again. Todd had wondered if he might be assigned another roommate– anyone other than Cameron, God, but preferably Neil still– and then the door had opened quietly and Neil was there again, trying for a brave smile, and saying, “Todd?” in a voice that had once rung pure and true through a theater that loved him.
Todd loves him for it. He’d embraced Neill with open arms, felt the air punch out of his lungs in one strike, but it came back. He came back. They were alright again, sort of. They might be alright in time, but time is what they have.
Now they’ve all been waiting for the snow to melt, and treading on thin ice around topics they don’t dare broach. Neil has been a good sport, never making them feel awkward for wanting to treat him like a china doll. He was good before, too, though, and– It gets hard to tell sometimes, that’s all. Hard to tell when he genuinely is unbothered and when he’s superbly good at pretending otherwise. They stick to safer subjects anyway.
At last, though, the ground is firm, the weather not terrible, and Charlie’s gone and rallied the troops for a night out there. At first, Todd’s first instinct is to panic. They aren’t supposed to be having any more meetings of the Dead Poets Society, not since Keating was the scapegoat for all the trouble and everyone cracked down on what makes a good boy want to escape, but over time he realizes that it’ll be alright. Some things are worth the risk. Making Neil smile again is one of them.
They meet at midnight. Todd sits awake with bated breath, even though the act by itself isn’t even all that unusual. They’re teenage boys. Staying up until the moon hangs high and lofty in the sky is expected, not uncommon. Still, a delicious shiver of inherent wrongdoing whispers down his spine when Neil walks slowly into the center of their shared dorm room and says quietly, reverently, “It’s time.”
As if the others had been waiting upon that very proclamation, the remaining boys peer out into the hall immediately after Neil and Todd silently close their door behind them. Their eyes meet with shared secrecy, shared triumph, and they make their way down the wooden stairs and out into the bristling chill of night. The stars are out tonight. We are all out tonight.
They all start heading out into the woods. Charlie takes off like a flash at the end of a matchstick, hurtling at a runner’s sprint across the hills, and the others follow him at varying speeds. Todd begins walking at a normal clip until it occurs to him that he doesn’t see enough heads bobbing around him and he turns to see Neil hesitating by the door.
They lock eyes, and Todd sees a whole host of things swimming in brown irises, fear and apprehension and a sick sort of guilt that makes Todd’s stomach squirm in sympathy. He gives Neil one last moment over the threshold, then jerks his head towards the others, putting a little faux arrogance into the gesture in the hopes that an actor might appreciate an act in someone else and remember what it is like to trust oneself again.
Neil accepts the move and grins, his teeth flashing in the moonlight. “I’ll race you to the caves,” he calls, and begins to run, his footsteps sure and strong.
Todd stares after him, an astronomer watching his first comet, then takes off after him. The grass is dry and quick under his feet, spread out under each footstep like the wake of a speedboat. The wind, already coarse, pulls at Todd’s skin, his hair, his clothes, but not even the strongest gusts could keep him down. Somehow, he’s already to the edge of the forest, and he lets out a loud, delighted whoop. A barbaric yawp, if you will. Somewhere in the back of Todd’s mind, a dark-haired man in a comfortable brown sweater smiles indulgently, and chalks up another small victory to the wonders of poetry.
The second his war cry leaves Todd’s throat, the other boys swarm him like moths to a flame. Someone claps a hand over his mouth, and around him, laughs echo into the crunching of leaves underfoot. 
“Don’t be so loud, you’ll get the professors on us in no time,” someone admonishes, but then a different boy cuts in, “Don’t be stupid, we’re far enough out that we can all be shouting,” and Todd’s punishment is lifted and he can yell once more. His defender– Neil, it must be, no one else can make their voice ring with glory like that in just a few words– joins in in the triumphant calls, and then they’re all shrieking up to the stars above, here we are, not boys and not men, bold enough to scream and young enough to never listen.
Todd thinks, as they run through the forest, that it’s been a while since he let himself go free. He hasn’t listened to his mind in a long time, hasn’t let the words roll around in his brain, loose marbles of similes and paraphrased poems. His musings are dusty, dark things most of the time, but sometimes the light catches them just right and they glow like sapphires. He could write a thousand stanzas if he wanted to, right now, and everyone would listen.
The Dead Poets Society reaches the caves and a hush falls among the crowd. Slowly, they edge inside, eyes wide. The rock faces and crumbling caverns should be different, Todd thinks, something should mark the passage of time and all the awful things that have twisted their fates since the last time they sat together and thought of prose, but the stones still look as they did the last time they were here. The moss grows in familiar patterns, albeit a little thicker in certain patches now that it hasn’t been scuffed by boots in a month or so, but one of Charlie’s magazines that he forgot to take back with him turns up under some spiderwebs, and Todd’s favorite place to sit is still just as inviting. Maybe, then, the only thing that changed was them. Maybe that’s all that needs to happen.
“So?” Meeks asks, settling into a seat, “What are we doing tonight?”
“Poetry, duh,” Charlie answers him, rolling his eyes fondly. “We’re the Dead Poets Society. What else would we do, peruse our textbooks?”
This earns him a vengeful swat on the shoulder from Meeks, but even Charlie can admit that the question was fair. They’ve read plenty of poems, they’ve written a few, they’ve even gone off and run some improv limerick challenges, although Todd notes that they haven’t brought nearly enough alcohol for that tonight.
After a few moments’ thought, someone suggests a play. It might be Todd. Instantly, the idea is accepted, and roles are divided out. They’ll be doing Hamlet, since there are plenty of long sticks outside and everyone is quite fond of the idea of pretending to run each other through. Pitts is already practicing his death rattles, except he’s not very good at it, and it sounds more like he’s hacking up a lung or two.
Neil, though, is glowing at the idea, and even though they haven’t got any scripts so everyone is mostly just planning on paraphrasing the hell out of one of William Shakespeare’s finer works, Todd gets the idea that Neil has a few memorized soliloquies rattling around in his head already.
Good, then. They’ll enjoy tonight, and the next night they’re out here, and the one after that, too. It has been a very long winter, but Todd has caught his first glimpse of new spring, and he gets the feeling that warmer, sunnier days aren’t the impossibility they seemed a few weeks ago. The days are healing, and they will too. And so the Dead Poets come back to life.
requested by @reinekes-fox, i hope you enjoy!
dead poets society tag list: @faerieroyal
all tags list: @wordsarelife
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deadcrowcalling · 12 days
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imagine this todd
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with this neil
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go on. just think of it.
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My favourite thing about Dead Poets fans is that nothing is canon. There is no reason to believe Todd had a Christmas gift for Neil. We made that shit up for the simple reason of making each other cry. And I respect that.
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gustingirl · 2 years
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i need a dead poets society cast reunion more than i need oxygen to live
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sevyn-stars · 11 months
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I could leave you, knowing all I ever gave you was a smile, and that would be enough.
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duck-in-a-spaceship · 4 months
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Pages Dog-Eared, Margins Filled
Merry Christmas! Have some Dead Poets Society fanfic!
Summary: Neil wants Todd in. Not just to say he's in but to really do something about, to read poetry, to put himself out there, to perform. So, the two of them start their own offshoot of the Dead Poets Society, to drum up some courage, and rehearse for the big stage.
Next>>
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Chapter 1: I Want You In
Todd fidgeted with the edge of his notebook, crinkling and smoothing out the page in his hand, focusing on anything but Neil sitting in front of him. The gentle sounds of the crunching paper, of the radiator humming under Neil’s legs, of the dead limbs of a tree tapping against their window, imploring to be let in, filled the crushing silence left by his and Neil’s argument. Todd settled back into his bed and pulled the words against his chest, tried to let them fill his heart.
They felt a little silly, all of the sudden, ramblings about dreams and new beginnings, things neither of them could grab. Things-
“You’re coming to the meeting this afternoon?”
“I don’t know, maybe.” Todd shook his head as he spoke, shrugging off the question as if it didn’t matter. It did, of course. Nearly everything Neil said did, that’s why people listened to him, why they followed him, why they sat around failed fires in caves and… and let poetry drip from their tongues like honey. That’s why Todd did, at least.
“Nothing Mr. Keating has to say means shit to you, does it Todd?”
Todd looked up, taken aback by Neil’s outburst, by the way he was suddenly leaning forwards, too fucking invested. “What is that supposed to-”
“You’re in the club! Being in the club means being stirred up by things!” Neil stood up and pointed his script at Todd. “You look about as stirred up as a cesspool!”
“So, what, you want me out?”
“No, I want you in.” Neil stepped forwards until his knees bumped up against Todd’s mattress, until he was leaning up against the overhang. “But being in means you got to do something, not just say you’re in.”
“Listen, Neil. I- I appreciate this concern but I’m not like you, alright?” Todd had sort of figured Neil already knew that. Already knew he just couldn’t be the kind of person people sat around failed fires in caves for, never could be even if he tried. He thought Neil had accepted it, when he got Todd in the club without having to say a single word. “I… You say things and people listen. I'm… I’m not like that.”
“Don’t you think you could be?”
“No!” The answer was so obvious Todd threw it out on instinct, like if he tossed it out fast enough both of them would have no choice but to catch it, but to accept it. Yet the moment it left his lips, it felt wrong. “I- I don’t know.” Maybe he could be. Maybe the boy who wrote poetry in front of his entire English class and who snuck out at night to sit in caves could be and who had friends like Neil could be but- “That’s not the point. The- the point is there’s nothing you can do about it. So you can just butt out. I can take care of myself just fine.”
Neil stared at him. All soft brown eyes and furrowed brows and gentle concern and fuck could he stop it already?
“Alright?” Todd asked.
“No.”
“What do you mean, no?”
Neil grinned, loose and mischievous, spelling out the kind of trouble Todd wasn’t sure he wanted to say no to. “No.”
In a flash, he tossed the play’s poster aside, snatching up Todd’s notebook instead and racing to jump up onto his bed. Todd scrambled after him in an instant.
“Gimme that- Neil!” he protested, pencil abandoned by crumpled pages, socked feet trying to find purchase as he jumped up onto Neil’s bed. “Give that back!”
“We are dreaming of a-” Neil began to read, cut off as he leapt from one bed to the next. “What is this… poetry!” Todd crashed into him after the jump, slipping on their tangled sheets, papers crunching underfoot like fallen leaves. He scrambled for the notebook, but Neil twisted it away from him with a delighted shriek, clutching the stolen goods to his chest. “I’m being chased by Walt Whitman!”
Neil crashed into the wall, laughing the entire time, and Todd stopped fighting to keep the smile off of his face. He jumped after Neil, and they collided again. Neil stumbled, or Todd did, or both of them did, probably, and then they were tumbling down to the bed together, a mess of tangled limbs and grabbing sheets and uncontrollable giggles.
“Okay! Okay!” Neil managed between breathless laughter, holding the notebook up in the air. “I surrender! You can have it. You can- you win!”
Todd took it from his grasp, pressing the pages shut the moment it was in his grasp. “Uh thanks,” he managed, suddenly a little too aware of how he could feel the warmth of Neil’s skin pressed up against his legs, how seconds ago his head was pressed against his chest. He could move, try to detangle them a little, but he wasn’t sure he could handle the embarrassment of awkwardly trying to push away from Neil.
He stayed put.
“You know, stealing my poetry and running around the room with it doesn’t make me any more stirred up,” Todd said, one of his hands that was holding him up firmly pressing the notebook shut.
“Really?” Neil asked. “I’m stirred up, I know that much. You seemed pretty stirred up too y’know, when you were chasing me like a madman. A sweaty-toothed one, even.” His face split into an even wider grin, somehow, endlessly pleased by his own reference.
Todd swatted him in the arm, and Neil swatted back playfully, laughing quietly. It was a hard sound not to mimic, a hard thing to ignore. “Hey, hey!” Neil protested, blocking an incoming smack. “I liked that poem. You were good Todd, you were really good.”
Todd eyed him doubtfully, silently making sure he was being genuine. It felt unlikely, that anyone had enjoyed the stuttering result of Keating’s mad urging towards the world of improv poetry, except maybe Keating himself. Even Todd, who stood slightly breathless and elated at the end of the whole thing, found it hard to ignore the wave of anxiety he had to endure to get there. “It wasn’t- it wasn’t that good.” He laughed slightly, a bit awkwardly. “It was a mess.”
“It was a great mess, then,” Neil insisted. “Really Todd, I loved it. I’d listen to you read poetry anytime, everyone else would too. They’d lose their shit if you stepped up during a poets meeting, I mean it.”
Todd looked at him, all soft smiles and rumpled clothes and hopeful grins, and believed he meant it. That was the worst thing of all, he really believed he meant it. Todd swallowed thickly. “I mean I- I appreciate that Neil but I’m not… in the cave, in front of all those people… it’s not the same.”
Neil frowned slightly, clearly considering this. Then he brightened, so clearly Todd could practically see the light bulb flash over his head, and he wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or not. “I know what we can do!” Neil announced, sitting up so suddenly that his forehead nearly crashed into Todd’s, that he gave them no choice but to try and detangle themselves.
It was indeed an awkward endeavor, punctuated with a lot of hissed curse words and half failed instructions to “Move your arm,” and “I can’t move my arm until you move your arm!” and “No not like- fuck!” but they managed it. Todd knew he was bright red by the end of it, but Neil’s neck was flushed as well, and that made him feel a little less bad.
“So, um, you had an idea?” Todd prompted hesitantly, once they were both sitting on the edge of the bed.
“Yes!” Neil agreed, standing up so he could face Todd. “We should have our own Dead Poets Society,” he proclaimed. Todd opened his mouth, moved to protest, but Neil waved him away to continue. “It’ll be just the two of us. We’ll meet whenever the others don’t, down to the cave just like always, but you won’t have to worry about everyone else. It’ll be like- it’ll be like rehearsals! You can practice with me to get over the stage fright before you move onto the big show.”
“I- I don’t know Neil. I mean, what if, what if it’s just as bad and I freeze up or it doesn’t work…” Todd trailed off, not sure how else to voice his protests, trying to give words to the anxieties that rolled around in his stomach.
“Well that’s just the thing,” Neil insisted. “It doesn’t matter how you do, cuz it’ll just be you and me. And I won’t care.”
Todd swallowed thickly, held eye contact with Neil for two many sticky slow seconds before he had to look away. “I’m just not sure is all, okay? I mean, aren’t we- we risking enough with the regular meetings? Are you sure this is a good idea, Neil?” He chanced a glance up, saw that Neil was ready to talk again, was ready to launch into another persuasive tirade, and Todd felt the strong urge to cut him off before he said something charmingly stupid and soul-stirring enough to work. “I- I don’t even know what I’d read,” he blurted out.
Neil laughed, short and breathless. “Oh come on! That’s the easy bit, you can read anything. Do something Whitman, you like his stuff, right?”
Todd shrugged, looked out the window. “I don’t know Neil… maybe. I’ll- I’ll have to think about it.”
“Oh bullshit,” Neil said. He stepped forward until he was toe-to-toe with Todd, dropped into a crouch right in front of him, one hand on his knee. “Bullshit,” he said again. Todd looked down at him, tried to keep his breaths nice and even. “You’re not gonna think about it at all.” What a lie; Todd was going to be thinking about this conversation until he graduated, until he died. “Come on, right now. Yes or no? Don’t think about it, just go with your gut. Carpe diem!" He drummed his fingers on Todd's knee with those last words, as if that could drum up some moxie from deep inside of him.
And maybe it could, because Todd found himself pausing before he answered, giving the idea thought instead of immediate denial. What if he did? Why not? It was just Neil. Not Cameron or Pitts or Meeks or any of the other poets. Maybe that could make all the difference, in some way. Todd found himself nodding. “Alright, alright, I mean…” he trailed off, looked down at Neil, who was grinning so wide Todd was worried his face would split. “Carpe diem?”
“Yes, yes!” Neil exclaimed, slapping his hand down on Todd’s thigh as he stood up, spinning in place to turn and face Todd. “This is great, this is great.” He walked over to the window, seemingly unable to stay still, and drumming his fingers against the radiator with little metallic clangs. “We’ll go tonight.”
Todd blinked, momentarily stunned. “Wait wh- tonight?”
“Well sure.” Neil turned back to him, all loose smiles and unabashed pride, the kind of confidence he was trying to rub off on Todd. “Why should we wait any longer?”
“I- I don’t even know what to read yet. Shouldn’t we take some time to- to prepare?” Todd stuttered out his excuse, grasping for whatever words might buy him a little more time.
“Whitman, like I said! Look, if you really don’t know, you can ask Keating. I’m sure he’d love to give you some poetry recommendations. Just don’t tell him what for.”
Todd sighed, leaned against the wall behind his bed in some form of resignation. He wanted to go with Neil, he really did. He wanted to… to live fully and suck the marrow out of life or whatever the hell it was. He wanted to stand on the burnt embers of a failed fire so he got ash on his shoes and smoke in his lungs and he wanted… he wanted to say words people would listen to. “Alright,” Todd agreed. “We can go tonight.”
And Neil’s face split into one of those grins that was contagious, that could have Todd smiling even if he didn’t know why. And just that made everything a little worth it.
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the anderperry fair folk au is going well <- (guy who just wrote 500 words' worth of description about a travelling outfit)
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garsmacabre · 1 year
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i'm writing an exam about dead poets society tomorrow so i guess it comes in handy that i've been hyperfixating on that shit for the past few weeks
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hi! i was wondering if you could do an imagine where wilson’s planning a really special birthday dinner for his girlfriend, but she ends up getting the flu on her birthday, so instead he takes care of her. <3 <3
I loved this request! I would love for Wilson to take care of me when I'm ill. I just feel like he'd be so caring!!
Hope this is what you wanted !!
If you want to request something for this series please do here
I love it when people request stuff and I can hear all your ideas! Also feel free to ask any questions about the series or ask for headcanons!
I might be open to doing some normal James Wilson x reader fics, depends if I get a good enough request ;) But at the moment I'm focusing on expanding and deepening the world of Wilson x peds!reader <3
Masterlist
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the four weeks into his time at Welton, Todd is hopelessly in love with Neil, and Neil is completely aware.
one night after a late study session and a poets' meeting, they stumble back into their room in the dark and Todd accidentally gets into Neil's bed instead of his.
Neil realises but he's really tired and Todd just looks so helpless and cuddly snoring soundly wrapped up in the bed sheets that Neil just gets into the bed with him and falls asleep holding Todd.
one thing leads to another and soon its a regular habit.
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sarcasmic-skies · 1 year
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im losing my mind over this jimmie rodgers tune rn look at the lyrics i cannot imagine how hard this hit home for closeted queer people in 1958 i am losing my mind
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lesbicosmos · 1 year
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i hate having so many writing ideas but no motivation to write
like currently in my notes app i have this idea for a dps fix it fic where neils dad never shows up to the play and him and the poets all go celebrate in the cave
but i cba to write it bc i feel like ill fuck it up and get the characterisation
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inanisomnia · 1 year
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rukkhadevata.
compilation of my written works + guidelines on my blog. (will update this soon bc atM I DON'T HAVE ENOUGH TIME y_y)
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byf / byi + spotify !!
➹ me.
➹ guidelines & ins.note
➹ my spotify for the playlists mentioned in each story!!
MASTERLIST.
HxH
Chrollo Lucilfer
- Consume (Discontinued)
for now, i can give a pinterest board inspired by the story.)
AIB
Chishiya Shuntaro
- Entropy of Chaos (coming soon)
> playlist
synopsis: you've been in the borderland for quite some time now – a renowned member of the beach and every other night, you're risking your life to get these playing cards that might be the key to get back to your world. one evening, you happen to find chishiya shuntaro – one of the beach's executive and an infamous asshole, playing the same game as yours : 6 of hearts. what could possibly be worst than death in borderland? probably falling in love with someone who's bound to intertwine their soul with death.
- the apricity of your touch
summary: who knew that a single touch brings back strings of emotions and memories?
headcanons:
chishiya hc 01
latch || chishiya meeting someone with the same attributes as him.
lay me gently
DPS (dead poets society)
anderperry
- your eyes are the art gallery itself
- yes to heaven (coming soon.)
Jujutsu Kaisen
- francesca
summary: barred lines between lust and love with satoru gojo
tags.
#hyacinth.s - asks & reqs ++ messages!
#inanisdumbis - me literally getting lost here in tumblr
#ins.shtpo - me shitposting and rambling abt random things
#inanis' navi. - this navigation.
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xunvyrae · 2 years
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Imagine Neil Perry singing along to The Penguins' "Earth Angel" with the borrowed radio from Meeks & Pitts in his and Todd's dorm room, then pulling Todd into a dance as the other giggles.
Neil singing the lines "I hope and pray that someday, That I'll be the vision of your happiness" as he gazes longingly at Todd's eyes, and Todd smilingly giving him a kiss, replying: "you already are, Neil."
my happy anderperry playlist here ♡︎ (modern & 50's music)
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enpassants · 2 years
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on my applying lyrics to anderperry agenda again <3
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sevyn-stars · 10 months
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I would stop the whole world if it meant 15 more minutes with you.
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