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#fracture my spine and swear that your mine!; doll
hanahaki-arcade · 2 months
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🎤🎤 one for doll and one for omega? :3
Doll's is Funtime Foxy just without the. Filter. But yeah!
Omega's is. This. Because I cannot hear them as anything but me.
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gredandforge01 · 4 years
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Bucky Barnes: Dating Headcanon
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The gentle giant.
Cute hugs.
Him buying you cute little gifts.
Vise Versa.
Him being more than proud of you.
Helping him through his nightmares.
You rarely do, but when you have nightmares he’d comfort you like you do to him.
Giving him nose kisses.
Him blushing.
Being over protective of you.
“Y/n, no” “Y/n, yes”
Steve and the rest of the avengers shipping you both.
Always holding hands.
Him being afraid to hurt you to start with.
Slowly getting more comfortable around you.
Holding both of his hands to show you love all of him.
Taking baths together after missions.
Always having to buy plums at the shops for him.
Steve thinking you as a younger sister to him.
“Swear to God Rogers if he doesn’t come back whole-”
“He isn’t whole y/n, look at his arm.”
Slapping Steve across the back of the head.
Butt taps then running away laughing.
Natasha helping you pick out an old fashioned dress for your guys 1 year anniversary.
Bucky almost tearing up at how beautiful you look.
“You look beautiful, doll.”
The 1 year anniversary being a 40’s theme.
Asking you to marry him by the fountain, on one knee, in his sexy 40’s uniform.
Crying a yes and attacking him in a hug making you both go in the water.
Tickle fights.
Lazy morning kisses.
His morning voice is hot asf.
“Do you know another language, doll?”
“Yes I do actually. English and My Morning Language if I don’t get coffee.”
Him teaching you Russian.
Failing miserably.
Trying to say a word he says but it sounds like a bunch of gibberish.
“Teach me to say fuck so I can scream it at the top of my lungs at my teacher/boss won’t understand or get mad.”
Thinking you're adorable when you sleep.
Sleeping either side, mainly his right so he can feel you more.
Always ending up sleeping on top of him.
Amazing sex tbh.
He’ll either be sweet and gentle, having the “I want to worship your body tonight” look in his eyes.
Or he’ll grab your throat and look into your eyes as he fucks you senselessly, staring into your soul.
Whimpering when he does that because it makes you submit to him.
Marking each other skin.
Metal arm kink is a must.
Trying out different positions.
His being when your riding him and your chests are pressed together.
You can’t decide if its the one where you’re underneath him and he’s on top where you can both feel each other or when your on your stomach and he’s above, kissing down your spine and on the back of your neck.
But loving them all.
HIS THIGHS OF BETRAYAL!
Riding them when you need some friction.
Riding them when he’s half asleep.
Riding them just cuz.
Helping him remember.
Seeing the winter soldier side of him.
As much as he hates it, he hurt you when is was in winter soldier mode, fracturing you ribs.
Him apologising so, so, so, so, so many times.
You reassuring him its fine and hugging.
Him teaching you about the 40’s.
Seeming your great grandfather was in the war, Bucky and him got along real well.
“When I was your age…”
“Bucky I swear to God, you sound like my grandmother.”
Neck kisses.
Forehead kisses.
Hand kisses.
Playing with his hair as you both lay down on the couch.
Him really good at braiding your hair.
Man buns 
Matching hairstyles
Washing each others hair.
Doing a play/ short movie for an acting school and having to do the world war 2.
Amazingly, you end up being a character whose role is apart of the ‘107th’.
“I look ridiculous in this!”
“Its not that bad, doll.”
“It has like 15 layers!”
“You still look gorgeous baby.”
Stuffing up so many times with your lines before hand.
Having to do an overnight experience for the play.
Bucky joining you.
“I need the toilet.”
Him leading you to the toilet outside…
“Oh hell, I ain’t getting in that… I’ll wait.”
Lazy days.
“Babe, fruitcake is for old people.”
Painting together.
Cooking together.
When he’s half asleep, you snuggle under his arm and press your foreheads together.
He says some really weird stuff in his dream.
“But my elephant wants the donut with red, white and blue sprinkles Tony!”
Thinking he’s adorable.
Playing pranks on him.
Teaming up with Steve to pull pranks on him.
OMG STICKING MAGNETS TO HIS ARM!!
Especially the unicorn ones with ice cream.
Him humming songs from the 40’s.
Him teaching you to dance.
You standing on his foot a few times.
See who can eat a block of chocolate the fastest.
See who throws up first after eating the block of chocolate.
You just reach his shoulders.
Calling him soldier, Sargent, sarge, handsome, James, Barnes, Bucky, Fucky Buck, Lucky Bucky, Sucky Bucky, Ducky Bucky… basically anything that rhymes with Bucky…
Him calling you doll like ALLL the time. Angel, sweetie, sweetheart, darling, sexy, mine, my little soldier, and baby doll when he’s horny… #sorrynotsorry.
Facetiming when he’s on missions.
Him leaving a little “surprise” (I mean a vibrator) in your bedside table so when your facetiming you both can have some release.
Using that vibrator when he comes back from missions so he shows his arm is a better vibrator.
Yes… his arm has a vibrator mode.
You don’t even ask about how it came to be.
Living in a little apartment together in the city on one of the top floors, where the city lights shine into the huge floor to ceiling window.
After his nightmares and he doesn’t want to wake you, he would sit there on the sofa and just watch the lights.
Overlooking the city at night when you both can’t sleep while having a hot beverage.
When your sick he likes to wrap you up in blankets on the couch and give you some chicken soup his mother always used to make for him when he was sick.
Taking care of you even if your not sick.
Helping you shower or bath when your sick.
Being a complete gentlemen when your sick.
Him saying that his mother would absolutely adore you.
Him pulling out a seat for you.
Opening the car door for you.
Letting you go into the door before he does.
“Girls before boys.” He’d cheekily grin.
“Elders before beauties…” You’d snort back.
He’s face is so shocked and “upset”.
Then he’d pick you up and playfully fight you.
“ I’m in a dress Barnes.”
“Well, I’m the only one here with you.”
“Exactly! I don’t think I could go another round after what happened yesterday.”
‘Unconditionally’ by Katy Perry playing at your wedding as you two dance slowly.
Basically loving each other unconditionally.
'I’m with you till the end of the line’ is your vows…
Steve crying at your wedding.
You crying at your wedding.
Bucky crying even at your wedding.
Always and forever…
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ravenvsfox · 5 years
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rockband chapter 5 babey 😈🤘🏻
Neil tilts a record out of the stacks, and the sun catches the sleek surface and shows him his reflection.
“You’re not even in the right section,” Kevin calls. He’s two rows away flipping through rock-punk CDs, looking exhilarated when they fall towards him like dominoes.
The whole store is no bigger than a spacious bedroom, and the shop front is all boxy windows, letting in honeycombs of late-afternoon light. Kevin’s never looked so relaxed, dragging his fingers along the spines of albums, inspecting the equipment behind the till, smiling and chatting with the owner.
“There is no right section,” he mutters, sliding the album back into its slot. “It’s all music.”
“Right,” Kevin says. Neil glances up and finds him unexpectedly close, mouth pursed reluctantly with amusement. “Except we’re not here for all music.”
“What are we actually here for again?” Neil asks, distracted. He can see Andrew waiting outside with his back to them and his arms crossed, serious and stock-still as a bodyguard.
“Inspiration.”
Neil watches Kevin’s face. The crease that’s usually between his brows is only suggestion now, a slouchy, un-tensed line. He’s tolerable like this, Neil thinks, almost impressive, choosing music to feed his creativity.
“You love it here,” Neil accuses. “This is a vacation for you.”
Kevin scoffs. “Like you’re not the same.”
Neil shrugs. There’s an upright piano on the wall and he wants to squeeze the keys in his hands like fingers in a crowd. The sound of voices and tires on asphalt from outside spreads like frosting over the crumbling drumbeat from the stereo. The rusting brown of the wallpaper behind the counter looks almost orange with the full force of the sun on it.
He could live and die in a place like this, head down, hands full of bright new music and dark classics, never in silence, never alone.
"Come look at this,” Kevin says. Neil follows him to the far corner of the shop where there are picked-over alternative CDs and peeling tape labels. He plucks an album from the stack and wiggles it at Neil. “Old school Ausreißer.”
Neil squints at the cover art. “You look like a bad metal band.” The original four are caught in the middle of a set, dressed in all black under a red spotlight, mid-howl. The word Ausreißer is so stylized that it’s almost illegible.
Kevin rolls his eyes and puts the CD back in its slot. “Things change. When we found you you looked like you were on day ten of a bender.”
“I can go back to that, if it’s the look you’re going for. Wouldn’t want to stand out in a band full of junkies and burnouts.”
“Funny,” Kevin says flatly. “Just bring that smart mouth to song writing.” He gathers his little stack of music and a clear box of sturdy picks, and drops them on the front counter to be checked out.
Neil hesitates, swaddled in the darkest, warmest corner of the store, reluctant to splash back out into the cold. He can already see how it will play out: Andrew’s silence and Kevin’s focus, the way they take up so much of the sidewalk that Neil has to fall in behind them or walk in the gutter, the drive home like a never-ending commute to nowhere at all.
He’s listless without a stage, and Kevin won’t let him forget that he’s not a natural born songwriter. He’s waiting for inspiration like that second raindrop after you swear you felt the first one.
His eyes wander and catch on a lurid red flier stapled to the bulletin board above the stacks, and he does a double-take. Foxes. Township Auditorium. Friday, January 25th.
“Dan’s group is playing this Friday?” Neil wonders aloud, and Kevin looks at him over his shoulder, handing bills off to the cashier.
“Oh yeah, the Township gig. I think they’re hanging out in town for a week or so, too.”
“We should go.” He thinks of the way the girls had laughed about their public personas and plastic recognition. He wants to hear them for real, as magnetic and driven as they were at Abby’s, assuring him that they do pop like he’s never heard in his life.
“Waste of time,” Kevin says, accepting his bag with one of his frozen, ken doll smiles and making towards the exit.
“We’re not touring right now,” Neil argues, catching up. “We can take two hours off from the new album.”
“We can,” Kevin says, “but we shouldn’t.”
“And yet you find the time to drink six hours a day.”
“The creative process looks different on everyone,” he grits. They push out into the sunlight and Andrew looks vaguely in their direction, his face chapped from the wind.
“Great. Mine looks like going to local concerts and supporting our label, and you know full fucking well that Wymack would agree with me.” They start walking, Neil leading them in a frantic triangle down main street. Andrew doesn’t ask or care about what they’re arguing over, which is why Neil tells him, “I want to go to the Foxes concert on Friday.”
“Then go,” he says. He’d been chain-smoking while Neil and Kevin were in the shop, and he looks irritable and sick. His pallor has been almost bruised lately, like something’s wringing him out and leaving marks behind.
Neil flips Kevin off and walks further ahead of the group, buoyed by the opportunity to be part of an audience again. He loves the silky anonymity and sway of the crowd almost as much as being doused in lights and held up by a mic stand.
Kevin’s still talking about accountability and wasted talent, but he’s lost his audience.
Neil reaches the van first, parallel parked at a wicked angle. He waits for the muted click of the unlock button, then climbs into the passenger seat. There’s a parking ticket folded over the windshield wipers and Andrew sets them going so that it flutters down onto the street.
“It’s not going to be the same in the crowd as it is onstage,” Kevin says calmly from the backseat.
Neil turns his head. “I know.”
“The fans know who you are now, and I’m not sure you’re ready for what that actually looks like.”
“I’m pretty good at blending in,” Neil says, eyes narrowed.
“You’re not,” Andrew says, pulling jerkily out of the spot without looking and nearly catching a hyundai by the nose. “You’re loud.” Car horns blare on all sides like a chorus of agreement.
“You draw attention,” Kevin agrees grimly. “I’d rather you stick it out in the studio where you can’t get into trouble. And Wymack would agree with me about that.”
Neil watches pedestrians swarm and cars criss-cross beyond the window. “So what, I join a band and now I’m on full-time house arrest?”
“Shouldn’t you be used to keeping your head down, runaway?” Andrew taunts. His hands flash as he makes a left turn, ink spelling yes over no over yes. Neil gives him a look.
“You’re not talking about staying on the move, you’re talking about hiding. And in my experience, your problems catch up with you when you sit and wait for them to go away.”
“I’m not talking about your fucked up past,” Kevin says irritably. “If you want to stumble into the nearest concert, you can, but if you misrepresent us or pull some stupid shit to distract from the set, Wymack will kick your ass. If Dan doesn’t get there first.”
“Don’t worry Kevin,” Andrew says, glancing away from the road to fix Neil with a cool, knowing look. “He has winning impulse control. Right Neil?”
Neil clenches his teeth and ignores him. “I realize that you don’t trust me, but I need you to understand that I don’t care. I’m not going to stay in the cage until you figure out if you’re ready to unlock it or not. I’m not going to live that way anymore.”
“You’re on a team now, and you have to care,” Kevin argues.
Neil scoffs. “Tell that to Andrew.”
Kevin looks pained. “He’s—“
“What? An exception? I’d love to know why I’m held to a higher standard than the person with concealed weapons and an unreliable drug dependency,” Neil says, fuming. Andrew pumps the brakes so that Neil topples forward into the dashboard, then he’s thrown back again when they accelerate. He grips the headrest and seethes, “you’re fucking psychotic.”
“You—“ Kevin starts.
“Kevin,” Andrew says, toneless, barely there, and Kevin stops short. Neil recognizes that easy power, that tongue-biting obedience.
They collapse into strained silence, Andrew looking infuriatingly tranquil, the air around Kevin vibrating with how badly he wants to speak.
Neil thinks about the corner of the music store and that old album, an Ausreißer from back when Neil was still lost in between hotel rooms, when his mother was alive, and she could change the course of his life with just the tips of her fingers. He thinks, things can be so easy and so ugly at the same time.
They get out at Palmetto, Neil wrenching doors closed behind him, trying to feel like he has a raft to himself for once, like he’s not always sharing, feeling for someone else’s shifting weight.
Nicky’s spread between two chairs when he gets to the studio, and Neil’s relieved to see the easy smile on his face. It fractures when he gets a good look at him.
“Oh no. Was it unbearable? I thought music shopping would mellow Kevin out, at least.”
“It was fine,” Neil says, rolling a chair towards the table where they left all of their notes and stray music. He sweeps everything off the table, feeling a vindictive shock when it all settles on the floor; every dangling idea, stagnating chord progression, and experimental piece of garbage.
“Yeah, you seem fine,” Nicky says sarcastically.
“Better,” Neil says, rummaging in the heaps of wasted work until his hand closes around a discarded pen. “I’m inspired.”
_____
The dye burns cold on his scalp. He paints the wispy place above his ears, and tucks it up into the rest of the gummy mess. There’s a dark streak on the porcelain of the sink, and he rubs it with one gloved finger.
Someone knocks at the door, and Neil reaches behind himself to open it. There’s a beat, and a flutter of movement, and then his eyes meet Andrew’s in the mirror. 
“Brown,” Andrew remarks.
“You wanted me to tone it down,” Neil says, focusing on smothering his auburn roots and pointedly ignoring the rest of his reflection.
“Don’t put Kevin’s words in my mouth.”
Neil meets his eyes again. “What do you want?”
Andrew doesn’t reply for a long moment, and then he starts to peel down his armbands. It’s like watching a snake shed its skin, and Neil’s so startled to see it happening that he turns around to watch him directly.
He’s expecting the thatch of scars, but it still knocks the wind out of him to see them, tender pinks and whites that nudge all the way up to the ink on his wrists and hands.
Andrew plucks the brush out of Neil’s limp hand and scoops up a mound of colour that looks black in the weak light.
“Head down.”
Neil complies, chin towards his chest, and feels Andrew smooth the dye from just below his ear up into the coil of loose, wet hair. He can feel the damp heat from Andrew’s bare wrists, smothered for most of the day.
“Who put you in a cage?” Andrew asks, and the hair on Neil’s neck stands up.
“What—“
“You said: I’m not going to stay in the cage until you figure out if you’re ready to unlock it. I’m not going to live that way anymore.” He says it robotically, like an automated recording.
“I know what I said,” Neil snaps, starting to look up, but Andrew grips his neck and steers his head down again.
“Then you should be able to explain what you meant. Without lying to me.”
Andrew’s initiating one of their trades, he realizes, baring a secret and nodding at Neil do to the same. He closes his eyes, flinching when the brush makes sudden contact with his neck.
“My mother.” It’s an easier answer than the reality--a web of injustice too thick to see through. A childhood spent escaping from one cell block to another. 
The brush stops midway through a glide towards his hairline. “She hurt you?” Andrew asks, low.
“It’s not that simple.”
“I don’t believe you.”
“You know better than anyone that protecting someone can get bloody. Our circumstances weren’t--they were never good enough for us to have a decent relationship. But she kept us moving.”
A bare hand curls in his hair, and Neil’s eyes open. His breath catches when he recognizes the hateful look on Andrew’s face.
“Did she hit you, yes or no?”
Neil swallows thickly, trying to focus on the feeling of Andrew’s hand against his scalp. “Yes.” The hand tightens painfully. “But she’s dead now. My parents are dead.” He doesn’t know what drives him to say such a hasty, partial truth, like it has any bearing on the way it felt to be forced to the ground and pinned until his arm broke. Death gets rid of the person, not the memory. 
Andrew’s hand drops altogether. He moves into the space at Neil’s side, hip to hip, and rinses his hand under the tap. “If she was beating you, she wasn’t protecting you.”
“You don’t understand what people are capable of when they’re struggling to survive.”
Andrew steps slowly and lethally into Neil’s space. “Yes, I do,” he says, nearly whispering. Neil’s eyes hitch down to his destroyed wrists. 
He nods, and Andrew backs off. He feels a strange, remote disappointment watching him move away, like climbing out of a roller coaster and watching it take off without him.
“We’re not keeping you locked up,” Andrew says. “We do not own you.”
Neil shakes his head a little, running a hand over his hair under the guise of checking for dry patches, trying to reclaim the tingling, grounding feeling of Andrew’s fingers.
“Contractually, you do.”
“You’re with us,” Andrew says, “until the second someone abuses your contract, then you leave. We both know you could outrun me if you really wanted to.”
“Maybe,” Neil says, on the blunt edge of a smile. “But you might be able to outlast me.”
Andrew looks at him in the mirror for a long while. “You’re disgustingly stubborn,” he says. “And dense. I wouldn’t count on my ability to put up with you for that long.”
Neil shrugs. “It doesn’t matter, anyway. I won’t leave. We have a deal.”
“I just told you—“
“Not the contract. You and I have a deal. And I’m not ready to give it up,” Neil says, and he means it. The tenuous promise of protection, the give and take, the lure of the stage. He’s only grown more and more obsessed with the whole thing.
Andrew wavers. He reaches for his discarded armbands, and takes his time rolling them back up. Neil feels a painful rush of recognition at seeing his scars swallowed up, and he reaches out impulsively to hold him by the wrist. Andrew’s fingers are still ruddy with dye.
“This isn’t a cage. You’re nothing like—it’s nothing like my mother.”
At Abby’s, he’d told Andrew he reminded him of home, the most nightmarish insult he could lay his hands upon. And for a jarring second, Andrew’s commanding relationship with the band had looked like the dynamic between himself and his mother, ceaseless authority meeting senseless devotion. He’s been stupid enough to mistake Andrew’s promises for Mary Hatford’s threats.
At length, Andrew tugs, and Neil lets go of him.
Long after he’s gone, and Neil’s hair is washed out and limp, wet brown, he can still feel the raised scars underneath the fabric of the armband, and beneath that, a curiously rabbiting pulse.
______
And “monster” does not begin
to cover bolts and stitches in my skin
sinew held with safety pins
but you made me
the creature not the man, right?
but this lab coat’s fitting pretty tight
and if you’re living out of spite
are you a person or a feeling,
and would it hurt to look at you directly?
gunshots speak louder than words
but the warning shots you heard
don’t work for people who’d prefer
to die than to live on their knees--
“It needs workshopping,” Kevin says, tossing the notebook onto the coffee table.
“I think it’s great, Neil,” Nicky says. “The Frankenstein stuff is cool, our fans eat that shit up.”
Neil shrugs, and he gathers his notes back up from the table, out of reach from prying eyes. They’re assembled in a loose square in the living room, with Andrew at the window, a cigarette burning delicately between two fingers.
“You call yourselves the monsters so— I don’t know.”
“It works,” Kevin sniffs. “They’ll get it. They’ll like it.” It’s a more generous response than he was expecting, and he knows it’s the most approval Kevin can bring himself to show. “How soon can you match it musically?” he asks Andrew.
“I already have a melody,” Neil interrupts. He stands, walks over to the keyboard Kevin insists they always keep on hand, and presses the ‘on’ button. “It’s not very complex,” he says, walking his right hand over a couple of keys until the power catches up and the notes start to voice.
He plays the song through once, low arpeggiated chords and a sustained, high tenor line. He sings when he can’t help it, crooning until it gets too high to sing softly.
Out of the corner of his eye, he catches Andrew’s fingers drumming against the windowsill.
“You’re right,” Aaron says when it’s finished. “It’s not very complex.”
“Downer,” Nicky accuses. “It’s just keys right now, we can amp it up.”
“Is it worth it?” Aaron complains.
“Yes,” Andrew says, leaning over to put his cigarette out in the ashtray balanced on the arm of the couch. They all look at him expectantly, and he gets up, grabs the music directly out of Neil’s hands, and disappears into his room with it.
“Well that’s a good sign,” Nicky says, bemused. “Guess we’re going to that concert, Neil.” When Kevin opens his mouth to protest, Nicky says, “Wymack signed off on it. Plus we’re making headway on the b-side tracks, and Andrew’s actually working.”
“I’m not going,” Kevin says, crossing his arms.
“Me neither,” Aaron says. “Allison will have our balls if we pull focus from her.”
“So we won’t,” Nicky says. He ropes Neil in by the shoulder and tousles his newly dark hair. “No one will even know we’re there.”
______
Later, Nicky sends Neil to ask for the car keys, and he finds himself standing in the dusk outside Andrew’s room, delaying the inevitable confrontation.
Andrew comes out before he can knock, wearing boots and a black baseball cap, keys clenched in his fist. They nearly collide, and Neil staggers back a step. 
“You’re coming with us?” he asks dumbly.
“You and Nicky can’t be trusted alone,” he says. It’s an insult, but it hits Neil like warm water from a shower-head, like relief.
“Did Kevin ask you to do this?” Neil asks, but Andrew ignores him, brushing past into the living room, then the entryway. Nicky pushes off from the back of the couch where he’s been waiting, looking back and forth between the two of them nervously.
“We’re all going?”
“Apparently,” Neil replies.
“Cool. Weird. Shotgun.”
“Neil’s sitting in the front,” Andrew says, cranking the screen door open.
“Family really means, like, nothing to you when Neil’s around—“ Nicky’s saying as he follows Andrew out into the night.
Neil breathes out, lacing his shoes and listening to Nicky chatter circles around Andrew, who is steady and silent, already fixed in the driver’s seat.
He’s been picturing the Foxes concert as that same ambiguous darkness from before he joined the band, skulking in the back of bars and hoping to be caught. Now he imagines Andrew and Nicky propping him up like brackets, a drink he actually paid for, the hair-raising knowledge of what it feels like on the other side of the performance.
Wind shivers through the front door and underneath Neil’s collar. He jams his hands into his jacket pockets—the leather already stiff and unyielding from the cold—squares his shoulders, and opens the door.
______
They’re smuggled in through a door backstage, already late. Nicky clings to Neil’s sleeve so tightly that it pulls down over his hand. 
Renee comes to greet them, as unnervingly pleasant as the last time he’d seen her. Neil keeps expecting her even-keeled demeanour to clash against Andrew’s like icebergs meeting, but they only seem to thaw around one another. 
Andrew greets her, and she knocks her knuckles into his hand and smiles.
“I’m glad you guys came. Don’t tell her I told you, but Allison’s raring to show off.”
“I bet she is, competitive bitch,” Nicky says good-naturedly. “All you foxes are such a handful.”
Renee seems to be considering whether or not he’s joking when Dan appears at her elbow. “Walk in the park compared to your lot,” she says, smiling sharply. Her eyes flit to Neil and she softens. “Still doing okay, Neil?”
“She means, have we ruined your life,” Andrew says in German.
“Quick, tell her how saintly we are,” Nicky says.
“And lie?” Neil asks in exaggerated German, as if scandalized. “I’m fine,” he says to Dan. “Excited to see a Foxes set.” 
It’s a bigger venue than he’s used to, and the energy is intimidating, people whisking past them and calling instructions to one another.
Her smile quirks, and she lets her arm drape around Renee’s neck. “We’ll try our best to impress, then. As usual.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Nicky says. “You’re a big deal, we get it. Don’t you have warm-ups to do?”
Dan snorts. “Time off is making you a little mean, Hemmick. You better watch him, monster.”
Andrew stares blankly back at her, and Nicky says, “you try living with Kevin 24 hours a day and tell me how personable you’re feeling.”
Dan winces. “Point.” Someone ducks close and whispers in her ear, and her face flickers through several shades of confusion and annoyance. “Okay, shit. One of Allison’s pegs came loose and her tuning is all over the place. Sound check’s in five, and Matt’s on the wrong side of drunk, but um. The show must go on, I guess.”
Renee ducks out from under Dan’s arm, excusing herself, and Dan squeezes Neil’s shoulder in parting. “See you out there. Try not to get into trouble.”
“Yeah right,” Nicky says, and she aims a kick at his shin. He falls back a step, laughing, as she jogs after Renee. “Hey, rock and roll, Dan,” he calls. “Or whatever it is you guys do.”
He’s still beaming when he loops his arm with Neil’s and steers them towards the door. Neil looks anxiously back at Andrew, but he’s a step behind them as usual.
They wait for a lull in passersby, and then they’re out in the thick of the crowd, pushing conspicuously from the front of the stage to the side of the room. Eyes linger on them and narrow, and his throat starts to constrict until he feels Andrew’s hand thread into the shirt under his jacket, keeping him tethered.
Nicky can’t resist dancing a little to the opener, as obvious as they already are, and he bobs through the aisles, shooting furtive looks back at Neil to see if he’s enjoying himself. The band on stage is too high energy for their low energy song, jumping and twisting to a half-time rhythm. 
Andrew’s hand tightens at the small of his back, and Neil glances back to see him eyeing the thrashing drummer with distaste.
“I thought you didn’t care about technique,” Neil tells him over the music, and Andrew tears his eyes away. He’s frowning, and Neil relishes that off-guard little furrow of emotion.
“I don’t,” Andrew says, “I also don’t listen to bad music if I can help it.”
“Guess we must be pretty good, then,” Neil says.
“I didn’t say that.”
“No,” Neil agrees. “You didn’t.” He knows that it’s true, though. Somewhere past the layers and layers of bandages that Andrew wears, there must be raw flesh. It’s just that Neil can’t tell if he’s healing or rotting underneath it all.
They come to a stop close to the stairs up into the stands, and Nicky gestures at an empty patch halfway up. Most of the crowd is standing already, chaotic, but they climb up into the mess and find their seats, Nicky on the inside and Andrew in the aisle, with Neil sandwiched in-between.
“Our fans are louder,” Nicky leans over to say smugly.
“That’s because they’re trying to keep up with you,” Neil says. “Decibel for decibel.”
“Fuck you,” Nicky laughs. His eyes are bright, and he grips the seat in front of him to get the leverage to see through the masses.
They ride the energy of the crowd to the end of the song, and then the group is hollering goodbyes and filing offstage, and people start to sit down or escape to concession. Nicky relaxes back into his seat and pinches Neil for his opinion.
“I don’t think we missed much,” Neil says.
Nicky shrugs. “Yeah, but we were like that once. You got to skip Ausreißer’s adolescence, Neil, you lucky shit. It was not pretty.”
“Kevin showed me your first album,” he tells him.
“Oh, Jesus,” Nicky groans. “Those were dark times. I used to wear leather biker gloves on stage, like a tool.” He rustles in his inner jacket pocket and produces his flask. “Drink to forget?”
Andrew reaches across to pluck it from his hand before anyone can drink. He unscrews the cap and points it at Nicky. “I know you’re already fucked, Nicky.”
He scoffs, making a messy grab for it that Andrew dodges. “Hardly.”
Andrew swallows a generous shots worth, then passes the flask to Neil. This is familiar by now, sharing space and booze and drugs as a means to an end. They get drunk like they’re grappling down a cliff-face together, connected by rope.
Neil hesitates. There are strangers on all sides and the sick smell of sweat and beer in the air, but there’s something about his back to the wall and a concert ahead that he trusts. This is how he spent the years after his mother’s death, anonymous and drunk, losing control in measured doses like taking medication.
He drinks, the mouthpiece still wet from Andrew’s mouth, and screws his face up at the tartness of the flavour—a salty, lemony vodka. Nicky tries to steal the flask halfway through his sip, so Neil pushes him away by the face.
He and Andrew share the rest of the liquor, and he puts the back of his hand to his face to feel it warming up. It’s a relief, to feel his edges shaved off. It’s like he’s less defined this way, less likely to be recognized.
Stagehands are fiddling with amps onstage and taping wires down, and the buzz of the crowd is suddenly deafening.
“What’s the deal with Renee?” he hears himself asking.
“What d’you mean?” Nicky asks.
“You like her,” Neil guesses, jabbing Andrew with the base of the flask to get his attention. “But she’s nothing like you.”
“She’s one of us,” Andrew says.
“But she’s not, though,” Neil says, half-frustrated and half gawking at his own lack of composure. He wants his curiosity back inside where it can fester and wonder in circles and die. “I thought Wymack only took in strays. Charity cases.”
“You have met her twice,” Andrew says coldly. “How well do you think you can judge a person’s character in that time?”
“Pretty well,” Neil says grimly. He thinks of the cross around her neck and the prim lace of her collar, attention-grabbing hair offset by dark, serious eyes. He saw Matt’s track marks and Allison’s rage before Dan had even whispered their stories to him, but he can’t read anything on sweet, prim Renee.
“Lucky she doesn’t care what anyone thinks,” Nicky interjects. “She’s waiting to be judged by God, I think. Everyone else’s opinions are just… noise.”
He can’t imagine anyone who was really like them believing in God like that, but he bites his tongue.
“Little orphan Neil Josten gets in some trouble and he thinks he knows what rock bottom looks like,” Andrew muses, and Neil’s stomach sinks. “You haven’t even hit it yet.” He looks unfocused, and it occurs to Neil that he might have taken something before they left.
“You’re right,” Neil says. “But you promised that you’d be there when I do,” he reminds him. 
“What the fuck does that mean?” Nicky asks. “Neil?”
“Neil?” someone else says, and Neil looks over to see a woman and a couple of scruffy looking dudes frozen halfway up the stairs. His eyes drop to the shortest of the two, who’s wearing elbow-length armbands identical to Andrew’s. “Andrew! Nicky! Oh my god,” he says.
Nicky puts on a winning smile. “Hey!”
“I can’t believe you’re here—like, for real, there were rumours, but—oh my god— “
“He’s completely obsessed with you,” the woman gushes.
“Katie,” he hisses, and his friend shakes him good-naturedly by the shoulders.
“He’s afraid to say it, but—“
“Fuck off—“
“—every single album—“
“That’s very cute,” Nicky interrupts, cocking a flirtatious grin at the guy who’s holding his own cheeks, dismayed.
“We couldn’t believe you were just, like, changing your sound completely,” the taller guy says. “But Neil, man, I see why they’d take a chance for a voice like yours. It’s sick, dude.”
“Thanks,” Neil says stiffly.
“He’s not used to being recognized, yet,” Nicky says apologetically. “You’re taking his fan virginity.”
They titter, and the woman says, “we’re honoured.” She nudges her friend and widens her eyes meaningfully.
“We can’t really hang out though, sorry guys. Low profile tonight,” Nicky says. His smile is less believable by the second.
“Totally,” they chorus.
“I just quickly want to say, Andrew,” the first guy starts, breathless. “I know you get this all the time, but your lyrics saved my life. I couldn’t believe someone understood me like that, and—and you’re my--you inspire--I mean. I’m sorry, I’m so tongue-tied, I—“
“I didn’t write them for you,” Andrew says. 
The fan’s face crumples. Nicky looks at Neil, panicked, and then he forces a loud, incongruous laugh.
“Wow, good one,” Nicky says. “He doesn’t mean it, obviously.”
“Don’t I?” Andrew says.
“We appreciate it,” Neil interrupts. “But we can’t talk anymore.“
“Right, sorry, I’m so—“
They urge one another up the stairs, apologizing and thanking them, the one guy looking on the verge of tears through the bars of his friends’ arms, until they disappear up to the next level of seats.
“You could’ve pretended to be human,” Nicky hisses as soon as they’re gone.
“They call us monsters,” Andrew says. “What do they expect?” 
Nicky groans. “Please can we have fun, and not ruin anyone else’s night, especially our fans? People are gonna egg our car.”
Neil’s stomach squirms, and he crosses his arms over it. There could be well-meaning, invasive people like that everywhere, and now he’s tipsy and angry and stuck.
The house lights go down a few minutes later, and the whole crowd sucks in a collective breath before they plunge headfirst into cheering.
Neil’s arms loosen. Nicky stands up at his side, hooting, and everyone follows suit, craning towards the stage, wanting to be the first thing the band sees.
Dan comes out first, waving with both hands, and Matt follows, winking at the crowd and sliding his guitar over his head. Allison and Renee emerge from either side of the stage, Allison towering in high heels and glowing under the lights. Renee’s hair is wild, and her face is different, tongue caught in her teeth, almost cocky.
They fit behind their instruments like joints cracking into place, and they play their first chord in perfect unison, all of them operating different parts of the same body.
The crowd roars their approval. Neil sits upright. He’s surprised to feel Andrew standing up beside him, stepping into the aisle to watch. He follows without thinking.
The jangling, bopping drum line doesn’t wait for the strings to catch up, and Renee doesn’t need to watch to see that they’re following her. Her wrists are supple, and she’s lost to the music like she’s been playing for hours and not seconds.
The room goes up in flames when Dan starts singing, like the fans are all hungry, dry wood, and she’s a spark. She works the microphone free from its stand and starts running with it.
“Fucking excellent, right,” Nicky shouts, and Neil nods, mesmerized. The crowd moves together even separated by sections and rows of seats. 
It’s nothing like an Ausreißer concert, where boiling blood turns into wine, and everyone turns their desperate faces up to the stage like they’re waiting to be healed. Foxes sing like they’re in love and they fought for it. 
Neil can admit that they’re as musically proficient as the monsters, too, making up for lack of technical flair with a complete understanding of their sound.
Matt smiles dopily down at his guitar and then at Dan, like he can’t decide which deserves his attention more. When she floats towards him, he gets springy with it, teasing her with guitar licks, carving shapes into her oaky voice. Allison’s hand goes protectively to her tuning pegs whenever she has a break in the music, but her bass is rich and in tune.
They do an old-fashioned crescendo like it’s a classical piece, and Dan is almost conducting, hitting the air when Renee smashes the cymbals, gesturing for more when Allison starts a slippery solo, so fast that she laughs and tosses her hair, exhilarated.
Neil makes a hurt noise that gets swallowed in the din, but Andrew looks at him anyway. Neil looks back, studying his wide black pupils and wondering why he only bothers to pay attention when he’s stoned.
He remembers the wide eyes of the kid with the armbands, the agony of his disappointment, and he forces himself to look back out at the band.
One song finishes and another climbs on its back. People move and mill out of their seats towards the stage. He feels like he’s seeing double, like he’s watching a long pilgrimage that’s somehow been condensed or played back.
The first break in the music, Dan laughs her way out of the song, takes a swig of wine, and says “how was that?” into the mic, pointing out towards the place where the monsters are standing. Nicky puts two fingers to his mouth and whistles.
Her stage presence is unparalleled. She’s funny and a little hard on her audience, begging them to sing louder, drive her offstage if they can. Neil can see why she’s in charge, unofficially. She paces circles around the stage like she’s boosting morale. She barely needs the microphone to be heard.
They topple back into their set without warning, a trust fall of a count-in where Renee bangs out a few warning shots and everyone’s hands fly to their instruments.
Somewhere in the thicket of fans, Neil hears someone call, “Andrew!” He sees an incongruous flash, turned towards the audience and not the stage.
“Nicky, Nicky Hemmick! Nicky, over here—“
“Andrew,” Neil starts.
“We love you, Neil,” someone screams.
“Don’t—“
Neil’s jostled down a stair, and Andrew yanks him back up.
“Ignore them,” Andrew says viciously.
“Yeah,” Nicky agrees, but he’s clearly rattled. “What are they gonna do?”
Neil struggles to get his bearings. A few of them are still shouting, recording them with their phones or fighting their way through the crowd towards them. Nicky motions for them to stop, but a few people get close enough to beg for autographs or snap blurry photos of themselves with the band members in the background. He wonders if it was the fans from before, upset enough to tip off the whole crowd to their seat numbers. 
“Bet you didn’t think we were this famous, huh?” Nicky jokes nervously. 
Andrew has no problem with shoving people away, and Nicky frantically apologizes as many times as he can before he just starts shaking his head. Neil is forced painfully into Nicky’s side, and he can hear people in their row restlessly asking what’s going on.
Most of the audience is oblivious, still focused on Foxes’ raucous energy, but the three of them are surrounded for another ten minutes before people start to get frustrated enough to give up. The rest of them are shoulder-tapped by security, and the throng dwindles to nothing.
“You okay?” Nicky asks. Neil nods, but when he blinks he can still see pinholes of light from camera flashes. He knows that the photos will end up online where anyone can see him as he is right now, and they can guess at his habits or zero in on his location if they want to.
He’s been reckless for a long time, but standing pooled in stage lights feels entirely, chokingly different from wading down into the crowd and feeling the attention slither around him like seaweed.
Andrew crushes a hand to the back of his neck, and Neil inhales all at once.
“Kinda ironic that crowds freak you out so much when you sing for one every night,” Nicky says. He’s standing half in front of Neil, eclipsing the concert still unfolding in the background.
“It’s not the crowd.” Neil shakes his head to clear it. “It’s—they all know who I am.”
‘They think they do,” Nicky corrects firmly, fingers curling into Neil’s arms. The harpy tattoo peers out from under his sheer sleeve, a monster in a veil.
“They want to,” Andrew says, gaze tossed out to the back of the venue. His face is so blank and washed out under the lights that it’s like it’s been chemically stripped of colour. “You’ve caught their attention.”
Neil pulls free from Nicky’s arms and sits heavily in his seat. “I don’t want it.”
“You might not have a choice,” Nicky says, sitting next to him, smothering the distance Neil keeps trying and failing to cultivate.
“You always have a choice,” Andrew says, and when Neil looks up at him, he’s holding out his right hand with its painted yes. Neil accepts it gingerly, and Andrew drags him to his feet.
They watch the rest of the concert from backstage.
Andrew sits propped up on an amp, and Nicky alternates between trying to get the band’s attention from the wings, and mimicking Matt’s solos with vigorous air guitar. Neil suspects he’s trying to get him to laugh.
Neil has enough distance now to feel stupid about locking up during such a minor incident and proving Kevin right. The crowd has already forgotten them, or never knew they were there. The show goes on. 
They’re coming up on their encore performance when Neil feels a buzzing at his hip. 
He fishes an unfamiliar cellphone out of his pocket and stares uncomprehendingly at the message lingering on screen, sent from a number he doesn’t recognize.
A neat little ’60’ and nothing else.
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mechagalaxy · 4 years
Text
John T Mainer 28840: Hellbunny is born
Hellbunny is born
St Christopher’s Home for Wayward Pilots was a convent run hospital for those who had lost their mind and body to the ravages of mecha combat and starship piloting. The dump shock that was a constant risk for those who jacked bare brained into the great niode powered artificial intelligences that drove mecha, stargates, starships, and the great Thinking Engines of the noble houses and great trading empires left a trail of human wreckage across a thousand suns. The sisters of St Christopher’s tended to the Illyrian militaries refuse pile of broken humanity.
Given a few rubles and table scraps, St Christopher’s supported itself through charitable donations from the wealthy and powerful nobles, and a huge sideline in smuggling illegal weapons, nanotech, bioenhancements, and the ever popular Holy Trinity. The Holy Trinity in biosculpt consist of facial and skull alteration to defeat facial recognition programs, fingerprint and pheromone adjustments to stop print and chemtrace, and of course, a genetic chimera meld so your surface skin cells do not leave DNA to match existing records of whoever it was you were running from.
Sister Bunny was a hard eyed blonde whose soft reasonable voice was all most people ever heard, and the few who pushed her far enough to see the eyes go gunmetal grey and smile turn into the wide white grin of a wolf seldom would, or could speak of it. She described her life before St Christopher’s as “sort of like teaching pre-school for the disturbed”, which she allowed people to assume meant special needs teacher. It wasn’t a sin if you didn’t lie. Stupid was on their account.
When the alarm went off, and the shooting started, she keyed her implants to summon the guards, and alert the mecha pilots. Some of those who were being cared for here were dangerous to themselves and others, and the rest were worse. She assumed no one would wonder who was giving the orders, as they never had in the past. The voice of command came to her without thinking, from long years leading troops, and when that guttural rasp snapped an order, people obeyed. When things cooled off, no one would match that to sweet Sister Bunny.
The gunfire got louder, then the signals got worse.
[BOOM] The explosion of the hydrogen tank by the fuel cell knocked down the guard Boreas. Looking at the camera feed, Sister Bunny saw a patient in flapping hospital gown expertly throw the pilot to the ground and shoot him once. Then, staring again, he screamed in rage and fired 11 more times into the pilot before starting up the Boreas and looking for the mecha exit route.
Sister Bunny swore a most un-nunlike oath, and ran to the store house where seasonal supplies and yard machines were kept.
As the Boreas struggled to find a way out, he made the mistake of trying to force the ambulance exit, and it was too small for anything over fifty tons to turn swiftly. That is how Sister Bunny caught him with her Nephillax. Golden Bunny was graven on the cockpit, along with a King of the Mountain medal, and crown for first in a clan to win one. More importantly, a blue Galaxy Eye blazed from the Nephillax and its fierce heterodyne beam punched through the Boreas shields above the spine, and disrupted the shielding on the Boreas Nanotech conduits to feed its great ice guns.
For half a second, absolute zero temperatures washed the sides of the power and plasma conduits running through the torso, then the freeze/heat fractures disrupted the internal buffers and white fire shattered the power distribution system above the right hip, sending the Boreas face first into the ground.
Crawling from the machine, the disturbed pilot, clearly seen in gun camera with blood red ears affixed to his head screamed “Hellbunny, I am Hellbunny, I will purge the heretic!” As he fired into the door frames beside the hospital security staff, scattering them without injuring any.
Sister Bunny drew her Glock 17L from beneath her habit, and let the familiar hum of the smartlink fill her soul, as the cross hairs suddenly filled her eye and tracked with the pistol muzzle. She let a brace of 9mm slugs punch the wall to either side of his head to hurry him along, then walked her rounds down the hall to keep him running.
Finally pulling into the chapel, he shouted he claimed sanctuary, and would shoot anyone who tried to get him out. Sister Bunny kneecapped him with a neat double tap and let him crawl behind the altar for cover. Using that time, she closed and externally bolted the only doors to the chapel.
The Abbess came down to find Sister Bunny thumbing rounds into her magazines and puffing on a long Russian cigarette that stank of bad decisions and worse motives.
“Sister Bunny! I thought you quit smoking?” The Abbess asked horrified
Sister Bunny took a good long drag off her cigarette and smiled a wide disturbing smile to her Abbess,
“I thought I was done shooting people too, but Christ has a sense of humour today. Relax, I will call someone to get him out”
The Abbess winced as Hellbunny screamed and punched five quick rounds into the lock on the chapel door, only to discover the door was ferrite cored and the old fashioned bar holding it shut was as much out of reach as one of the planets four moons.
“You mean a SWAT team, or a commando team?” The Abbess said looking frightened.
Sister Bunny patted her hand “No Abbess, just a priest I used to know”
The Abbess fingered her rosary and looked concerned “I don’t think a priest will do it Sister”
Sister Bunny laughed, and flicked the slide lock chambering a fresh round. “Well, there are priests and then there are priests”
-----Spirit of Bunny compound----
I grabbed my spear and loaded up my Redeemer, shouting at my command company to mount up. We hit the gate and I gave a quick and dirty Sitrep to my crew.
“Alright, we are on a medical retrieval. St Christopher’s gave us a call. One of their brain burned pilots went on a bit of a rampage and shot the place up, stole a Boreas, made a small music critique and then lost a shoot out with a heavily armed nun before locking himself in the chapel” I thought it sounded reasonable enough, but my team had issues.
“A nun? He took out a Boreas and got shot down by a nun?” Antillar Maximus was convent educated himself, and had problems thinking about one of the Sisters of Mercy even having a gun, let alone using it. I had to give him some background.
“Yes well Sister Bunny used to be Lt Stephanie Robbins, scout/sniper team leader of the Defenders of Bunny. There are nuns, and then there are oh-shit-nuns! She is the party of the second part.
I dismounted from my machine and walked over to the downed Boreas. The dead pilot was on a gurney beside it. Sister Bunny was smoking again, which said a lot, and smiling which said that at least she got to shoot someone, so she wasn’t actually stressing out.
“Looking good Sister Bunny. So, what’s the deal on the shooter. This guy kill any of yours besides this guy? Any particular reason you didn’t just cap him?” I was a bit curious. She tended to shoot first, and avoid mentioning it altogether just to save paperwork. I used to really appreciate that when I was her CO.
Sister Bunny grinned at the bearded pilot in front of her, a Thor’s hammer dangling from his dog tags just above his Valknut tatoo marking him most definitely as not Christian. The rune carved spear in his hand filled in the rest of the blanks, like something out of an old Viking story, he was a very different kind of priest. She filled him in with the swiftness of a practiced scout.
“Oh this one is a lunatic alright, but not a mad dog. More of a mad bunny. He calls himself Hellbunny, and he didn’t hit one of the nurses or orderlies during the firefight, and the only one he shot was this pilot right here” She pulled back the sheet, and the pilot, with a chest shot to doll rags lay there dead as a doornail.
“Still seems excessive” I said, and then Sister Bunny pulled the dead pilots T shirt back into position and I laughed. It had been a Nickleback concert T shirt, and 14 very precise bullets had shot the word NO right through Nickleback. Ok, not a dangerous lunatic, just a regular lunatic with serious music taste. That I could live with.
We both laughed as we walked to the chapel. The Abbess looked at me, in my pagan gear and made a terrified squeak. I smiled gently.
“Not to worry Abbess, looting chapels is one of our specialities. We will have him out of there in two shakes of a bunnies tail” I waggled my eyebrows and she beat a hasty retreat.
I thought my smile was gentle, but when Sister Bunny laughed, hers was flat scary, and her Glock rested lightly in her hand.
I heard the pilot raging inside the chapel, swearing to bring blood and fire upon the unrighteous. Yep, full on lunatic, but with style. I had a weakness for those. I slid the bar off the door gently, then gestured to Sister Bunny. She adopted a weaver stance in front of the door, and I booted it open.
Hellbunny stood on one leg, his second tied off in a bloody bandage formed of altar cloth. His pistol snapped down to aim at us, but Sister Bunny fired one clean shot into the hand holding the pistol and it flew from his hand in a welter of blood.
As he stood in shock for one half second, I threw my spear ith a shout of “MINE” and pinned him to the altar like a butterfly on a collector’s board. I followed through my cast and charged up to where he was pinned.
Rabbit ears drooping above his face, his mad eyes stared back at me defiantly. There was no end to the fight in him. Crazy as a bedbug, and dangerous with it. I liked him already.
He snarled defiance at me “You can’t keep me penned up. I will get free. I will find battle again! You cannot stop me!”
I grabbed the spear and yanked it down hard, freeing the head, and tearing his wound, causing him to both shut up, and groan in pain. I looked him in the eyes, madman to madman and grinned.
“Hellbunny, I claim you for the Spirit of Bunny, for the Spirit of Bunny lives in you. Sister Bunny called me, and swore she had one of mine here, and I came to collect. I won’t keep you from battle. I will send you to battle. I will send you against DRAGONS!”
Hellbunny strained against the spear, pulling himself forward. His eyes mad and wild, but suddenly filled with hope.
“Will there be hell and blood?” He asked
“I expect we will be up to our little fluffy tails in hellfire and ass whooping when the dragons arrive. They don’t take cheques, and they don’t give mercy. You want a piece of that fight, you swear to obey your orders, and don’t shoot non combatants, even Nickleback fans” I broke it to him gently.
He looked a little crestfallen about the Nickleback fans, but given the lure of Dragons, he was willing to give up even music criticism for a higher calling.
Thus came Daniel “Hellbunny” Halbany to the Spirit of Bunny.
John T Mainer 28840
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hanahaki-arcade · 3 months
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tell about tf2 s/is!!! and how they came up to be enemies with so many guys (i don't usually see selfshippers with enemy f/os at all lol)
Ok ok so I have three!!! Two are part of a fan team I have with my girlfriend and one is Saxton Hale's daughter hehe sooooo
PNK Medic/Doll: So they are sort of like Frankenstein's Monster, at one point a while ago they had a breakdown and replaced all of their body parts except their head with other people's body parts (they worked at a morgue at the time). They ended up joining PNK because they had no where else to go, no one else would hire them because. Y'know. They were a freak. Anyways Team PNK lore (this is relevant) is that it is a team assembled by The Administrator herself as her own personal mercenaries just in case she needed them. Doll ended up becoming her "spy" (the actual spy, Charlotte, was not exactly someone who would. Do that.) And they had their own little relationship. They were also trained as a medic by. Both Medics. For both practical reasons (learning all types of strategies, getting a well rounded education) and just in case they would need to eliminate either team. Also Team PNK does like. Sort of take the roles of the RED team in the TF comics, so Doll ends up working with the Classic Mercs. But like. Under the Administrator's orders. Yeah. Anyways Doll is a little bitch who can't make their own decisions and lets women direct their life. I am homophobic towards them/silly
PNK Pyro/Sparky: There is way less for them. But yeah they are what you'd expect from a Pyro, they are very playful and in general dog-like. They are the most moral support here, and they are still playfully agressive like they are just. What's on the package. They are here to be cool. They also can technically speak, at one point the engineer of the team makes them something they can talk with. Which is rad.
Violet Hale: VIOLET MY BELOVED she is a silly billy. She's Saxton's adopted daughter, and she idolizes him completely. She's one of those kids you can't look away from for one second because she will be off like a shot, trying to climb something or hide somewhere or grab a weapon she should not be having. She like. Obviously would not like Olivia for family reasons but I fully believe they would not mesh well, Violet would NOT like her brattiness and just leave.
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hanahaki-arcade · 4 months
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🌟 + Medic for Doll?
Their dad!!!! He was insane around them and they imprinted on him like a baby duck, they go to hang out with him whenever everything gets to be too much for them. They also tend to be way nicer after hanging around him because he is quite nice to Doll. Like you would think he would be a horrible influence but the world has aligned to make the perfect situation for Medic to be a dad.
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hanahaki-arcade · 4 months
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🌦️☕️💌 for Doll - @solitaireships
🌦️: Would you be accompanied by mostly fluff or angst fanfics? Both? Explain why.
Oh, angst for sure. Doll is a very tragic character, they constantly search for love and affection and often goes to bad places to get it. They are also just really fun to make suffer I do this a lot myself.
☕️: What are the most common plots of shipping fics between you and your f/o?
Probably about Doll and The Administrator's arrangement. There probably wouldn't be much like. Actually cute or wholesome things for them. Rip.
💌: How would your dynamic be portrayed? What might people focus on most? Any misconceptions?
Doll would most likely be portrayed as a damsel in distress when that is. Not the case, they are letting The Administrator use them like this is toxic all around. It's like Cheavy x Medic like. There is no fully innocent party here they are perpetuating.
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hanahaki-arcade · 5 months
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😡: How would someone who hated you portray you?
🥰: How would someone who loved you portray you?
For Doll
Someone who hates me: Doll would be wayyyy more manipulative and like. Made out to seem like they actually liked hurting their friends. They would also be a huge boundary pusher and not respect consent methinks. Basically any bad trait Doll has would be cranked up to the max and they would be made to be a this monster
So.eone who loves me: Doll would still be evil, but in a more series aligned way. They would be shown to be cold but still very caring and that they love their team so much they were just looking for love in a place they shouldn't. Honestly it would just be Doll but more of a sweetheart.
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