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#faroe and Addison live au
michaelmylove · 1 month
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I did a thing :3
context: Arkham Valley PTA AU, tl;dr, Faroe and Addison both live and go to school together. There’s a collection on ao3 :D (not my concept)
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parkeryangs · 4 months
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What if Parker yang apocalypse au is transmasc. What then 👀
ASH YOUR MIND i hadn't considered this before but i'm thinking about it so hard
he's on t before the apocalypse but obviously that becomes inaccessible once everything shuts down. after a few months without injections, his period comes back and he's a bit blindsided because it's been years, but faroe understands miles better than arthur does and, while she can't fully relate, supports him the best she can
despite this, he just decides to stay stealth at the safehouse he + the lesters are living in during the au, which is fine at first until he just really needs to talk to someone that isn't a teenager lol. so he confesses to oscar (who he's becoming closer with by this point anyways)
after he started transitioning, he never really had to come out much at all because, when he first moved from tx, he just looked some years younger than he really was, & he wasn't around/close enough to the same people for anyone to mention the changes on t when they first started, so sharing his identity is a vulnerability that he immediately kind of hates
oscar, despite being a cis gay man, just tells parker he's glad he was comfortable enough to tell him, sorry that the world literally had to end and fuck up his life alongside it, and that it didn't change what he thought of/felt about parker at all :]
slight tangent but i also hc addison larson as transfem so oscar's already (somewhat) familiar, + addi is generally pretty open about it so once parker is comfortable they start discussing their identities together as well :]
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Refrain, chapter four - a Malevolent fic (The start of Surrogate, season two!)
Kayne's "season one" ended with a choice: whichever father Faroe picked, he was ready to let that slingshot fire.
She picked Arthur. Well, that was nice, wasn't it? Especially since he'd spent almost a year pulling that rubber band back, loaded.
Of course, he had no idea how well it would work. Humans are weird, and pieces of Hastur seem to respond particularly well to prolonged exposure.
It was time to deny a wicked man his prize.
Time to give a good man a second chance and see what he did with it.
Time to take the abused piece of a god and find out how it changed when given to someone else.
Part of Surrogate, a Malevolent AU. Written with @sepiabandensis.
AO3 (chapter four)
-------
They got used to sleeping outside, when the weather permitted. They also got used to welcoming other travelers.
These moments, to Sunny, were unreal. Seated around a campfire, sharing stories; lying beneath blankets of stars. The freedom. The living.
Maybe Parker was right. Even if they eventually did get caught… maybe this was worth the journey.
#
Parker-watching was a good thing to do. Sunny liked when they were in places with reflections; he could see the planes of Parker’s face, and the steady, sharp gaze that missed nothing.
Sunny also noticed whom Parker watched. And whom Parker… watched.
In one small town, within spitting distance of Myngar, they took a room at an inn with some fantastic roasted fisher-bird. The rice-like grain from the nearby floodplains made a light, flavorful beer that was easy to drink, hard to overdo, and just potent enough that even Sunny was warm from the buzz.
Sunny had taken a liking to people-watching, as well. It was good to keep an eye out while they were on a case, but there was a certain kind of simple beauty in watching others, humans and otherwise, go about their lives. It reminded Sunny of a lifetime ago, when he had watched strange and stilted dancing in a bar in Addison, but it was so much better.
Today Parker’s gaze wandered, dragging Sunny’s along with it, but when it got to the bar… it lingered.
The barkeep’s son was a tall, handsome man with lowered lashes and a shy smile who seemed keen on keeping Parker’s glass full. Sunny did not miss when their hands brushed against at another exchange of a glass. He also did not miss how the man’s gaze lingered, too, sweeping back towards Parker, and how Parker met and held that gaze. Sometimes, when the man leaned just right, it was if the flavor in Parker’s mouth changed. Almost like hunger. Almost.
You prefer the male form, Sunny observed.
“Yeah,” said Parker, still watching the guy.
You like that form.
“Kinda,” said Parker. “Guys like that, they know how to move. I like spreading ‘em. Like butter on toast.”
Sunny thought for a long moment. If you wish to indulge, I will not interfere.
Parker had a coughing fit. “Buddy… come on, I’m not doing that to you.”
Larson did. I learned how to… step aside. Away. To put myself away.
“To what?” said Parker, soft. “You what?”
To remove myself from it.
“What, you… you dissociate?” said Parker, recalling the word from a case four years ago. “Are you serious?”
Sunny seemed lost. Yes?
Parker put his hands around his beer. He was silent for a long moment, and no longer watching the barkeep’s son. “I’d rather you didn’t do that, buddy. I’m not gonna put you in a position where you have to.”
But you deserve pleasure, Sunny said, intensely. You deserve good things.
“I’ve had plenty of fun. You know what’s not fun? Screwing over a partner, you hear me?”
It was Sunny’s turn to be silent for a long moment.
“That son of a bitch,” Parker muttered, and did not bring it up again.
#
Two weeks later, Larson hired non-magical goons—natives to the Dreamlands—and these, Parker found harder to spot.
The group caught him fair and square, dragging him out of a town before he’d reached an inn for the night. They beat him up. They threw him in a half-wrecked room with a heavy door and locked it, then got rowdy-drunk in the main room to celebrate the payday they’d snagged.
Parker used a board from the bed and a block from the wall and levered the door off its hinges while Sunny hissed, Yes, Parker!
From that point, they both were a lot more careful.
#
I never want to go back to him, Sunny told Parker after the fourth failed capture. He spoke with the same desperate pleading he’d used when begging Parker not to hurt him on the day they had met. Parker, please. I never, ever want to go back.
“I hear you, buddy,” said Parker, breathing a little hard as he jogged in the wilderness. “But if they catch us and we can’t get out, that only leaves one option, you know?” And Parker wasn’t Larson; he never used Sunny’s words against him, so he didn’t say, you didn’t want to die, or anything like that. He just let it sit. This was Sunny’s hand to play, however he wanted to play it.
Instead, Sunny began to recite a poem.
If we must die—let it not be like hogs Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot, While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs, Making their mock at our accursed lot, If we must die—oh, let us nobly die, So that our precious blood may not be shed In vain; then even the monsters we defy Shall be constrained to honor us though dead! Oh, Kinsmen! We must meet the common foe; Though far outnumbered, let us show us brave, And for their thousand blows deal one deathblow! What though before us lies the open grave? Like men we'll face the murderous, cowardly pack, Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!
Parker sounded stunned. “Oh,” he said, softly. “That’s… that’s it. That’s… everything. You just… damn, Sunny. That’s… that feels right. What is that? And don’t say ‘a poem.’”
If I can’t say it’s a poem, Sunny said wryly, I will call it a war cry. I will not let him take me. I won’t execute you to do it, but… It would be an honor to die by your side, my friend.
Parker set his jaw. It was a good sign; Sunny knew that by now. It meant Parker was ready to throw himself into something, head, hand, and foot, heart, soul, and spirit. “I’m in. I won’t let them get you, if I got any say in it. Let ‘em try.”
#
They said this man was strong. Had knocked out a casting sorcerer, somehow, with just his fists.
They said this man was smart. He’d reinstated the true rulers of Karnath, unraveled the mystery of the Mummy Caves, and somehow brought peace to Princess Y’thgna in her final moments.
They said he was also on some kind of personal quest to taste every single food in the Dreamlands.
Of course, all of that couldn’t be true. But it sure was fun to talk about.
And people did.
#
Parker traveled smart, and kept their head down, sticking to crowds; and so they got to hear the news.
The Games were in Carcosa. (And Sunny waxed eloquent.)
Carcosa was attacked. (And Sunny freaked out.)
The Carcosan princess was missing (and Sunny twisted, trying to figure out who the hell that could be).
The Carcosan princess was found (and maybe was human, and Sunny didn’t believe that at all).
A storm like no one had ever seen crash-landed in the Middle Sea. (And Parker and Sunny were very glad they hadn’t gotten to the coast yet to catch a boat towards Carcosa, because every boat on the water had been turned to toothpicks.)
This slowed them down a bit. Parker knew they were being chased, but… when the storm finally passed, everything was kindling. The closer they got to the sea, the more damage they found. People wept; voices cried names, hoping for response against impossible odds. The wounded moaned, sometimes still trapped in buildings that had fallen.
Parker couldn’t just keep going. He knew they were close; Carcosa was across the water, or so Sunny said. But they couldn’t ignore all of this. “We gotta help, Sunny.”
Sunny had lapsed into that heavy, meaningful silence, but at last: I agree. People are wounded, or hurting, or need to find family, and that is what you and I seem to excel at. Plus, there’s talk of Carcosa being allied with Celephaïs, now—we can always go there to resume our quest, after we’ve helped.
And Parker had to say it, because he wasn’t in the business of tricking Sunny. “Means we’ll be in the crosshairs. And in one place longer than we should be. You still up? Because I am.”
I’m still up, my friend. Larson we will deal with when he comes—we always do. His voice still trembled when he talked about Larson coming after them.
“Glad to work with you, buddy,” said Parker. And they dove in.
#
They weren’t caught for three weeks. Maybe Larson hadn’t considered they’d stay behind, risking themselves. Maybe he’d just assumed they’d avoid the worst of it, because (both were sure) he would have.
But they stayed, and they helped, and though Parker tried to keep it all under wraps, the weird hooded guy with the wisp of gold in his mouth just wasn’t something people wanted to keep quiet about.
#
“Mister,” said a woman one night. “Please. You’re the one helping people, right? Please.”
Parker was tired. Sunny was tired. They hadn’t even had the chance to enjoy their truly excellent hot and sour soup. “Maybe?” said Parker, turning. “What’s up?”
She was a worn woman, tired, too thin. She’d chopped her hair off rather than trying to maintain it in all the chaos, and her clothes were threadbare. “My son. Please. He… we thought he was getting better, but he’s not,” she said, wringing her hands.
“I can’t make any promises,” said Parker, because he always did, “but I can at least try. Where is he?”
“Oh, thank you! Thank you!” she sobbed. “This way. I’m sorry, it… my home is on the other side of town.”
“Eh,” said Parker. “Nice evening to stretch our legs. Lead on, ma’am. I’m Parker. Nice to meet you.”
“Pah… Pakah,” she repeated. “Cill.”
“Hi, Cill.” And Parker did a thing that he sometimes did: he offered the soup to the woman.
Sunny didn’t sigh this time. They could get more soup. They would. That looked really good, too.
She looked shocked. Took it. And, her eyes filling, she turned and hurried off.
Parker followed at speed, hood up. “Spot our tail yet?”
I can’t tell. I still think you’re right and we’re being watched.
“I’m sure we are.” His gut was never wrong. “You ready to move on yet?”
They’re not ready.
“I agree.” Parker navigated around a cart filled with debris, being taken for burning. “Let’s just be careful.”
Cill wasn’t kidding; her home was more than just on the other side of town. It was outside it, on the outskirts, far enough away that its flickering, candlelit windows shone in the night.
So this felt suspicious as hell, but the woman’s distress was real. Her glance, over her shoulder, was desperate and just a pinch guilty as she clutched the soup to her chest and went inside.
Had Larson hurt some kid? “Batter up,” Parker warned softly, and stepped in behind her.
It wasn’t a wealthy place. Essentially one room with bits of mismatched furniture here and there, it had a single bed with a boy, a child who had to be five, at most. Half his face was bandaged; the wound, whatever it was, had turned, seeping brown, and did not smell good. The boy’s breath came fast and shallow.
“Aw, kid,” said Parker softly, and headed for him.
Sunny let out his insubstantial breath. This will be an easy one. It’s like we did for that woman in Thraa, remember? I’m going to let you do this one: focus, and let my magic flow through you.
“Yeah, that’ll work. Cill, how’d he get hurt?” But her look made him pause.
She kept glancing behind him.
Parker looked. There was nothing there. Oh, boy. “Cill?”
“He… when the shipyard was destroyed. It was flying debris. Nails and wood.”
“We can help him.” Parker needed her to know this. “Okay?”
Her look was pleading.
Why does she keep staring at us like that? Sunny’s voice was low.
“Pretty sure it’s a trap, but that kid is really hurt,” said Parker.
“Now, I wasn’t gonna let such a golden opportunity pass by,” said Larson, and he appeared from shadow, hand held palm down over the kid’s head.
Sunny gasped, but it was almost second nature as he took hold of Parker’s voice. “Larson,” he said, softly. “That’s a child. An innocent. Don’t hurt him. Please.”
“You,” Larson sneered, “ain’t in a position to bargain, you truant little shit. Now, let me talk to the big man.”
Parker took in a soft breath, his jaw his own again. “Speakin’,” he said. “You’ve got us where you want us. Yeah? Let the kid go.”
“Sure. Soon as I really get what I want. You are gonna hold damn still, aren’t you? No spells. No tricks. This little game of ours has been fun, but it’s over. I win.”
More men stepped out of the shadows. There was real power here; this must have taken days to set up.
Cill was softly crying.
The kid…
Parker, Sunny whispered. The kid.
They were on the same page, but they’d only get one shot—and only if Larson was distracted. Sunny began prepping the spell like a slingshot, and Parker drew focus back to himself. “So much work for just one guy, right? I must’a really busted up your plans. Whatever they were.”
“You’ll never know them,” Larson smugged.
“Really? I got a few guesses. Educated ones, even.”
“I don’t care,” said Larson, baring his teeth a little.
“No? You don’t even want to know how I keep getting away from you? Just some guy from Boston, fooling the Great White Hunter?”
“What you’ve been, boy, is lucky. And I think we both know why.”
Parker could feel the magic building. Just needed to keep him talking. “Because I’m smarter than you?”
“Because of what you stole,”  Larson snarled.
Parker leaned on his accent, knowing without question that it would grate on Larson’s nerves. “Didn’t steal nuttin’. You know, Lahson… for all we’ve been playing cat and mouse, you haven’t showed up all that much. Ah ya scared?”
Larson was turning colors again. “Just trying not to crack the chamber pot too soon,” he snarled.
“Ooh. Funny. Get that, Sunny? He’s calling you shit.”
I’ll fucking show him shit, Sunny muttered, the power coiling beneath their tongue.
“Enough of this,” said Larson, and his goons shifted, in position. “Stand down, or the kid dies.”
Parker could do that. After all, Larson didn’t say not to speak.
He relaxed his jaw, his lips, his tongue. He gave Sunny his mouth. And Sunny sang.
The power flowed from them like a wave, surging over the kid, bandages burning away as the infection was purged and the wounds knit themselves closed, sight even returning to the eye that was mangled. It was golden light, pure poetry in R’lyehian, and Parker could feel his face smiling as it left a golden glow of protection sweeping around not only the boy, but Cill too.
“You can’t hurt them now,” Sunny said. “As it turns out, this shit don’t stink after all.”
Parker laughed.
Larson stared as if he fully believed they’d gone mad. “That was your shot? Are you out of your damn mind?”
And they came at him, fists and ropes and anger, too much to fight through—but not before he saw the gratitude on Cill’s face.
Take that, you asshole, he thought, and tumbled into darkness.
#
They say he single-handedly turned the tide of the death-toll after the Storm in Zakarion.
They say he lost his life there, captured by whatever evil tracked him down (and various Dreamers imagined this immortal clash as various things, from angels and demons to good and evil enfleshed).
They say he even saved the child of an enemy before he died.
They say a shrine had already been raised, and there would be more. No one would ever forget the names of Pahkah Yang and Sunny, his golden friend.
#
There would definitely be no further chances to get away.
Parker woke and found himself bound to a ridiculous level; chains and ropes, up his arms and legs, around his torso. Every finger had been individually tied. There was some kind of muzzle on his face, keeping his mouth from opening, its straps digging into his cheeks. He couldn’t even turn his head—blocks had been strapped to it, keeping it straight.
Well. It had been a good run.
Honestly? He’d always believed he’d die young, but here, he’d gotten to live twice. He’d helped people. He’d seen things so few had, and really loved this new world.
It was Sunny he felt sick for.
Parker didn’t really know from spells. Not really. But the things Sunny had described about that last one—the one the Outer God interrupted—made him certain Larson had been about to do something terrible to Sunny. Sunny was the one in real danger here.
Parker, Sunny said. Can you hear me? Blink twice if yes, three times if—well, I suppose I’ll know if the answer is no.
He could blink twice. Easy. Also, ow. His head hurt. Whoever did him had done him dirty. Fuckers, he thought, and really wished he had a way to silently communicate with Sunny.
He didn’t want Sunny feeling bad over this. They’d done the right thing, even if it meant capture.
Oh, thank the gods, Sunny said. His voice was soothing and gentle—Parker was reminded of how Sunny had spoken after he’d passed out, when Sunny had healed his bullet wound, what might have been a lifetime ago. I… This is perhaps selfish of me, but… I was afraid of being alone. I’m glad you’re still here. He went quiet for a moment. I’ve decided… I think there are some ways for me to fight against him now. I promised you that I wouldn’t go down without a fight, and I’m going to keep that promise.
Parker blinked twice.
Sunny let out a soft, desperate laugh. Thank you, Parker. Thank you for everything you’ve done for me. I feel like, maybe, I did something very good. That we did something good. And I don’t know about you, but I can face my end with… fewer regrets. He took a lungless breath. If I have the opportunity, I’ll make it quick for you, my friend. And I’ll look for you on the other side.
Two blinks. And Parker set his jaw. He was all in.
Heh. Heh, heh. Fuck. Somehow Parker could feel Sunny shudder. Should I try to fill our time? Talk? Close your eyes for two seconds if no, or… one blink for poetry, two blinks for songs, three blinks for… something else, I suppose. I’ll figure something out.
Three blinks. Always, he encouraged Sunny to explore. That was just who he was. Consistently.
Sunny knew who Parker was. Parker had lied plenty—Sunny had seen him do it, to get out of things, to get information. But never to Sunny. Parker had tricked, too. Fought. Been quite aggressive… but never to Sunny. And Parker had always had a reason for doing those things, and explained. It made everything better, somehow. Good. Living.
Parker’s heart raced now, of course. His wriggled attempts did nothing. There would be no getting out of this.
Sunny sniffled. Something else, he said. You know, I don’t remember tasting anything before you. I think the entity that put me in Arthur’s head ensured I remembered nothing. So I think that made this the most wonderful. To be able to taste.
“Mmmm,” Parker agreed.
This is perhaps a bit embarrassing, Sunny said with a laugh. But I think the sweets were some of my favorites. I really liked that sipping chocolate we had in Jaren. I think that might have been my favorite—at least of the drinks.
Parker chuckled just a little. A couple of tears slipped down his face, but he said, “Mm-mm-mm,” encouraging.
My favorite meal, though, was when we had—do you remember, Parker, when we had to catch that fish, on the Oukranos? A real laugh, now. And despite the fact that we had it in a trap, it still took us twenty minutes to catch the fucking thing. You got all wet. It tasted so good, though, probably because we were both tired. But you were laughing, and I was still having such a good time. It was like we didn’t have to worry about anything but—
“Fucking hell, you two,” said a bright voice, a strident voice, a voice that Parker sort of knew. Had heard briefly. Most recently, when something pulled him to the roof, when they were going to be caught. “If I wanted mush, I’d have bought the damn cable package.”
Sunny gasped. Parker, it’s him! The Outer God!
“Mmm?” managed Parker, because what the fuck? What does he want? he thought.
“Eh. The usual. A better lemon pie. Six Amy May Wongs with some sharp toys. A better use of time, for fuck’s sake. Anyway! You’re all wound up. Ready to go. It’s time to fulfill your actual purpose, babes.”
That sounded bad. Parker couldn’t see him; he wanted Sunny out of this. Maybe he could bargain.
“Nope, sorry. He’s blow number two to that tender psyche. Ciao!”
Parker! Wh—
Wh—Parker was ripped from the restraints (it hurt, damn it) and hurled.
He hit the floor, staggering into blazing white light that took his sight, into some… presence that thrummed through the room and made his skin tingle, and discordant trumpets hurt his ears.
If this was the Pearly Gates, they needed a tune-up. “What the fuck?” he cried, blinded, half-deafened, staggering
“Parker?” came a voice.
A voice he knew.
A voice he’d listened to, and coaxed to laughter, and pulled into intense detective work, and thought about, and jacked off to, and dearly loved until the owner of that voice had turned around and strangled him dead.
So was he dead again? “What?” he said. “Arthur?”
He turned and threw his hand over his eyes—that was it, that presence, too grand and huge to look at, blinding-bright golden robes shimmering with faint patterns that bloomed and died in his vision, and some sort of limbs like waves of ink spread along the ground.
And he could feel that if not for Sunny, tucked into his head, he would have been overwhelmed.
Buoyed in those tentacles were two people, nestled up against the robe, one a little girl, and the other—
A voice that was and was not Sunny’s spoke. Arthur? Arthur, it… it can't be.
“Parker?” Arthur Lester said.
Arthur… something terrible had happened to him. Scars pockmarked the right side of his face. His hair was long and sweat-sticky, falling past his shoulders. His beard was salt-and-pepper, and gray threaded through the hair at his temples, and those eyes—
They were still fucking yellow.
“Put…” Arthur said, looking up into the darkness of a crowned hood on that massive shape. His voice was ragged. “Put me…”
Gently, tenderly, the tentacle set Arthur on the ground. Arthur staggered forward on weak knees, but his face wasn’t quite orienting the right way.
John had his eyes, Sunny had said, and Parker swallowed.
They weren't looking directly at him, but they sure could still cry. “Parker? Y... you're alive?” Arthur said, voice cracking (and Parker had not forgotten, had not lost any of the memory of that voice).
There was so much… much. Right now. Had Sunny been right? Arthur had murdered, and… vanished? To this place? "You're alive?" said Parker. "Fucking... you... son of a bitch, you're here?"
A snare drum rolled. “And guest star number two!” that voice rang out, the voice of the Outer God.
Watch out! It was a desperate cry, sharp and snarled and full of terror.
“I got this,” soothed Parker, though he absolutely did not.
Arthur stopped as though he’d been gut punched. “Yellow?” he choked.
Parker winced, just as Sunny began to seethe in the back of his head. MURDERER! Sunny cried.
“Easy, Sunny,” said Parker.
No! Parker, get away from him! He’s fucking dangerous! Sunny snarled, a dog with its leg in a trap. He'll hurt you! He... he'll... get away from us!
And then it got worse. Impossibly, it got worse, and it got complicated.
The drum roll rioted, and instruments blared from nowhere, painfully loud. “And of course,” cried the Outer God, his voice weirdly distorted and echoing, “what’s a new season without a new villain? Guest star number three, straight from the wilds of the sweetest digs in the Dreamlands! Covered in the sins of his youth, filled with power from the nastiest rituals you’ve ever seen, scion of the Order of the Falling Star, and one of my favorite puppets… Wallace (ace… ace…) Larsooooooooon!”
The music shrieked, and an unseen crowd bellowed.
And Larson stepped into view, staggering like Parker had. "What? What is... where am I? I do declare,” he said, smooth and calm like this happened every day. “What is this place?”
“Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaand action!" the Outer God bellowed—and disappeared, along with the spotlights, the crowd, the ambient noise, leaving them all alone in a dark throne room, in thick and near-complete gloom.
It still hurt to look toward that being, whatever it was, though Parker briefly couldn’t see anything but silhouettes. “Fuck,” he murmured.
Larson heard him. “You! Thief! How in the hell did you get loose again?”
Hastur, said the voice that was and was not Sunny's.
You’ve got to be kidding, thought Parker, and wondered if this meant they were all in hell. “Oh, fuck this guy,” he said, wanting to lend Sunny strength. “He ain’t getting you back. You hear me? Try it, asshole!”
Parker, I’m scared, said Sunny, which made him feel half-feral.
But apparently not all feral. Not nearly as feral as Arthur.
Parker knew Arthur. Knew him as a man who’s studied another for years can know, and saw the change. Even in the gloom, he saw the switch flip.
Saw the moment that body language stiffened, saw the moment Arthur’s brain turned off.
Larson turned toward that radiant something that hurt to look at, fell to his knees, and proclaimed a bunch of gibberish.
And Arthur—
Hastur! shouted not-Sunny’s voice.
Arthur lunged with murder his every inch, teeth showing in a white rictus as though he planned to bite Larson to death, fingers curved like claws.
Maybe it’s not hell, Parker thought. Maybe I’ve just gone crazy. And with the habit born of years past, of chasing this man down from the time he was self-destructing in Jack’s Bar to their most twisted child-murder cases, Parker ran after Arthur Lester to stop him from doing something dumb.
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parkeryangs · 4 months
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Packing ask! Could you tell us about some of your fav Faroe head cannons? (packing hell if so fun and im definitely in it as well)
i don't really have many thoughts on an alive version faroe in canon SO i'm gonna talk some various au things per usual lol;
in the meowlevolent universe, when john is "officially" a part of the family, they start to spend a lot of the weekends camping & being outdoors while she's growing up! & john teaches her how to fish (they both tease arthur because he refuses to help bait the hooks)
when she's in middle school, she gets a seizure-alert dog called newt:] he and harper are bffs even though harp is decidedly not as young as she used to be
she goes to college in arkham where her dads still teach!:) she studies studio arts and becomes a painter, (and even though arthur can't ever see her work, he and john go to every art show. john takes pictures + describes each one to arthur, still)
she meets her girlfriend, addison larson, during a show. addison works as an art journalist in fall river and long considers herself a "fan" of the up-and-coming faroe lester when they run into one another at a gallery. they start to keep in touch, and a few weeks later meet for coffee for an "interview" though both wish it was a date (it was a date the whole time)
in the apocalypse au, she's hard of hearing; her eardrum ruptured after exposure to gunshot noise without protection, so it's irreversible + left her with tinnitus and balance problems
she's scared of heights, due to inheriting her dad's essential tremor (though less severe!) & also being epileptic in this au too lol
arthur + parker don't want her handling weaponry as much as they can help it, but she's a better shot than both of them lol
^ bc of this, parker calls her sniper :]
she has burn scars, mostly concentrated on her left arm; when she was a baby, the lester house caught on fire & bella died of smoke inhalation. after that, faroe & arthur temporarily lived in a dangerous part of the city before arthur met parker and they moved moved in with him.
she can play the guitar!! being 15 in this au, she's very much in the mindset of wanting to be nothing like her father (though they are so alike its painful lol), so after refusing to learn piano at his offer for years, he gets her a guitar for her bday and she loves it.
she's a bit reckless and endangers herself/others a Lot solely because she's still clinging to the pre-apocalypse "how things used to be", mindset and as such makes incredibly poorly thought-out decisions.
she was born + raised in arkham, but has a decently thick southern accent, incidentally taken on from closely growing up around parker (who's, ofc, a texas boy forever and ever)
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