Hello everyone ⥠I'm Cyberclipse, but you can call me Eclipse/Cyber. I'm an adult and use she/her pronouns. Minors don't interact. If I catch you, you're getting blocked. I'm a writer (kind of) and I'm from Poland, so English isn't my first language and it might be kind of bad at times. Hopefully not too bad.
I'm also on ao3 and quotev, same username as here! I post on ao3 most often because I'm working on a BEN x reader fanfiction currently (quotev gets a bit slower updates, but it still has them).
REQUESTS ARE: OPEN
RULES.
1. I'm not obligated to write any request. If it makes me feel uncomfortable, this blog is first and foremost for fun.
2. Stuff that is a hard no from the start is: non-con, bestiality, extreme age gaps/age play, incest/step-cest, scat/piss fetishes.
3. I might be a bit slow with requests at times, but that is because I have personal life going on, and I'm working on a fanfiction. I take requests as a warm-up for "proper writing". Still, I will try to get to them as fast as possible.
4. Don't request characters that aren't listed on my masterlist! If you do, I can't guarantee writing your request.
MASTERLIST.
Click right here for the masterlist âĄ
TAGS.
â Eclipse talks
As the name suggests, that's the tag I'll use when I'm just talking :p
â Eclipse writes
Tag for my writing! One-shots, headcanons and whatnot.
â Eclipse answers
Answering your asks <3 !!! I love getting them so don't be shy.
â Eclipse reblogs
Tag for my reblogs!
â I love BEN
Gee, I wonder what my favorite creepypasta might be. Definitely not BEN, pfff.
Hello! I would love headcanons of Nina in a wlw relationship. Like little wholesome things she would do. <3
Tell 'em you're my girl
Nina the killer x Reader
SUMMARY: General headcanons for Nina with a fem! Reader
CW: Brief mention of self-harm (Nina doing it, not the reader). Other than that, it's all SFW!
A/N: I loveeee Nina but surprisingly, I never wrote for her before so this was fun!! Hope you like it âĄ
If you're into makeup, she wants to do it for you SO BAD. Her skills are really good too, so tbh I consider it a win-win. She's super into painting your nails and doing your hair too
Loves picking out matching outfits for you as well
Also would carve your name into her skin lowk or get it tattooed or some shit. My girl is dedicated yk
Overall can come off as a bit obnoxious with just how often she mentions you. If she could she would wear a shirt with sparkly gems on it that say âI love MY girlfriendâ in bold letters.
Yes, special emphasis on âmyâ because when I tell you she can get jealous sometimesâŠ
She sees her girlfriend as someone absolutely amazing, perfect, sweet, all of the good adjectives. So she thinks everyone must want you too, because duhhh
And so, when she even thinks someone is flirting with you, she immediately comes to you all pouty, asking for your attention. And when you do, you can bet she's SO smug about it to the person who was talking to you before
LOVES loves hickeys and is into biting. Doesn't matter if you bite her or she bites you, she's eating that UP and you bet she wears clothes to show it off
Her hugs are lowkey rib breaking, she will try to lift you up if she can
Absolute YAPPER, she will talk your ear off about the most random things. If you talk a lot too it's even better because as much as she loves talking, she loves listening to you too
I can imagine her recording your voice and listening to it before she sleeps, or when she's bored. If you send her voice messages she will love you even more if it's somehow possible
Initially in your relationship, she was rather shy, which may be surprising. She thought you're too good for her and was a bit insecure. It got better with time however
If you're not the type to enjoy her almost suffocating affection, she will try to tone it down, but it will be very challenging for her. She's still trying for you though
whats your inspo for writing! and how long have you been writing :3
I've been writing since I was like 10 I think? It started with me writing really bad warrior cats fanfiction. Then a few years later I posted an oc x todoroki fanfic.......
After I dropped it I didn't post any of my writing for a loooooooong while until January this year when I finally gathered the courage to do so again !!
I don't know where I get inspiration to write because ideas just randomly pop into my head. Like I could be doing whatever and then I come up with the plot of a 50 chapter fic,,,
Sometimes, though, it's from something external like I read something nice or when I listen to music or when something happens in my life
SUMMARY: BEN likes having control and driving people crazy, in more than one way, of course.
CW: Overstimulation, Edging, Vibrators, Erotic electrostimulation, Vaginal fingering, Face slapping, Implied multiple orgasms, authors first time finishing a smut so results may vary
WC: 1.1k
A/N: I was giggling and kicking my feet when writing this LMAO. I always thought the idea of BEN shocking yn a bit during sex was sooooo good but I could barely find fics with it??? That's what inspired this and I found the wip after a while and I decided to finish it. Nervous abt posting it but you only live once
If there was one thing anyone could say with certainty about BEN, it was that he loved control.
Not just in the casual, surface-level way most people did. Of course not, it's him after all. He savored the way people unraveled under him, how they squirmed, how their composure cracked piece by piece until there was nothing left but raw, visceral reaction. He liked being above them, liked knowing every tremor, every broken sound, every helpless glance was because of him. And, eventually, they became shells of what they were, pliant and mendable in his hands. What he always wanted out of all this was clear however, he wanted to see the life drain from their eyes eventually after all the fun.
That kind of power gave him a rush like nothing else quite could.
WellâŠalmost nothing.
You shifted restlessly on the bed, the sheets twisted beneath you from how long this had been going on â minutes, maybe hours, you werenât even sure anymore. Time had dissolved into pure sensation. Your thighs were slick, the evidence of it smeared against your skin and soaking faintly into the fabric beneath you. Every nerve felt exposed and raw, heightened to an unbearable degree.
You turned your head away, trying to escape the weight of BEN's gaze; the sharpness of it, the way it seemed to pin you in place more effectively than his hands ever could. It was too much. Too intense. Almost suffocating.
Your chest rose and fell unevenly, breaths catching between soft whimpers. Tears clung stubbornly to your lashes, blurring your vision, born from a confusing mix of pleasure and pain. You didnât even know what you wanted anymore. More? Less? It all tangled together until it stopped making sense.
The moment you looked away, his hand was on you.
Firm fingers wrapped around your chin, forcing your face back toward him with little effort. At the same time, the vibration pressed against your clit intensified, just enough to make your entire body jolt.
âI thought I told you something about looking away?â
His voice was calm, almost conversational.
A quiet âtskâ left him when you didnât respond immediately. His grip tightened.
âAnd Iâm not hearing an apology either.â
âIâahâ⊠Iâm sorry,â you stammered, your voice breaking under the strain. âIâm sorry, BEN. Please, justââŠless⊠I canâtânghâ!â
The plea dissolved into a helpless sound as another wave of sensation crashed through you. Your thoughts were slipping, fraying at the edges.
He only smiled with amusement at your reaction.
BEN's hand left your jaw, but the absence of it didnât feel like freedom, it just made you more aware of everything else. The build-up inside you was reaching a tipping point again, that familiar tightening coil threatening to snap. It hurt. It burned. Your body was trembling from it, overwhelmed and sensitive.
And just as it crestedâ
He pulled the vibrator away.
The absence hit you like you got your head out from the water. A helpless, desperate whine tore from your throat before you could stop it, your hips twitching, trying to chase what was no longer there.
âI thought you didnât want any more?â he murmured, voice soft with mock sympathy. âYou know Iâm only trying to please you. Even if that means stopping.â
There was a quiet laugh beneath his words, the kind that made heat crawl up your spine whenever you heard it.
âLook at you,â he added, tilting his head slightly. âYouâre crying.â
Only then did you really register it; the warmth on your cheeks, the dampness trailing down toward your temples. Your breathing was uneven, your body still trembling as you weakly shook your head.
âYouâre anâŠahhâŠasshole,â you managed, the insult barely holding together.
âOh?â
His brows lifted, interest piqued rather than offended.
Instead of responding verbally, his hand moved lower. Fingers brushed against your slick heat, deliberately slow as he gathered the evidence of your arousal, using it as lubricant. Then he pushed two fingers inside you.
You gasped sharply, your back arching off the bed as your body welcomed the intrusion far too easily. He didnât rush it â to your surprise â instead he worked you open slowly. Each thrust drew out quiet, obscene wet sounds, accompanied by the broken rhythm of your moans.
When he curled his fingers in, your vision flickered, your breath catching as pleasure sparked through you like a fault line cracking open. It was too much. Too good.
He noticed. Of course he did. That bastard knows your way around your body so well it makes you embarrassed at times.
A low chuckle slipped from BEN, his thumb finding your clit again, but this time, instead of immediate pressure, there was something else. A sudden, sharp jolt.
You cried out, your body jerking involuntarily as the sensation shot through you. It wasnât quite pain, not entirely â but it wasnât purely pleasure either. It was something in between, literal electricity that made your nerves light up in a way you couldnât quite process.
âSensitive?â BEN murmured, watching you carefully.
Before you could answer, it happened again.
This time you were ready for it â or at least, more aware. The shock melted almost instantly into something else, something that twisted low in your stomach and spread outward in a wave of heat. Your moan came easier this time, trembling and unsteady.
His fingers resumed their rhythm, deeper now, more deliberate. His thumb switched with the fingers of his other hand, now that he rubbed your swollen clit with them, it was much more intense.
Ben watched you closely, drinking in every moan, every gasp, every little expression you've made.
He sped up his pace now, pumping into you. Occasionally sending another small jolt through your already oversensitive body. Each one pushed you closer to the edge, tightening everything inside you until you felt like you might snap.
âGood girl.â
The praise sent a shiver through you, your hips lifting instinctively, chasing more friction, more sensation. You were aching for it now, desperate despite everything.
And this time he let you have it.
The climax hit hard, crashing through you like a breaking wave. Your voice dissolved into helpless, sobbing moans as your body clenched tightly around his fingers.
BEN didnât stop immediately. He slowed, drawing it out, guiding you through every aftershock until your body finally began to come down from it.
Only then did he withdraw his fingers, bringing them to his mouth.
You were left limp against the bed, completely spent. Your chest rose and fell heavily, skin damp with sweat, tears still cooling on your cheeks.
For a brief moment, there was quiet and stillness. That was until he lightly slapped your cheek.
âCome on,â he hummed, voice low, almost indulgent. âIâm not done with you yet.â
Your stomach dropped slightly, anticipation and dread twisting together again.
âI want you to beg me to stop.â
And before you could gather the breath to protest, that familiar crackle sparked against your sensitive skin once more.
SUMMARY: (THIS IS PART TWO! FOR PART 1 CLICK HERE) You move into the city in an attempt to escape the small town you grew up in, and especially the people living there. Months later, that escape has narrowed into a stagnant routine: a two-star hotel front desk, a rented apartment, and a life without any direction, ambitions, or goals. Everything changes when a guest is found dead during your shift, allegedly due to commiting suicide. You find the body. The image follows you home, lingers behind your eyelids, and refuses to let go.
Luckily for you, a stranger online is here to help :)
CW (for the whole fanfic, not just this part): Suicide, Minor character death, Self-harm, Hallucinations, Reader has issues and shitty parents, Physical/Psychological abuse, Animal abuse/death, Vomiting, Still considering writing smut but as of now there isn't any, Slow burn, Mix of fanon and canon BEN, Fem! Reader implied but if you squint it can be gender neutral.
WC: 12k
A/N: Unfortunately, after this I don't have any chapters to post </3 however, chapter 6 is currently in the writing and should be here soon (but as I said I plan to post here every 3 chapters...So even more waiting rip). Still, I hope you enjoy this nonetheless! Also, I started using the site to write my posts because the app is SO uncooperative (also fun fact I use my phone to write anything, idk why but writing on my laptop always went slow for me). Oh and the formatting kind of messed up at the Anyways, happy reading âĄ
TAGLIST: @autuminii
3:01 p.m., February 20th, 20XX.
Youâre tugging your coat on, fingers fumbling slightly with the zipper as you brace yourself for the cold. Itâs not as brutal as it was a few weeks ago, but winter is still clinging on stubbornly. At least the snow doesnât fall as often now, and when it does, it melts into slush almost immediately. Still, the air bites at your cheeks the moment you step outside and you hate that feeling. You pull your hat down over your ears and reach for your bag. Just as your hand closes around the strap, you feel someone rest their hand on your shoulder. You nearly jump out of your skin.
Your body tenses instantly as you turn your head, heart thudding, only to find Paula standing beside you. She looks completely unfazed, as if she didnât almost scare you half to death. Her green eyes catch the light as she smiles, bright and lively. Though, to be fair, they always sparkle like that. Paula has always had that effortless charm about her. The kind of person who could sit still and somehow still draw attention, like she was born to be admired. Her beauty does half the talking for her, which only ever made you wonder why she chose to work in a place as shabby and underwhelming as this one.
You let out a small, confused hum, and she immediately claps her hands together, clearly excited, her voice taking on an upbeat, sing-song tone you guess she mostly uses when at the front desk while talking to the visitors.
âY/N! I was thinkingâŠwell, actually, me and Maisie have been thinking, if you want to go out with us both this weekend.â
Your eyes widen slightly, and you almost choke on thin air. What?
For a split second, your mind goes completely blank. You didnât even realize people here hung out outside of work. As far as you knew everyone clocked out and vanished into their own lives the moment their shifts ended. And Maisie? You barely knew her at all. She worked night shifts. By the time you arrived in the mornings, she was already gone. Youâd exchanged maybe a handful of words with her, but you're not even sure about that. The idea that the two of them were friends, let alone inviting you, feels unreal.
You force a small, tense smile, trying not to look startled or ungrateful. The last thing you want is coworker drama. Youâve always preferred to stay neutral, invisible if possible.
ââŠI didnât know you guys were friends,â you say carefully. âAre you sure itâs okay? I donât want to make it awkward.â
Paula lets out a soft laugh, waving her hand dismissively. Only then do you realize youâve started walking with her, drifting back toward the front desk where sheâs already settling in.
âMaybe if it wasâŠyou from a few months ago!â she says, still smiling. âThen yeah, we wouldnât even dream of inviting you, no offense. But you know how you wereâŠall gloomy and asocial.â
She says it so lightly, so casually, as if what she said wasnât insulting at all.
âUh, wellââ you start, unsure how to respond.
âBut now you actually, like, talk to us!â she continues. âEveryoneâs been wondering what happened. Especially after you found that dead girl. What was her name againâŠRiley? Rebecca?â She taps her lips thoughtfully.
âRosa,â you reply quietly. âIt was Rosa.â
For a moment, youâre not entirely sure what she means. You hadnât noticed yourself changing, not really. You always thought you were justâŠgetting by. But as you stand there, the words sink in, and the gears in your head slowly start turning. When you think back to the beginning of the year, the differences are subtle but undeniable. You have been smiling more. Talking more. Youâve even started caring about how you look before workâŠnothing drastic, but still more than before. And the nightmaresâŠtheyâve been fewer and spaced farther apart, the same with the hallucinations, which youâre incredibly grateful for.
It all seems to trace back to Ben.
He became such a big part of your life so naturally that you almost didnât notice it happening. Talking to him every day made things feel lighter, easier. He distracted you from the memories, from everything that went wrong. Itâs almost silly how much happier you feel just because youâre not alone anymore. Maybe your problem really was a lack of friends all along.
âAnyway,â Paula says suddenly, snapping you out of your thoughts, âhave you found anyone speeeeecial?â She leans forward conspiratorially. âCome on, spill!â
Your face heats up instantly.
You donât have a crush on Ben. Heâs your friend. JUST your friend. And no, this isnât denial. The embarrassment comes from something else entirely. It's the assumption that happiness must automatically come from romance. Still, you know that if you say youâve just made a friend, Paula will think you're simply hiding your partner from her for whatever reason. So you choose a safer answer, it's not really that much of a lie either way.
âNo, actually,â you say, clearing your throat. âI startedâŠworking on myself. Eating better, exercising, you know. Self-care.â
Paula studies you for a moment, her eyes narrowing just a bit, like sheâs weighing your words. Then she smiles again and nods, apparently satisfied.
âAh, thatâs good, thatâs good,â she says. âSo, are you free this weekend or not? We donât have to drink if youâre all health-focused now.â
You hesitate for just a second before nodding.
ââŠSure. Just text me. Iâm pretty sure I gave you my number.â
She immediately pulls out her phone, thumbs moving quickly across the screen. A second later, you feel your own phone vibrate in the back pocket of your pants. When you check it, you see a message from Paula, it's nothing but a string of random emojis. You remember giving her your number when you first started the job. She mostly used it to ask about scheduling or organization stuff when she got confused. It's funny considering you are her junior.
âSee you!â she chirps, already turning to the computer screen.
You give a small wave over your shoulder as you step out of the hotel, even though Paula wasn't really watching if you leave or not. The cold greets you immediately, it stings your entire face, making you narrow your eyes, scrunch your nose and shudder. You shove your hands into the pockets of your coat and take a few steps forward, letting the door close behind you with a soft thud.
This is your first actual plan to hang out with people since you moved out. A whole year ago. Maybe more, if youâre being honest with yourself. After highschool you stayed with your parents for just a bit longer, and during that time period everyone went away to college or simply didn't want to associate with you anymore. It was mutual.
You canât help but wonder if your coworkers have always been closer than you assumed. Maybe theyâve been laughing together, grabbing drinks, building connections right under your nose while you stayed safely in your own bubble. Maybe you built that version of them â the one that assumed everyone is so self-centered and uninterested in socializing as you â in your head on purpose. So you could cope somehow with your low self worth, feeling of being an actual real life NPC, and that kindness is a rarity nowadays so you don't have to possess it.
The thought lingers as you walk toward the metro station, your boots making weird sloshing sounds against patches of the melting snow. The air stings your fingers when you pull your phone out, bare skin protesting against the cold almost immediately. You ignore it. Youâre buzzing with nervous excitement, and thereâs only one person you want to tell (also the only one you CAN tell, you have no one else, remember?).
Your thumbs move quickly as you type.
Y/N: Guess what
Y/N: im going out this weekend
Y/N: With my coworkers
Y/N: Paula and Maisie
Y/N: im so excited !!!
Y/N: and nervous
Y/N: i hope i wonât mess this up somehow,, it would suck if things got weird between us
You stare at the screen, waiting. Nothing.
Heâs probably busy, you tell yourself. You try not to read into it as you slip your phone back into your pocket and descend into the station. Soon enough, youâre seated inside the metro, shoulders relaxing as the doors slide shut. Your phone buzzes and you grab it almost too fast.
M4J0R4: i didnât know you talk to them
M4J0R4: you said youâre kind of lonely back there
Your brows knit together as you read it. ThatâsâŠnot what you expected. Not from Ben. You thought heâd be excited. Proud, even. Supportive. Thatâs the word that keeps echoing in your head. You type back, trying to keep things light.
Y/N: well that was until today lol
Y/N: paula surprised me a lot
Y/N: she said i was unapproachable before lmaoaoaoa
Y/N: still itâs not like i care about being friends with them i just donât want them to think badly of me
Y/N: did something happen?
The three little dots donât appear. Seconds pass, then a minute. Your chest tightens just a bit more than youâd like to admit. You start typing another message, something that's a bit too desperate for your liking, but before you can send anything, his reply comes through.
M4J0R4: srry, i had a rough day thatâs all
M4J0R4: im happy for u ^^
M4J0R4: i hope u have fun, donât forget to text me tho, i wanna know how it goes
You let out a quiet sigh, tension leaving your shoulders. Of course. It wasnât about you. It rarely is, but your brain loves to pretend otherwise. Relief settles warmly in your chest. You text back and forth as the metro carries you home, Ben tells you about his day. By the time you reach your stop and unlock your apartment door, the conversation hasnât slowed.
You toss your bag aside, kick off your shoes, and make your way to the kitchen. Dinner is nothing special, just a pre-made baguette stuffed with chicken that you slide into the oven for a few minutes. While it heats up, youâre still texting him. When itâs done and youâre sitting at the couch, eating, youâre still texting him.
Yeah. Youâve been texting him a lot. The thought doesnât bother you nearly as much as it probably should. He's your friend after all, it's normal to talk to your friends a lot.
6:07 p.m., February 25th, 20XX.
You spread your clothes out carefully on the bed, smoothing the fabric with your hands and then pausing, just to look at them. For a moment, you almost admire the little arrangement youâve made. This is the nicest stuff you own, no contest, and itâs been sitting untouched in your closet for monthsâŠokay, maybe longer, quietly collecting dust.
Itâs not like youâve had many occasions to dress up. For work, you rotate through the same three button-up shirts, pairing them with dark bottoms. Theyâre fine. Functional, don't draw attention towards you, just how you like it. And when you get home, you have a bad habit of staying in the same clothes for days at a time. Not great â kind of gross, honestly â but it saves you from doing laundry more often than absolutely necessary. You try not to think too hard about it.
As sad as it sounds, itâs only after moving out that youâve developed anything resembling a fashion sense. Before that, your mom picked out your clothes for you. Every shirt, every pair of pants, even goddamn shoes. You couldâve fought it, of course. You couldâve bought things you liked and changed at school, but that meant spending money you were trying so hard to save to move out as soon as you could. And honestly? It didnât feel worth the effort anyways. The clothes she chose were modest, a bit too prim and proper, but you never looked ridiculous, so you settled. You justâŠdidnât feel like yourself, that's all.
Now, ironically, when you finally have the freedom to experiment, money is tight. There's rent, groceries, transit, things that matter way more than what you wear. Fashion is a luxury you can't afford yet, it's way far down on your list.
Carefully, you slip the outfit on and head to the bathroom. The light hums softly as you look at yourself in the mirror.
You lookâŠnice.
Actually, more than nice. Itâs the best youâve looked in a long while. You showered earlier, brushed your teeth properly, even made sure to eat something decent so you wouldnât go out on an empty stomach and end up irritable. For some reason, social events drain not only your social battery but your appetite too. Youâve learned that the hard way.
All thatâs left is your hair. You grab the brush and run it through slowly, untangling it while keeping your eyes on your reflection. When youâre done, you pause again, taking yourself in and a small smile tugs at your lips.
Somewhere along the way, the sharp edge of your nervousness dulled. Youâre still anxious, sure, but the fear of messing everything up isnât suffocating anymore. Ben helped with that throughout the week.
Right. Ben.
You were supposed to text him once you were ready and about to leave. You set the brush down and head back to your bedroom, sitting on the edge of the bed as you unlock your phone and start typing.
Y/N: iâll be leaving in likeee 20 minutes
Y/N: and itâs gonna take another 20 to get there
The reply comes quickly.
M4J0R4: txt me when u get there then ;p
M4J0R4: just so ik u got there safe
You smile down at your phone, warmth spreading through your chest. He cares a lot. You canât really remember anyone ever paying this much attention to you before. Not your family, not your former friends, you didn't even care this much about yourself, ever. Youâve never thought of yourself as particularly special, not worth any extra effort or time. But for some reason he thinks you are.
You shake your head slightly, forcing the thought away. Youâre getting ahead of yourself.
It would be pathetic to start falling for someone just because theyâre genuinely kind to you. Desperate, even. And it would only highlight how starved you are for connection, how easily gentle warmth feels like a blazing fire when you were stranded and cold for so long. You exhale slowly and lock your phone.
Your way to the bar isnât anything remarkable. The streets blur together as you walk half distracted, glancing at your phone from time to time to make sure you head in the right direction. You arrive exactly when you planned to. Still, you stop short once youâre there, standing on the sidewalk and staring at the building in front of you.
You hadnât really looked into the place beyond figuring out how to get here. Seeing it in person isâŠa lot. It looked so polished? Expensive? You seem unable to find the right adjective. You already feel out of place, and youâre painfully aware that this feeling will probably get worse once you actually sit down with Paula and Maisie. From the outside, the bar leans heavily toward the fancy side, with its large windows that spill warm light out onto the street. Above the entrance, a massive LED sign glows softly â âSmall Merciesâ.
Three girls walk past you and head inside, glancing at you for just a moment, long enough for your brain to interpret it as judgment. Thatâs your cue. Youâre being weird, great. Before you can overthink it any further, you straighten up and follow them inside.
The interior somehow looks even nicer. The walls are a deep, muted red. The floors shine under the low lighting, reflecting movement and color. Behind the bar, bottles line the shelves in neat, glowing rows, it's so many options itâs almost dizzying. You suppose you should be grateful they didnât invite you to some grimy place where the air smells stale and thereâs an almost one hundred percent chance a middle-aged alcoholic would hit on you, leaving you feeling gross just for existing in the same room. Still, your stomach tightens when you think about the prices. Your wallet feels heavier in your pocket, it's already bracing itself for when it's time to pay.
You canât help but wonder if Paula and Maisie come here often. If they doâŠhow can they afford it? You all make the same salary, you're pretty sure. Maybe they get help from their families or something similar. You decide to believe this is a one-time thing. It's easier that way, and you choose kindness towards yourself right now.
You pull out your phone quickly and text Ben a simple âIâm hereâ, then tuck it away again and scan the room. It takes a moment, but then you spot Paulaâs dark hair. Sitting beside her is a blonde girl wearing glasses â Maisie, you assume. Last time you saw her youâre sure she wore contact lenses instead though. You lift your hand in a small wave and manage a brief smile as you make your way over.
âYou made it!â Paula beams, shuffling closer to Maisie to make space for you. As you sit down, Maisie gives you a soft, barely-there âhey,â her voice quiet and reserved.
âI hope you werenât waiting too long for meâŠâ you reply.
âNoooo, we just got here ourselves,â Paula replies easily. âMaisieâs boyfriend gave us a ride.â She glances at the blonde, who nods in confirmation. Paula continues, âHeâs gonna pick us up too, right?â
âYeah, yeah,â Maisie says. âI just gotta text him when.â Then she looks at you, speaking more so out of politeness rather than actual concern. âWe can take you with us if you want. So you donât have to go back drunk at night and all.â
You open your mouth to respond, but Paula cuts in immediately.
âY/N isnât drinking tonight. Thought I told you.â
Maisieâs eyebrows knit together. âSo sheâs just gonnaâŠwatch us get drunk?â
âIâm fine, really,â you say quickly, your voice softer than you intend. âItâs no big deal.â
âYou hear her!â Paula says, already standing up. âAnyway, Iâll go grab the drinks. What do you want, Y/N?â
You hesitate, glancing toward the bar again. All those bottles. All those prices you donât want to imagine. You chose to go with something basic.
ââŠA margarita mocktail would be nice,â you say finally.
Paula nods and heads off, clearly already knowing what Maisie wants. The moment sheâs far enough away, Maisie shifts in her seat and pushes her glasses back up her nose.
âSorry Paula put you on the spot like that,â she says. âItâs typical for her, really. Sheâs always so inconsiderate toward others.â
You blink. Youâve been here for maybe ten minutes, and itâs already turning into gossip. Great. Just great.
âItâs really fineââ you start.
âLike, what made her think youâd have fun watching the two of us drink?â Maisie continues. âThatâs basically being a babysitter to toddlers.â
âI donât mindââ
âYou really seem like you have your shit together,â she says, cutting you off again. âUnlike her. Drinking every weekend. Sheâs just an alcoholic in denial.â
That catches you so off guard you go completely quiet.
You? Having your shit together? The thought is so absurd it short-circuits your brain, and your silence seems to encourage her.
âYeah,â Maisie goes on. âLike, you didnât really talk to anyone or anything, but I respected that. You came in, did your job, didnât take shit from anybody.â
ââŠUhm,â you manage. âThank you?â
Before she can say anything else, Paula returns with the drinks, setting them down on the table with a bright smile. Thank whatever is up there in the skies.
The tension drains just a little, but the awkwardness inside you lingers. You wrap your hands around your glass, trying to ground yourself. Why do they even hang out if Maisie so clearly dislikes Paula? The question nags at you. And, unexpectedly, you feel a small pang of sympathy for the brunette.
This night is already shaping up to beâŠsomething.
Still, you sip on your margarita and make a conscious effort to relax. You donât want to ruin the evening for yourself or them. The drink is cold and pleasantly tart, and you focus on that for a moment, letting it ground you. You lean back slightly in your seat, shoulders loosening as the minutes crawl by.
Mostly, you just nod along to whatever Paula and Maisie are talking about. You add a comment here and there when it feels appropriate, but your input is minimal. They donât really seem to notice. Somehow, theyâre having a fantastic time together, which feels almost surreal considering Maisie was tearing into Paula not that long ago. The contradiction makes your head spin a little. As they drink more, they both loosen up even further. Voices louder, laughter sharper, words tumbling over each other. Meanwhile, you stuck to that single mocktail, not ordering anything after that. Maisie was right about it being with two toddlers. Still, it makes you wonder why she chose to drink so much anyways, despite her apparent sympathy towards you.
Eventually, the conversation derails completely. It turns into nonstop giggling and inside jokes, stuff you have zero context for. Paula starts rambling about a cousin who lives in Wisconsin, going on and on about things that mean absolutely nothing to you. You tune out, fingers drifting to your phone almost on autopilot.
You check if Ben texted you. He did.
M4J0R4: Hope youâre having fun!!
Your mouth twists slightly before you respond.
Y/N: couldâve been better tbh
Y/N: theyâre drunk af
Y/N: and lowkey hate each other
Y/N: maisie talked shit abt paula to me
Y/N: and now they act like suuuuch good friends and ignore me
Y/N: it makes me wonder why Iâm here
The reply comes quickly.
M4J0R4: oof
M4J0R4: maybe u could like say you have an emergency or somethin and leave
You glance up at the table for a second. Paula is still rambling to her friend, laughing so hard she has to brace herself. Neither of them even looks in your direction.
Y/N: idk i donât want to leave them like this stillâŠ
Y/N: i mean the place is nice but u never know
Y/N: two drunk young women alone in a bar is not the best scenario
M4J0R4: youâre way too kind towards people who donât like you lmaoooo
M4J0R4: iâll never get that abt you
M4J0R4: donât you dislike them too after this??
Something tightens in your chest. Heâs right. Objectively, heâs completely right. You donât plan on hanging out with them again after tonight. You already know that. And theyâre clearly too drunk to remember anything you do or say anyway. So why stay?
Y/N: i mean, i do
Y/N: i donât care if something happens to them
Y/N: idk maybe youâre right
Before you can think any further, Paulaâs voice cuts through your thoughts.
âY/N!!â
You jolt, snapping your head up from your phone. Paula is giggling uncontrollably, her face flushed deep pink, eyes glassy. Sheâs leaning heavily against Maisie, barely holding herself upright.
âPhut thatâŠthing down!â she slurs, pointing vaguely at your phone.
âYeaahh!â Maisie joins in, laughing. âPut it doooown, Y/N!â
You hesitate, scanning them both.
ââŠDonât you girls think you should call it a night?â you suggest carefully. âPaulaâs barely sitting upright.â
âNoooo!â Paula protests loudly. âIâm not...hicâŠdrunk!â
Luckily, Maisie seems just sober enough to agree with you.
âThat type of shit would make you die first in any horror movie,â she says, snorting. âAnyway, Iâll text my boyfriend, yeah.â
She pulls out her phone, squinting at the screen before frowning deeply.
âUgggh, itâs deadâŠwhere did I put my chargerâŠThey have outlets next to tables hereâŠâ
While Maisie starts fumbling around, first her pockets, then her bag, you stand up from the table, your legs stiff from sitting so long.
âIâll go to the bathroom,â you say lightly. âDonât run off anywhere.â You even manage a small smile, attempting humorâŠsomehow.
Then you turn on your heel and head toward the bathroom. Once inside, you close the door behind you and let out a shaky sigh, resting your back against it. The noise from the bar is muffled in here, distant and dull. You look at yourself in the small mirror above the sink.
You lookâŠrougher than you expected. Your hair is messy, sticking slightly to your face. You hadnât even realized how warm and sweaty you were. You step closer to the sink and turn on the tap, letting cold water rush out. You cup your hands and splash your face, the chill sending a wave of relief through you. You exhale softly, shoulders dropping. You grab some paper towels and blot your face dry. Itâs not the most pleasant texture, but itâll do. Better than walking around with a wet face.
You take your phone out again, turning so your back rests against the cool porcelain of the sink. Ben has already sent more messages.
M4J0R4: You donât sound too convinced
M4J0R4: Stop letting people walk all over you like that
M4J0R4: U said you want to be how you were before
M4J0R4: To have that, admit Iâm right
You sigh, rubbing your thumb over the edge of your phone. He sounds so firm. So unyielding. Youâve never seen Ben talk to you like this before, not thisâŠsharply. He's been like this the whole evening and it makes something uneasy twist in your chest. Usually, he softens things. Reassures you. This feels different; like heâs pushing instead of pulling.
Still, you type back.
Y/N: Okay, I donât care about them
Y/N: Youâre right
Even as you send it, the words feel hollow. Youâre just repeating something you donât actually believe, hoping that saying it will somehow make it true. Ben doesnât reply.
The silence stretches, and then the lights above you flicker. Once. Twice.
Your breath catches in your throat. A second later, a scream pierces from the outside.Your heart stutters violently in your chest, the sound echoing in your ears. For a moment, youâre frozen, staring at the bathroom door as if it might burst open on its own. Someone will run in here with a gun or something. Every instinct in you screams donât look. Donât go out there. Donât see it.
But the noise outside only grows louder. Chairs scraping. Voices overlapping. Panic spreading like wildfire. Your curiosity wins. It will be the death of you one day, you know it.
You step out of the bathroom.
Your line of sight lands immediately on the table you were sitting at not long ago. Maisie is slumped forward, face down against the tabletop.
Paula is beside her, shaking, sobbing uncontrollably, her hands hovering uselessly like she doesnât know where to put them. Someone is shouting for help. Someone else is yelling to call an ambulance. One of the servers rushes to them both. The room spins.
No.
No, no, no. Not again.
You donât need to get any closer. You already know. Just like with Rosa. One moment it's all normal, the next, it's this.
Your vision blurs as panic surges through you. Do you bring bad luck everywhere you go? Is there something wrong with you? Are you cursed or something? How does this even happen? You told yourself the second time would be easier. For fuck's sake, you told yourself there wouldnât be a second time at all. Your chest tightens until it hurts.
You bolt out of the bar, leaving the chaos and screaming behind you. Outside, the cold night air hits your lungs, but it doesnât help. You brace yourself against the wall, knees giving out as you slide down, bile rising up your throat fast. You retch onto the pavement, body shaking uncontrollably. Your nails dig into the bricks as if you can anchor yourself there, the sting shooting up your arm grounding you just enough to keep from collapsing completely.
You wipe your mouth with the back of your arm, it tastes acidic, making you frown even more. Then force yourself upright, though your legs still tremble beneath you. Singular tears trail down your cheeks, blurring your vision.
You take your phone out again, fingers numb as you type.
Y/N: Ben
Y/N: im pretty sure Maisie died or idk what happened omfgnwk
The reply comes quickly.
M4J0R4: You said you donât care
What?
Why would he say that? Why now? This doesnât sound like Ben. Not the Ben who comforted you, who made you laugh, who told you things would be okay. You clutch your phone tighter, knuckles whitening. It feels cruel. Heartless. And horribly timed. Like both the universe and him are mocking you, considering everything happened right after you sent that message.
You stare at the screen, disbelief numbing you. More messages appear on your screen.
M4J0R4: Are you seriously going to let all this make you fall back into the state you were in when we first talked?
M4J0R4: You keep repeating the same mistakes
M4J0R4: Or maybe you think itâs your fault?
M4J0R4: That you bring them death somehow?
M4J0R4: Wouldnât it be better if you just stopped socializing altogether if thatâs what you think?
M4J0R4: Clearly it brings more good to both you and them, if youâre so convinced thatâs the case
M4J0R4: I know you
M4J0R4: I know you think all this
Your hands start shaking so badly you almost drop your phone. You clutch it tighter now, your knuckles turning white.
Heâs right. Thatâs the worst part. Those thoughts have already been clawing at the back of your head. You do think itâs your fault. You do think you ruin everything you touch. Seeing it spelled out like this, thrown back at you so bluntly, makes your chest tighten until it feels like it might cave in.
Your breathing grows faster, shallow and uneven. Tears spill freely now, blurring the words on the screen. You were waiting for him to tell you it wasnât your fault. To ground you. To be the one steady thing. He doesnât.
So you give in.
Y/N: Iâll stop going out then
Y/N: I mean I wonât get so depressed again
Y/N: u r with me after all
Y/N: and just talking to you at home is the happiest Iâve been in a long time
The message sends and is met with no reply.
The silence afterward feels deafening. You slowly slip your phone back into your pocket and press your head against the wall, drawing in a shaky breath. Your mind feels foggy, unfocused, like youâre moving through water.
Is he disappointed in you?
He sounded disappointed. That hurts more than you expect.
You stay there, shaking, as the noise from inside the bar bleeds out into the night.
âIâ I told you! She was just plugging in her phone andâ... and then she justâŠnow sheâsâŠ!â
Paula's voice breaks as she talks to the officers.
You stand beside her, awkward and stiff, one hand hovering before settling on her back. You rub slow, uncertain circles. Youâve never been good at this, comforting people, especially when you feel this guilty.
Thankfully, Maisie is alive. Sheâd just fallen unconscious. No death.
Apparently, she had been electrocuted.
Sheâd plugged her phone into an outlet near the table, wanting to charge it, and something went wrong. You canât make sense of it. This isnât some grimy bar tucked into an alley with exposed wires and flickering lights. This place is polished, expensive, and safe. How does something like that even happen?
You donât bother trying to wrap your head around it. You leave that to the officers, who look just as confused as you feel. Eventually, after paramedics take Maisie away and the crowd thins, they leave you and Paula alone.
The quiet that follows is heavy.
Paula suddenly steps forward and wraps her arms around you, clinging tight. The gesture is so sudden it knocks the breath from your lungs. You freeze for a split second before carefully returning the hug, your arms resting around her shoulders. You pat her back gently, murmuring something that doesnât quite form into words. After a moment, you pull away, unable to hold it any longer.
ââŠIâll call you a taxi,â you say quietly.
She nods, eyes red and unfocused, mascara smeared darkly down her cheeks. You pull out your phone and make the call, your voice sounding distant even to yourself. Paula wipes at her face with the sleeve of her jacket, smudging the makeup further.
When you hang up, thereâs nothing left to do but wait.
Silence stretches between you, thick and uncomfortable. The sounds of the street feel muted. Your gaze drifts down to your phone screen, though youâre not really looking at anything. Ben didn't text anything else. He's probably mad at you. You'll tell him Maisie's alive later.
âTry not to think about it,â you say softer than expected, looking at Paula again.
Yet, the words sound hollow the moment they leave your mouth.
10:39 a.m., March 20th, 20XX
âI swear I put tape here somewhereâŠâ you mutter under your breath, voice low and distracted as you dig through the drawers of your desk.
Paperclips clatter softly as you push them aside. Pens roll, markers knock against each other, loose sheets crinkle under your fingers. Itâs a mess. It was organized at some point, when you got really bored you would rearrange stuff in here, but now itâs just layers of things youâve shoved away without thinking. Your movements grow more impatient the longer you search.
Your phone camera has been acting weird lately.
Always on. No matter what you do, that tiny indicator refuses to disappear. Thereâs something deeply unsettling about it, something that makes your skin prickle every time you notice that dot glowing in the corner of your screen. Ben told you not to worry about it, said itâs probably just a glitch, nothing serious. But it's not like he'd know if you covered it up, and it would give you peace of mind. It shouldn't bother you as much as it does, but it does. You're you after all. A mess. Just like the one in this goddamn drawer, if not worse. Yeah, probably worse. Where the hell is that tape?
Your fingers finally brush against something circular, half-hidden beneath a pile of random office clutter. Tape. You pull it free, a small, quiet victory, and set it down on the desk.
Your mind drifts as you reach for your phone.
Ever since the incident at the bar, things have feltâŠoff. Maisie took time off to recover, which makes sense, but the absence still lingers in the workplace like something unspoken. You and Paula barely talk anymore. A quiet âgood afternoonâ here and there, and even that feels strained and rare. Youâre pretty sure sheâs avoiding you. It's not entirely subtle either. Sometimes she makes it so obvious, it makes you feel worse about yourself.
Like youâre something contagious.
You try not to think about it too much.
You still have Ben.
Heâs the one constant that didnât disappear. Despite everything that happened. Despite you. Even when you spiral, even when you sabotage yourself in ways you donât fully understand, he stays. He stopped trying to âfixâ you a while ago, you noticed that. He probably realized it didnât work. You're such a lost caseâŠit's sad.
Your hand moves automatically as you pull your phone from your bag. Scissors would make this easier, but you donât feel like searching again. Instead, you reach down and grab your small, baby blue toiletry bag. The zipper sounds louder than it should in the quiet room as you open it and take out the razor.
With the bag resting on your lap, you pull a small strip of tape free and use the razor to cut it. Itâs not clean â the edge comes out rather uneven and slightly jagged â but it works. Good enough.
You press the tape over your phoneâs camera, smoothing it down with your thumb, making sure it sticks properly. There.
You turn the phone on. The little dot still glows in the corner of the screen, stubborn as ever. But at least nowâŠnow it doesnât feel like anyone can see you. Not that anyone would want to. You canât imagine someone watching you for long without getting bored.
Still.
This helps.
You quickly tuck the razor back into the toiletry bag and shove it away, returning the tape to the drawer like nothing happened. Your movements are quick, almost instinctive, like youâre afraid someone might walk in and catch you even though the room is empty. You glance up.
Yup, still no one but sad, old you.
Itâs been quiet all day. You wouldâve expected more people by now, it is spring, after all. The kind of season where things pick up, where people start going out more. But today is slow. Like most days lately.
Might as well eat.
You reach into your bag and pull out a small pack of chips. Just plain salted ones, nothing fancy. You turn slightly away from the desk before opening them, partly so you donât get crumbs everywhere on it, partly so if someone does walk in, the first thing they see isnât you eating.
The bag crinkles loudly as you open it. You wince a little, then start eating, trying to be as quiet as possible.
Crunch.
Crunch.
Crunch.
Your phone sits beside you, screen lighting up every so often as you check it. Nothing. Youâve been waiting for Ben to text back for two hours now.
You donât like it when he takes this long. You donât like the silence, the emptiness that creeps in when heâs not there to fill it. Itâs almost funny, in a bitter kind of way. You used to love being alone. Craved it, even. Now it feels suffocating. Things change.
You shift slightly, staring at your phone again. Now the power button is all greasy because you didn't lick the chip residue off your fingers.
Sometimes, you feel guilty. Like youâre using him. Like youâve built your stability around him in a way that isnât fair. You donât actually feel better about yourself, not really. No matter what he says, you still feel like something discarded, something at the very bottom of everythingâŠThat should explain well enough why he stopped trying.
And yet, the guilt doesnât go away. If anything, it grows. It sits heavy in your chest, mixing with everything else until you canât tell one feeling from another. You exhale sharply. Great. Now youâre thinking about it again.
Your eyes drop to the chip bag in your hands. Itâs almost empty.
Already?
A flicker of disgust curls in your stomach. Look at you. Sitting here, eating junk food at work like it doesnât matter. Like you donât care. Like youâve completely lost any sense of shame. You crumple the empty bag and toss it into the trash.
Your hands instinctively move to wipe themselves on your thighs, but you stop midway. That would just make you look worse. Dirtier. You hesitate, then stand up abruptly, grabbing your toiletry bag again.
Bathroom.
Quickly. Before anyone comes in.
You slip inside, licking your fingers so as to not get yourâŠequipment dirty, and shut the door behind you, leaning back against it for a moment. The quiet is even more intense. Your heartbeat sounds louder.
Your hands move on their own as you open the bag and take out the razor again.
Your fingers tremble slightly as you pull your black jeans down just enough.
squeeze around the wound a bit just to see some more of the blood leak out.
You turn to the sink and rinse the razor, watching the water wash the red away until it disappears completely. Then you tuck it back into the bag.
Afterwards you grab some toilet paper, wet it under the tap, and press it gently against your skin, then dab it dry. Itâs not ideal, but your genius self forgot to bring wet wipes again, so it has to do.
Youâve always been scared of going deeper.
Itâs almost ironic. Being afraid of death, while doing something that dances so close to it. But thatâs justâŠyou, isnât it?
Pathetic.
The word settles heavily in your mind.
You pull your jeans back up. The dark fabric will hide any blood that could potentially stain it. You wash your hands carefully, watching the water swirl down the drain, then dry them off.
For a moment, you just stand there, staring at your reflection. Then you look away, open the door, and step back out.
11:23 p.m., March 21st, 20XX.
The mattress dips beneath you, soft in a way that is almost comforting. Your hair fans out across the pillow and sheets in messy strands, catching faintly in the cold, bluish glow of your laptop screen â the only light cutting through the darkness of your room. The night outside offers nothing in return. Thick clouds smother the sky, hiding the stars, the moon, everything. It feels like the whole world has dimmed itself down to match your room.
Your fingers hover over the touchpad, sluggish, before dragging across it with just enough effort to click another video. Some long, rambling iceberg video about amusement park incidents. You donât even remember when you started watching these kinds of things, but theyâve become background noise lately. Something to fill the silence. However, you pause it almost immediately.
Discord opens with a familiar click, your fingers moving a little faster now as you type. Youâve been messaging him every few minutes, ten, maybe less. You try not to think too hard about that. Heâs never complained. Never said you were annoying. That has to mean something, right? Hopefully he isn't just holding back.
Y/N: heyy
Y/N: u done?
You stare at the screen for a few seconds. No typing bubble.
A quiet sigh slips past your lips, barely audible even to yourself, and you switch back to the video. The narratorâs voice fills the room again, droning on about safety failures and negligence. Your eyes sting, dry and tired, so you rub at them with the heel of your palm, blinking rapidly as if that might help.
You shift in bed, the sheets bunching beneath you, and reach blindly for the bag of tiny star-shaped chocolates sitting beside your laptop. You used to eat them when you were younger, so when you've found them in the store one time when going back from work, you couldn't help but buy them to bring back some memories. You grab a handful and shove them into your mouth, barely tasting them at first. You lick your fingers, slow and absentminded, before wiping them against your hoodie. Itâs already stained in places, covered in old marks you stopped caring about days ago, so whatâs one more?
You should go grocery shopping.
The thought drifts in uninvited, heavy and inconvenient. Thereâs barely anything left in the kitchen. Youâve been putting it off for days now. You donât want to go. It means stepping outside, standing in lines, exchanging empty words with strangers. Time wasted. Time that could be spent here. Talking to him. Even the few minutes talking to the cashier feel like too much time wasted.
Your hand reaches for your phone this time, unlocking it without thinking. The video keeps playing in the background, you donât even bother pausing it. You scroll for a moment, then open a delivery app. You can afford it. Itâs easier and faster. You hum quietly to yourself as you remember to place an order tomorrow.
You rest your phone screen-down on your chest, rising and falling with your breathing as your gaze drifts back to the laptop.
The narrator keeps talking. Something about preventable deaths. Mistakes that should have been obvious. People not paying attention. Your brows knit faintly, a flicker of discomfort crossing your face, but it doesnât last.
A soft ping cuts through the room.
Youâre already moving before you consciously register it, clicking back onto Discord.
M4J0R4: im here
M4J0R4: Hey :p
A smile spreads across your face almost instantly. You sit up a little too quickly, and your phone slips off your chest, hitting the mattress with a dull thud. You barely notice.
The laptop is pulled onto your lap, the warmth seeping through your clothes immediately. Itâs almost too hot, especially where your skin isâŠsensitive, but you ignore it. Youâve gotten used to ignoring worse.
You think vaguely that you read somewhere itâs bad for you. Something about heat, or radiation, or whatever. Probably pseudoscience. Probably not. You donât really care enough to find out.
Y/N: What were u doing!!
His reply comes quickly this time.
M4J0R4: Just had to clean up a bit
Of course he did.
You smile again, softer now. Heâs soâŠput together. At least compared to you. You glance briefly around your room. Clothes, wrappers, things half-finished and abandoned. You used to try to keep it clean. You donât tell him you stopped. He wouldnât like that. Youâre sure of it.
He already listens to enough.
Your fingers move quickly now, tapping out your thoughts before they can settle.
Y/N: wanna play something
Y/N: or watch a movie
Y/N: Actually i found one i want to see it with you
Y/N: Its abt some alien parasite that comes to earth from a meteorite
Thereâs a pause. You watch the screen, waiting.
M4J0R4: Just gimmie the title and I'll stream it
Your smile widens.
You send it, then stretch your back with a quiet groan, reaching behind you to prop your pillow against the bedframe. Once itâs in place, you lean back into it, adjusting until it feels just right.
Something about the movie tugs at your memory. A vague recollection of some old flash game you played years ago. Newgrounds, maybe. You controlled a worm or something like that, ate things, mutated. It was weird but fun. You canât remember the name. Youâll look it up laterâŠif you remember, that is.
Soon enough, the movie starts.
You and Ben watch together. Both muted. That was his rule. No voice or face. He said he didnât like how he sounded or looked and you accepted that. Mostly.
Still, it nags at you sometimes. The imbalance. He knows things about you â small things, big things. Things you donât even remember telling him. Like where you live.
You frown faintly at that thought.
When did you tell him that?
Your mind tries to trace it back, but the memory slips away from you. Well, he somehow knew about that incident in your hotel, back when you first met on that chat site. But it was on the news. Anyone couldâve seen it. So that's probably where he knew it from.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
You let the thought go.
But curiosity lingers.
What does he look like? What does he sound like? What would it be like to sit next to him instead of thisâŠtyping, waiting, imagining?
Your face warms slightly at the thought, and you shake your head, almost embarrassed with yourself. Itâs pathetic. Heâs just your friend.
StillâŠ
Your eyes drift to his profile picture. Link, from The Legend of Zelda. Youâve stared at it enough times that your brain fills in the gaps automatically. You picture him like thatâŠjust⊠human. No pointy ears.
You smile softly.
A sudden scream from the movie snaps your attention back. On screen, a girl convulses as something tears its way out of her stomach. You watch it without flinching.
Stuff like this doesnât really get to you anymore.
Your gaze drops to the keyboard instead. Youâre not paying attention.
Y/N: Ben can u pause
The movie halts almost immediately.
You type again, hesitating just a little this time.
Y/N: Maybe we could talk normally instead of texting
Y/N: I'd focus better on the movie and could comment on it
Y/N: also itd be nice to hear your voice ^_^
No response. Your chest tightens, just slightly. You rush to fill the silence. Digital silence, yeah.
Y/N: I mean no pressure or anything
Y/N: if you don't want to it's ok
A moment passes.
M4J0R4: Yeah sorry no
M4J0R4: my throat is sore recently too sooo maybe another time
Another time.
The words settle gently in your mind, soft and hopeful.
You smile.
Y/N: Oki
Y/N: You can play the movie
It resumes, but your attention doesnât.
Your thoughts drift again, pulled toward him like they always are. You imagine his voice now, trying different versions in your head. Would it be low? Soft? Rough? Smooth like velvet? You hum quietly, lost in it.
The longer you drift, the more aware you become of the heat against your legs. The laptop burns through the fabric of your clothes, sharp and uncomfortable now.
You hiss under your breath, wincing as you lift it slightly.
âJesus,â you mutter to yourself. Itâs overheating way too often and way too much now.
You set the laptop down beside you, wincing slightly as the heat leaves your skin in uneven waves. Your thighs tingle, oversensitive where the warmth had lingered too long, especially on the cuts. For a moment, you just sit there, letting the cool air settle back in.
Then your eyes drift upward and focus on the camera. The tiny light beside it is on.
You freeze.
Itâs faint, easy to miss if you werenât already staring, but unmistakable. Your stomach tightens.
âHuhâŠâ
The sound leaves your lips hollow, uncertain. Your brain scrambles for a rational explanation. Your laptop is oldâŠand it glitches, freezes, has so many bugsâŠOverheats like itâs trying to combust half the time. Maybe itâs justâŠthat. Yeah, probably. It has to be harmless.
Still, your fingers twitch slightly, the thought of covering it crossing your mind, just like you did with your phone. A piece of tape. A sticker. Anything on hand would be nice to be honest.
But you donât. Not yet.
You tell yourself youâll wait. Maybe it'llâŠturn off on its own or something.
The movie keeps playing, voices bleeding into the silence, but youâve already checked out. Your focus slips completely now, unraveling thread by thread until you donât even hear whatâs happening on screen anymore.
Instead, you open your files.
If you canât focus, you might as well do something. Clean things up a little. Maybe if your laptop didnât have to fight for its life every time you turned it on, it wouldnât act like this.
You open up folders, and as you do so, windows stack on top of each other. You try deleting a few of the files inside of them.
Error.
That same message you got before. When you tried deleting those photos of yourself. You kind of hoped that with time it'll just go away on its own.
You stare at it for a second too long, something cold creeping up your spine.
â...Itâs fine,â you murmur under your breath, more to fill the silence than anything else.
You dig deeper. You dig further into directories you didn't even know existed on this thing, you're not some I.T specialist after all. Then, you stumble upon a folder you don't recognize, the name being a random string of letters and numbers. Which, you suppose, should fit with the other folders you have as you name them all this way. However, this one in particular had this weird...feel about it. Especially if you consider the fact that it was so deep in the files, in a place where you wouldn't create new folders.
Your cursor hovers, then you click. Your breath stops.
Photos.
Dozens of them.
Your face.
Your room.
You.
Taken seconds ago.
The angle...like it was taken through your laptop camera.
Your chest tightens so fast it almost hurts. Your throat closes up as you stare, your brain refusing to process what your eyes are clearly seeing.
âNoâŠno, noâŠâ
Your gaze flicks up. To the camera.
That tiny light is still on.
Watching.
You swallow hard, forcing your face to stay still. Like that matters. Like whoever, whatever, is behind this could read your expression through the screen.
Slowly, mechanically, you close the folder.
Okay, calm down.
Thereâs an explanation. There has to be. Your hands move, grabbing your phone. Unlocking it and then searching. Digging through your gallery with growing urgency. There are photos in there as well.
Okay, nevermind, panic.
Your breathing picks up, shallow and uneven.
Someone is watching you.
The proof is right there, sitting in your devices right under your nose all this time. But it doesnât make sense. Why would anyone do it like this? Why leave evidence behind for you to find?
âŠ
They wouldn't do that unless they wanted you to find it.
Your stomach twists violently. You feel sick. Actually sick.
Like you might throw up or pass out or both at once.
You force yourself to breathe. In. Out. It doesnât help.
Your phone rests beside you now, abandoned, as your hands tremble in your lap. You donât even notice the Discord notification at first.
Then another.
And another.
You look back at the screen.
M4J0R4: Are u ok?
Your fingers feel stiff, disconnected, as you type.
Y/N: Yeah srry
The lie sits heavy in your chest.
You weren't sure if you should tell him or not. All of this stuff that keeps happening to youâŠit makes less and less sense with every passing day. It all started with Rosa's death, and after thatâŠare you next? Is someone really stalking you just to kill you? Toying with you? It would make sense, isolating you, just to get you one day. No, no, Rosa's death was a suicideâŠ
âŠAre you being driven to that?
Was she driven to that?
Your grip tightens on the bedsheets, knuckles paling. Your breath stutters. Your thumbs move again before you can stop them.
Y/N: Ben i think someone wants me dead
The movie pauses instantly.
M4J0R4: What are you talking abt?
Your heart pounds against your ribs as you type, each message more frantic than the last.
Y/N: I just saw photos of me on my laptop, taken from my front camera
Y/N: On my phone too
Y/N: And it was all kept in some weird folder
Thereâs a pause.
M4J0R4: Maybe it's some bug
M4J0R4: I could look into it for you
M4J0R4: Don't worry abt that why would anyone want you dead lmaooo
M4J0R4: you're so paranoid it's cute sometimes
M4J0R4: Its not like you have anyone beside me
âŠ
The words hit harder than they should.
Your chest tightens again, but for a different reason now.
Heâs right.
Who would go after you?
It would have to be random, someone you've never met, orâŠ
Or him.
The idea feels wrong the moment it forms. Ugly. Unfair. Heâs been there for you. Heâs the only one who has been.
You donât want to believe it.
You wonât.
âŠright?
M4J0R4: Don't ignore me
Your fingers hesitate.
Then type.
Y/N: Ben is it you?
You stare at the screen, heart in your throat. If he denies it, you can still take it back. Say itâs a joke. Laugh it off.
You just need him to deny it.
Just say no.
Justâ
M4J0R4: What if I was?
M4J0R4: What would you do about it?
M4J0R4: Call the police?
M4J0R4: You'd be dead before they even arrived
Your breath catches.
Everything inside you goes cold.
Is heâŠjoking?
He has to be joking.
Something deep in your gut twists sharply.
No.
He isnât.
Y/N: Ben this isn't funny haha
Your message looks pathetic even to you.
M4J0R4: Well, it's not a joke in the first place
It feels like the entire world tilts, and with it everything you've known shattered in an instant and even attempting to piece it back together will cut your fingers and hands.
Tears blur your vision before you even realize youâre crying.
M4J0R4: Are you gonna cry now?
M4J0R4: Its cute whenever you do that
M4J0R4: Its likeâŠlooking at a puppy getting kicked lol
M4J0R4: Yk there are people on dark web that stream that stuff
Your hands shake harder now.
M4J0R4: I got you speechless huh
M4J0R4: How about you just end it all?
M4J0R4: I didn't think you'd be smart enough to figure this out, you seemed rather out of it lately
M4J0R4: I was sure I'd get you to do it soon without much prompting on my side
M4J0R4: But it seems I underestimated you, so congrats
Each message lands like a blow right to your stomach.
This was the one thing keeping you together.
And now you have nothing.
Nothing.
Your thoughts fracture, slipping into something dark and heavy. Maybe heâs right and this is what you deserve, everything happening to you is some sick divine punishment for being such a piece of shit.
M4J0R4: You still had such a silly crush on me
M4J0R4: So desperate you fell for a dude who you weren't even sure his name is actually Ben
M4J0R4: You have that razor right? How about you do one thing right and put on a show for me?
M4J0R4: Be useful for something in your life for once instead of being such a parasite
M4J0R4: Im doing you and society a favor with this
Your vision swims. Your chest aches. Your breathing breaks.
âŠand then something snaps.
No.
You wonât give him that.
Anything but that.
Even if you will have to spend every single day that remains in your lifetime in misery, you won't give him the satisfaction of taking your life. This is the last act of self-preservation you have left in you.
You refuse to give him what he wants so bad.
With shaking hands, you move your cursor to the block button and click it. You donât stop there. You shut the laptop completely, the room going black in an instant. Your phone follows, you block him everywhere you can.
Heâs gone.
You go out of your room into the kitchen. Your hands fumble with a glass, filling it with water, nearly spilling it as you drink too fast. Your whole body trembles.
You wish you had something stronger. Like whiskey or vodka. But youâre not going out to buy it. You're not going to cut yourself either.
And maybe thatâs good.
Because you know youâre not stable enough right now to trust yourself with anything sharp. Not like this.
At least here, he canât see you.
Your laptop. Your phone. Theyâre in the other room.
Heâs cut off. Youâre alone. You feelâŠsomewhat safe.
The silence stretches, then you hear your name trough...something like static.
â...Y/N.â
01:27 a.m., March 22nd, 20XX.
The TV is on.A harsh white glow spills into the room, flattening the furniture into long, ugly shadows. The static crackles softly, a dry, whispering sound, like someone trying to speak through a mouth full of dust.
You stand there for a moment, the half-full glass of water halfway to your lips, heart beating so loudly it feels like it might interrupt whateverâŠthis is. You swallow anyway. Hydration is important. Even during what is the beginning of your psychological collapse. Or murder. The chances are fifty-fifty, if you can trust whatever BEN told you.
You set the glass down slowly, carefully. For a second, you consider the comforting lie â that itâs a coincidence, a cheap TV doing cheap TV things. However after all that happened, it would be both wishful thinking, and you dumbing yourself down on purpose. So as much as you want to entertain the idea, you can't. Idiots die first in horror stories. You take a step closer.
âBEN?! Where the hell are youâ?!â
Your voice cuts through the room, louder than you expected. Your only answer is the static of the television. You exhale sharply and drop onto the couch, grabbing the remote like itâs going to save you (it has never saved you from anything in its life, but tonight could be its big moment, who knows, maybe you'll knock someone out with it).
âRight here.â
The voice slithers out of the TV. It sounds wrong. Flat and mechanical, like text-to-speech, but make it filtered through an old radio.Your grip tightens around the remote. You glance around the room like BEN might be hiding behind the curtains, under the table, inside your wallsâŠThen your eyes snap back to the screen.
âI'm not going to do anything to myself,â you say, forcing your voice steady. It trembles anyway. âIf you want meâ...want me dead so bad, go kill me yourself, coward.â
Nice. Strong. Confident.
Your hands are shaking.
ââŠPlease. Just leave me alone.â
Less strong. Slightly pathetic, but at least honest.
You stare down at the remote. Why are you even talking to him? Why are you engaging? Thatâs exactly what he wants, right? You press the power button.
Click.
Darkness floods the room instantly and you also feel instant relief coming with it. You let out a soft breath.
Okay. Good. Problem solved. Y/N, you are a genius. Youâ
Click.
The TV turns back on after what? 3 seconds?You blink in slight disbelief, then press the button again.
Off. On. Off. On.
You keep going. Faster now.
Clicking like youâre trying to beat it in a race. Thirty seconds. Forty. A full minute of this ridiculous, desperate back-and-forth until your thumb aches and you finally give up.
The TV stays on. You stare at it, breathing harder than you should be. How is he doing that? Is he some kind of hacker? Well, he definitely is, butâŠis he like an ultra-advanced psycho hacker whose hobby is making people kill themselves? Next thing you will find out he uses 4-chan and telegram or something?
âI told you to leave me alone. You're not getting anything more out of me.â you mutter, walking over. You yank the plug out of the socket. The TV stays on. Thereâs a pause.
ââŠNo.âStill on.ââŠNo, no, no, noââ
Still. On.
You stare at it. It stares back. Not literally. But it feels like it could. Who knows, maybe he's inside somehow. Okay, that's too ridiculous even for thisâŠwhole situation. But then again, how the hell is it still on despite not being plugged in? You slowly turn your head toward the empty outlet then back to the TV. You let out a long, suffering groan and collapse back onto the couch.
âHow are you doing this?!â
Your voice rises despite yourself.
A laugh answers you; thin, distorted, unmistakably mocking.
âI have my ways.â
You stare at the screen.
â...If you don't want to answer, just keep quiet,â you say flatly. âYou couldnât have said something less helpful if you tried.â
The remote trembles in your hands, though whether from fear, anger or despair, youâre not sure anymore.
ââŠSo what more do you want from me?â you ask, exhaustion creeping in. âI told you. Iâm not going to do anything.â
A brief pause is between you and BEN.
âOh, no, no, Y/N. I changed my mind.â Something twists in your stomach. âI want to keep you alive. For the time being.â
What? You look up at the TV as if it was BEN standing in front of you instead.
âI thought I had you all figured out,â he continues. âBut you proved me wrong. You know, thatâs the first time thatâs happened.â
Thereâs something almost cheerful in it. Like heâs talking about a fun hobby. LikeâŠbaking or painting. Your brows knit together as he goes on.
âPeople are predictable,â he goes on. âThey meet me, I offer them comfort, friendshipâŠall the things they think they need. They grow dependent. And thenâŠThey break. One way or another. After that I move on and the cycle repeats.â
Rosa. Of course. You knew it. Your hands curl into fists. Words pile up in your chest â anger, disgust, something close to hatred â but they donât come out. Whatâs the point? What would that change?
âYou didnât follow that pattern,â he says. âSo Iâve decided youâreâŠinteresting. Worth keeping around until I finally understand you. And when that happensâŠYouâll stop being fun, and I'm sure you can figure out what comes after.â
Your jaw tightens.
âAnd what makes you think I agree to any of this?â
Your voice comes out sharper now, anger cutting through the other emotions.
âYou donât have a say in this.â
That does it.It's all his fault. Rosaâs death, your declining mental state, you wouldn't have ever needed his comfort if he didn't cause all this. The fact your old life is gone is all HIS fault. Something in you snaps at the realization. You stand so fast the remote slips from your hand and hits the floor with a dull clack. You barely notice. Youâre already moving; already swinging.
Your fist connects with the screen. Glass cracks. The screen splinters. You keep going, fueled by adrenaline and rage and the desperate need to break something back. Just how he broke you.
Finally, you stop. Your breathing is ragged. You feel throbbing pain. You look down. Your hand is bleeding.
ââŠOkay,â you breathe, staring at the shattered remains of your TV. â...that was a bit excessive...â
But still, checkmate. Right? You stand there for a moment longer, waiting and listening in, but don't hear anything anymore. You turn and head toward the bathroom, legs still shaky, your heartbeat slowly coming down.
As you stand in the bathroom, staring at your reflection and soon, looking for some tweezers, you try to remember the last time you were this angry.Not annoyed. Not resentful. Not that dull, familiar ache youâve learned to tuck neatly behind your ribs. Actually angry. It takes a moment, then it comes back. A few years ago. 17. Still stuck in that godforsaken town. People call that age âthe start of independence and rebellion,â like it was something exciting. However, youâd never been the rebellious type. You didnât yell. You didnât slam doors. You didnât break things, well, aside from one very unfortunate TV just now. You swallowed things down instead until they burned your throat. Let them simmer. Let them rot. Sometimes you didnât even let yourself feel them at all. Youâd seen what anger did to people, how it twisted them, how it burned through everything they touched. You didnât want to be that.âŠFunny how that worked out.
You finally spot a pair of tweezers by the sink. You sit down on the toilet lid, hand trembling slightly as you start picking out shards of glass. Each piece stings as it slides free. You hiss softly with each pull. Your mind drifts back again. It was the beginning of summer back then. Youâd been âhanging outâ with your friends: Leah, Catherine, Claire, and Oliver. Well.âHanging outâ is generous. You tagged along.Inserted yourself into their plans is a better way to put this. Because if you didnât, you wouldnât exist to them outside of school. And at school, you played a role. The good kid.Reliable. Quiet, but not too quiet. Friendly, but not memorable. The human equivalent of a clean white shirt; inoffensive, useful, and mostly there to make everything else look better. It was almost funny, in hindsight. You made them look good. That was your function. Because when they did something wrong, no one suspected them. After all, they hung out with you. And you were good. So they mustâve been too. You rinse your hand under cold water. It stings sharply, snapping you back for a second. Blood swirls down the drain in thin, diluted ribbons.
You reach for the bandages, clumsily wrapping your palm. Itâs messy, uneven. You're not the best at it, but does it require much skill anyways? If it sticks, it sticks. That dayâŠyeah. You were outside of town, near the forest. You used to like that place.It was quiet in a good way. Sometimes youâd go alone, just to breathe. If you were lucky, youâd catch a glimpse of a deer slipping through the trees, or a fox darting past like a flicker of fire. You loved that.Youâd all been sitting in a circle on a blanket with snacks. They talked and laughed while you mostly nodded along. Background noise with legs, thatâs what you were. Then Claire pulled out a box. You remember thinking it was weird. Curious, maybe. Then she opened it. A hamster. Small with light cream fur. Tiny nose twitching and black dots for eyes.
You lean your head back against the cool bathroom wall now, eyes half-lidded, breath slow. Your hand throbs under the bandage. You donât want to remember the rest.But you do. At first, you froze. Because your brain couldnât quite process it â what she was doing, what the others were letting her do. Then you remember lunging forward, grabbing her wrist, knocking the rock out of her hand. Your voice was loud, sharp and unfamiliar. And their reactions.
âRelax.â
âItâs just a hamster.â
âItâs dead anyway.â
Like that somehow made it better. Like that made it normal. Everyone except Leah. Leah, who actually looked at you like you werenât insane. Who said it was disgusting. Youâd always had a talent for picking the worst possible moments to be brave. Or maybe those were the only moments that actually mattered. Who knows.
You didnât speak to the others after that. Not for the rest of the summer. After that, it was just you and Leah. All senior year. You blink, staring at the ceiling. Your hand pulses again. Right. Present moment.You push yourself up from the toilet, flexing your fingers carefully. It still hurts, you just hope to feel better by tomorrow morning.
As you step out of the bathroom, your thoughts drift back uninvited.Is that what you are to him? To BEN?Just another small, helpless thing. Something to observe. Something to poke and prod and break, just to see how it works. Like that hamster. The comparison makes your stomach churn. No, you proved something. You're not going to play his little game. Still. Thereâs that thought. The ugly one. What is it with your luck? You always seem to attract the worst people. Or maybeâŠMaybe everyoneâs like that, deep down. Maybe âgoodâ is just a convenient story people tell each other so they can sleep at night without checking under the bed for themselves. Maybe youâre not an exception and youâre just better at pretending. You shake your head and along with that, the thoughts away.
You let out a tired sigh and lean briefly against the wall before pushing yourself forward, you decide to clean up the mess you've made in the morning.
SUMMARY: You move into the city in an attempt to escape the small town you grew up in, and especially the people living there. Months later, that escape has narrowed into a stagnant routine: a two-star hotel front desk, a rented apartment, and a life without any direction, ambitions, or goals. Everything changes when a guest is found dead during your shift, allegedly due to commiting suicide. You find the body. The image follows you home, lingers behind your eyelids, and refuses to let go.
Luckily for you, a stranger online is here to help :)
CW (for the whole fanfic, not just this part): Suicide, Minor character death, Self-harm, Hallucinations, Reader has issues and shitty parents, Physical/Psychological abuse, Animal abuse/death, Vomiting, Still considering writing smut but as of now there isn't any, Slow burn, Mix of fanon and canon BEN, Fem! Reader implied but if you squint it can be gender neutral.
WC: 7.5k
A/N: I decided to post this fic from my ao3, I plan to post part 2 (aka other 3 chapters) tomorrow or in a few days. I also think I'll post this fic here every 3 chapters for consistency. I hope you enjoy reading, and if you do, leave a like/reblog/comment (i love comments) ⥠happy reading âĄâĄâĄ !
5:40 a.m., November 18th, 20XX.
You stand in front of the bathroom mirror, rubbing the remnants of sleep from your eyes with one hand while the other fumbles blindly along the counter in search of your toothbrush. Your reflection looks back at you â pale and unfocused â until the blur finally sharpens enough to be recognizably you.
You open your mouth and shove the toothbrush between your teeth, still dry. A low hum escapes your throat, hovering somewhere between a sigh and a growl, irritation seeping out before you even register it. Only then do you glance around the bathroom, eyes sluggishly scanning for the toothpaste.
Itâs been like this for months now. At first, you told yourself it was nothing. Just stress. Poor sleep. A bad diet. Something temporary, something that would fade once you settled into your new routine after moving out, after learning how to exist on your own.
But it never faded.
If anything, itâs gotten worse. The fog feels heavier, denser, pressing in as responsibilities pile up one by one. Not that there are many to begin with, which somehow makes it feel even more pathetic. Maybe you just arenât built for this. For society. Maybe youâre defective; an outcast, a leech, a background character doomed to never amount to anything significant. Stunted by nothing at all.
The thought train derails when you feel something cold splatter against your toes. You glance down to see toothpaste dripping onto your feet, streaking the bathroom tiles. Youâve been squeezing the tube the entire time, lost in your own head. You sigh, resigned, and leave the mess for later.
The rest of your morning passes in a haze, your body moving on autopilot through a familiar routine: wash your face, get dressed, which is merely a half-hearted attempt at looking presentable. You feel detached, like youâre watching yourself from someone else's eyes. A spectator in your own life. And, oddly enough, itâs comforting.
Youâre not sure youâd survive having to consciously endure the same motions every single day. Some people find comfort in routine, in predictability. Maybe you would too, if it didnât feel so empty. So gray. So relentlessly uneventful.
Wake up. Get ready. Go to work. Work. Go home. Sleep. Rinse and repeat.
College crosses your mind, as it often does. Someday. When you have money. The idea of drowning in debt simply because you dared to want an education doesnât sound appealing, not now. And your parentsâŠwell. They were never exactly generous, especially when money was involved. Even if they were, thereâs still a long list of reasons you cut them out of your life entirely. Things you refuse to think about, especially not this early in the morning.
And then, youâre on the metro.
You donât remember leaving the apartment. You donât remember locking the door, or walking down the street, or stepping onto the train. It barely registers anymore. Youâve grown accustomed to losing time like this. When you finally step off and head toward your workplace, it feels more like arriving at a checkpoint than a destination. Getting to work can be crossed out from your list of daily tasks, that's always the same.
The hotel looms ahead of you. A small, unimpressive place. You work the front desk. Receptionist, technically. You donât exactly have a charming personality, but neither does the hotel. From what your coworker told you, you were the youngest applicant theyâd had in a while. Front desk jobs are like that; they want someone young, someone pleasant to look at. Or at least young. Makeup can usually handle the pleasant part.
You clock in and slide into the chair behind the desk. Itâs going to be a slow day, you can already tell. November isnât exactly prime vacation season, and this place isnât popular enough to compensate for that. At least if it is slow, you wonât have to deal with gap-year backpackers, drunk middle-aged men sleeping off marital fights, or couples pretending they arenât here to cheat on someone.
You boot up the computer and immediately pull up an online eight-ball pool game. Anyone coming in would assume youâre working. The site is some obscure Chinese page loaded with ridiculous power-ups that activate every few seconds without you even clicking anything. Bright colors, loud effects, all that jazz. It made you feel like an iPad baby, hypnotized by overstimulating YouTube cartoons.
â Ah, fuck,â you mumble under your breath as the ball misses the pocket. The sound of your own voice startles you. The realization that you haven't spoken since you woke up hitting you like a train. Itâs barely there, thin and rough, like the croak of a strangled frog. You clear your throat and glance around, suddenly self-conscious, before spotting your bag.
You lean down, grab your water bottle, and take a long sip. Then another. And another. You drink like a man stranded in the desert, until you finally notice a presence at the desk.
âHello? Excuse me. Iâd like a room for one, if you have any free.â
The woman looks to be in her early twenties, dressed casually. Pretty, too pretty, almost. She doesnât fit the usual clientele at all.
You straighten, setting the bottle down as though it burned you, and lick your lips awkwardly.
âAh, yes, of course. We have plenty of rooms available.â Your fingers move quickly over the keyboard as you speak, eyes glued to the screen. âIâll need your name, phone number, and credit card.â
Her name is Rosa Anderson. She books two nights, thanks you politely, and disappears upstairs. She doesnât leave her room for the rest of your shift. Only one other couple checks in.
When your shift ends, you greet Paula, she works the shift from 3 to 11pm. You head home without another word.
The moment you step into your apartment, your body gives up. You collapse onto the bed without even taking your shoes off. The day wasnât particularly demanding, but it feels like youâve run a marathon. Like youâve done a thousand jumping jacks on an empty stomach.
You don't even notice when your eyelids drop, let alone when you fall asleep for the rest of the day.
2:02 p.m., November 19th, 20XX.
Thereâs been a strange feeling sitting in your stomach all day. Not dread, noâŠthere wasnât any sharp panic, or immediate fear, nothing like that. Just something off. Like a loose thread tugging at the back of your mind. Like the quiet certainty that something, somewhere, has gone wrong and simply hasnât announced itself yet.
Maybe youâve unlocked a sixth sense. That would be kind of cool, wouldnât it? You could lean into it. Buy some cheap scarves, pitch a tent somewhere sketchy, lay out tarot cards for strangers. Tell them vague things about love and misfortune and fate. âI see change in your future,â youâd say, very seriously. People eat that stuff up.
You glance around the lobby.
Empty.
Painfully so. The lights hum softly overhead, the same artificial glow you got used to by now, bleaching the beige walls into something even duller than usual. No guests coming in. No one checking out. Not even the sound of footsteps echoing down the hall. Another slow dayâŠ
And then it clicks.
You havenât seen her.
Rosa.
You havenât seen her leave her room. Not once. You got here ten minutes before seven this morning, you haven't seen her leave yesterday either.
ThatâsâŠodd.
But only odd enough to notice, not enough to panic. Maybe sheâs an early bird and left before your shift even started. Or perhaps went to a party at night and still isn't back. Thatâs reasonable. Yeah. The most obvious explanation. Youâre probably just overthinking things â since when do you keep track of guests like this, anyway?
You tell yourself that, yet the feeling in your gut tightens.
Itâs been there since the moment you stepped behind the desk. You try to ignore it, but it clings to you like static, buzzing under your skin.
With a sigh, you push your chair back and stand. Your body feels tense without you consciously willing it to be, shoulders stiff, breath shallow. You reach beneath the counter and take out the spare key.
Room 13.
âŠ
Of course itâs 13.
âWhy are you doing this?â you ask yourself, internally scoffing. This isnât your job. Youâre not security. Youâre not housekeeping. Youâre just a receptionist, playing fucking 8-Ball or ocassional solitaire behind a desk.
The key slides into the lock anyway.
Before you can second-guess yourself, before you can turn back and sit down and laugh at your own paranoia, at how you could get a complaint to the manager about you disturbing guests, the door clicks open.
The smell hits you immediately. Sharp and metallic, stinging your nostrils, making your nose wrinkle.
Your palms grow damp as you freeze up, fingers tightening around the key. ThisâŠthis is not good. Every instinct youâve been ignoring since this morning suddenly screams at once.
âRosa?â you call out, hesitantly stepping inside.
Your voice almost echoes in the quiet room. You already know there wonât be an answer. Still, you wait a moment longer than necessary, as if hoping youâll be proven wrong. Still, nothing.
âFuck,â you mutter under your breath. Why does this have to happen during your shift? Of all people. Of all days.
Your eyes drift toward the bathroom.
The door is closed, but the smell is stronger there, unmistakable now. Blood. You know it is. Nothing else smells like that. Warm and sour and heavy in the air. You canât lie to yourself anymore, as much as you wish to, not when the truth is this obvious.
Your feet carry you forward despite your better judgment. You brace yourself, heart pounding so loudly it drowns every other sound out. One hand reaches for the door, fingers trembling.
It creaks open.
For a split second, your mind refuses to process what youâre seeing.
Then it does.
Blood. Everywhere.
It coats the tiles, pools unnaturally on the floor, splattered and smeared in a way that makes your stomach lurch. You step forward without realizing it and let out a small, broken sound when your shoe sinks into something wet. You stumble back, breath hitching, eyes finally landing on the body crumpled against the wall.
Rosa.
Sheâs impossibly still.
The razor in her hand is hard to make out at first, lost against the red-stained tiles, nearly invisible beneath the sticky sheen coating everything. Her phone lies nearby, half-submerged in crimson, the screen dark.
You stare.
Youâre surprised you havenât vomited yet. Maybe youâre more desensitized than you thought. But no â desensitization would mean numbness, and you feel everything. Your chest is tight, your thoughts racing so fast they blur together into one hazy mess, from which you can barely pick apart anything coherent. One of the most prominent things isâŠ
Why?
She didn't seem like she's going to do it. No sadness, no nothing.
Then again, every school PSA ever made likes to remind you that suicidal people often seem fine. Happy, even. Normal. The thought does nothing to make this easier to understand.
For a fleeting moment, you convince yourself this has to be a dream. That any second now youâll wake up in your cramped apartment, the sound of your alarm buzzing obnoxiously beside your bed. That none of this is real.
But even as you pinch yourself, blink multiple times, tell yourself in your head to wake upâŠ
âŠThe smell lingers.
7:33 p.m., December 16th, 20XX.
âTwenty-Two year old woman commits suicide at Olive Sierra Hotel, found dead by an employee!â
Those words haunted the news cycle for nearly two weeks.
Another thing that constantly reminded you of it all, was the fact youâd become â rather unwillingly â one of the most important people involved in the investigation. Which made sense, you supposed. You were the one who found her. The first to see her dead. The last to see her alive. However, âimportantâ didnât directly translate to âusefulâ.
What could you tell them? You didnât know her. You didnât know why she did it. You didnât know why she chose a hotel bathroom instead of the privacy of her own home. Sometimes you found yourself spiraling into theories late at night when you couldn't sleep, trying to make sense of it all. Maybe she didnât want her loved ones to find her like that and wanted to spare them the image. The clean up of the blood of someone who was so close and dear left on the floor before dying.
That thought feltâŠalmost kind. Empathetic, even. Which somehow made it all worse to think about.
Still, if not for that sudden, inexplicable hunch, her corpse might have been left there for another day. That had come up during questioning, of course. When you explained it was just a pure instinct, the officers exchanged questioning glances between each other, but didn't say anything more about it. Don't all cops and detectives in movies have those gut feelings that move the case forward? Maybe it really is just a thing of fiction thenâŠ
After that came the reporters. They swarmed the hotel like flies to rotten meat, shoving microphones in your face and asking unnecessary questions. You avoided them as best you could, slipping past with your head down, but even from a distance their presence felt invasive. You werenât a particularly emotional person â or at least you hadnât thought you were until recently â but something about it all felt deeply dejecting. They didn't care about her, not really. Neither did they care about you. All that mattered was to tell the story over and over again, milking it dry for sensation until people got bored. It's a funny thing to say, getting bored of someone's death. Still, that was the truth as far as you could see.
By the time December rolled around, the attention finally started to die down. The reporters moved on. The police closed the case and ruled it as undeniable suicide. Your coworkers stopped bringing it up as well, letting it fade into the past.
You could go back to peacefully wasting your life away! Yay! Okay, that sounded awfully edgy, but you get the point, don't you?
Youâre sitting in your cramped apartment now, legs pulled up on the couch after another shift, eating instant ramen straight from the cup. Spicy; kimchi flavor, you're pretty sure. The TV hums in the background, playing something you arenât really watching. Some game show, but again, you didn't bother with actually looking. You keep it on for the background noise.
And yet, even without any reminders, you still have nightmares. Every. Single. Night. You wish you could exaggerate. Once, you managed to hallucinate the body too.
Youâve thought about therapy. Briefly. But the idea makes you uncomfortable. How do you even start that conversation?
âHey, I found a dead body and now I canât stop seeing it!â
And then what? Theyâd tell you to breathe. To meditate. To âreframe your thoughtsâ. All for the extremely low price of draining your already meager savings. No thanks. You knew that wasnât necessarily fair; after all, youâd never actually tried therapy, but youâre not convinced it wouldnât be a colossal waste of time (and money, and since time IS money, it's waste squared).
You finish the ramen and set the empty cup on the small, wooden coffee table. Then you reach for your phone. Twenty percent battery. You consider grabbing the charger, but the effort feels monumental at the moment, so instead you sink further into the couch.
Ahhh, doomscrolling, Humanity's greatest invention as of yet.
Instagram first. Watching your old high school classmates slowly assemble functional lives fills you with a quiet, bitter jealousy. Diplomas, marriage, one already has a kid. Another posted their house. You exit the app almost immediately. Then you go to Tiktok, which is an even worse clusterfuck, but at least you don't have to look at those people any longer. You also make a mental note to block them later on.
The longer you scroll, the more videos you mindlessly watch, the heavier the loneliness becomes. You become hyperaware of the apartment having only you in it.
Maybe if you had a friend here, youâd be handling all this better. Unfortunately, youâve always been terrible at making friends. You drift in and out of groups. A floater. You could get alongâŠsomehow, but you've never been sought after. When you made the effort instead, it was met with plastic enthusiasm.
You stop yourself before the self-pity spiral fully takes hold.
Fine. Be proactive! Be the change you want to see in yourself! You're pretty sure that's what people say.
You go through a few sites which basically pair you up with a random person to talk to, similar to omegle (RIP). As you finally settle for one, you click to connect.
A few seconds pass. Then a message pops up immediately. Copied and pasted, you took a guess.
STRANGER: 22M looking for a freaky girl ;) send your snap if interested
You sigh.
Of course.
To be honest, what did you expect? A miracle coming at you right away? You disconnect and try again.
STRANGER: 20F wanting to RP, you're my brother's childhood friend, we've had a rivalry since we were young, but now we are going on a road trip to Oregon and forced to share one bedâ
Again.
And again, and again, and again.
Since when was everyone so aggressively horny? And how do they all manage to miss each other and land on someone who wants nothing to do with it? It seems luck is neither on yours, nor their side. Youâre about to give up entirely when you try one last time.
YOU: Hey hey
YOU: How are you?
It feels awkward. Especially when the reply takes a moment longer than you wanted to.
STRANGER: Heeey :p I'm fine, how abt u
You hum quietly. The first normal response youâve gotten in aroundâŠhalf an hour? You didnât keep track.
YOU: Im fine, just bored
YOU: Whats ur name?
STRANGER: Im B-
The screen goes black.
Your phone dies.
You groan, rubbing your face, resisting the urge to hurl the phone across the room. Great. Now you look like an asshole AND youâre alone again. It seems the universe itself is personally invested in keeping you lonely. You grab the phone and shuffle to the bedroom to plug it in. Might as well sleep too. Tomorrowâs Saturday. No work. Small miracles.
You lie in your bed staring at the ceiling, frustration knotting in your chest. You start to miss the past even more, you were constantly tired, just like now, but back then you could sleep peacefully at the very least.
After what feels like an hour, you get up to grab your phone from the floor. The screen lights up painfully bright and you drop it again with a soft thud. Whatever, time doesn't matter. It's dark outside so it's late, all you have to know. You get up to grab some water. You move through the dark apartment half-blind, bumping into the couch because of course you do. Screw that connected kitchen-living room. You finally find your bottle and take a long gulpâ
âand immediately spit it out, then drop the bottle.
Blood. It's so warm. Like someone just cut a fresh kill open and let everything pour in there.
Your hands start shaking. No. No, no. This isnât real. It canât be real. Youâre hallucinating. You're going genuinely crazy but thatâs still better than blood being randomly in your kitchen. Itâs water. Just water. A lie told 100 times eventually becomes the truth.
You leave wet footprints behind you as you stagger toward the bathroom, fingers slipping on the doorknob before you finally manage to turn on the light.
Something grabs your ankle.
You look down.
Rosa.
Her grip is cold and unyielding. You freeze for half a second before kicking her head, panic flooding every nerve. She doesnât let go. Her fingers tighten. But hey, on the bright side, there's no blood anymore so it doesn't feel like you're stuck in a horrifying (yet cheap) slasher movie!
Then she whispers something. A name, you think.
But you donât care about hyperrealistic hallucinations warning you about your impending doom or whatever. You kick again. And again. But she just won't let go and instead claws at your ankle, making you almost scream just from how deep her nails are going.
You jolt awake.
Cold sweat drenches your forehead. Your heart pounds painfully in your chest, you can hear it in the silence of your bedroom. Of course it was a nightmare. A vivid one. You sit up, rubbing your face, trying to steady your breathing.
You really need to do something about this. Not today though. Maybe next week.
Eventually, exhaustion wins. You fall into a shallow, dreamless sleep. It's mediocre, but you'll take anything after this.
1:07 p.m., December 17th, 20XX.
You sleep in, which feels justified given everything. When you finally drag yourself out of bed, your head throbs dully, as if youâre hungover despite not having touched a drop of alcohol. Your mouth is dry. Your limbs feel heavy. Youâre still wearing yesterdayâs clothes, they cling to you uncomfortably, stiff and wrinkled. With a tired sigh, you peel them off and pull on something clean before shuffling toward the bathroom.
The mirror greets you with a face that feelsâŠwrong, which makes you stare at your reflection longer than necessary. Objectively, nothing is that different. Just darker circles under your eyes and your mouth is now tilted to a permanent frown. Still, the longer you stare, the less it feels like youâre looking at yourself. Itâs like watching a stranger who happens to be wearing your skin.
You donât like that feeling.
Okay. You need to go outside.
You get dressed properly. Coat, scarf, boots. Then you grab your phone and wallet, stuffing them into your pocket afterwards just in case. You donât have a destination in mind. You just know that if you stay inside any longer, your thoughts are going to make you bang your head against the wall.
Once you step outside, the cold hits you immediately. You inhale sharply, lungs filling with crisp winter air that stings in the best way. Youâve always liked winter. It was quiet. Everything feels muted and slower. The holiday season helps, too. That made you remember Christmas is coming. You're going to spend it alone. Not like you mind, being alone with your brain is still easier than the company of your family.
As you walk, you take in the decorated houses and storefronts, windows plastered with âChristmas Saleâ signs. The snow beneath your boots crunches loudly, uneven and thick enough to make you stumble if youâre not careful.
You spot a small coffee shop tucked between two buildings and push the door open gratefully. The warmth hits you instantly. You stand in line, fumbling with your wallet, and order a large hot chocolate. When you finally sit down at a small table near the window, wrapping your hands around the cup, heat seeps back into your body.
For the first time in a long while, you relax.
You take out your phone, turn it on for the first time today and freeze up slightly. Youâre still on that chat site. Still connected.
ThatâsâŠstrange.
Your phone died last night. It shouldâve disconnected immediately. And even if it hadnât, most sites automatically end conversations after a few minutes of inactivity. Still, maybe this oneâs justâŠspecial, or the developers suck. Or maybe fate is throwing you a bone after so much fucking you in the ass. You can apologize to the stranger for leaving them on delivered for the whole night at least.
You finally read the message they sent you last night.
STRANGER: Im Ben
You hum softly and start typing back a response.
YOU: sosososososoo sorry For not replying :(( my phone died and then I went to sleep
YOU: I'm surprised the convo didn't end tho
YOU: Im [Y/N] btw
You stare at the screen for a solid five minutes, sipping your drink and wondering if youâve completely botched this. The little typing indicator appears.
STRANGER: Its okay I went to sleep too :p
You sigh in relief. All things considered, that reply was really quick.
YOU: Ive been really stressed lately, thats all ahaha
STRANGER: wanna tell me why? I can listen
YOU: Its a long story, and a SUPER depressing one too
STRANGER: I wanna know even more know
STRANGER: Tell me
STRANGER Tell me
STRANGER: Tell me!!
You hesitate, thumbs hovering over the keyboard. This isnât like you. Trauma dumping on strangers? Really? But he's soâŠoddly convincing, it's almost comical how quick it took for you to give in.
YOU: Ok Ok ill tell you
YOU: So I'm working at a hotel, front desk
YOU: And a month ago a girl offed herself in the bathroom in one of the rooms
YOU: And I found her
YOU: I can't stop thinking about it that's all
Thereâs a pause. Long enough for regret to start creeping in. Then Ben replies.
STRANGER: Olive Sierra? I heard about it
STRANGER: That's awful
STRANGER: Im sorry you had to go trough that :(
STRANGER: Yk for me the best help is just not thinking abt it and distracting myself
STRANGER: Do u play any video games?
You think for a moment. Youâre not really a gamer. Youâve never had the time or the money to get into it seriously. Still, youâve enjoyed them when youâve had the chance.
YOU: Yeah, I don't play much tho
STRANGER: Wanna play something together ?
STRANGER: I could add you on discord
STRANGER: If u have it ofc
The suggestion makes your stomach twist. Itâs soâŠkind and well-meaning. And yet, something inside you recoils. Paranoia again, probably. You crave connection, but the moment itâs offered, you hesitate.
YOU: ill Think about it
YOU: U can give me yours and I'll add u if I make up my mind abt it
Why are you like this? One moment youâre desperate for support, and the next youâre pushing it away over baseless suspicion. Youâve been on edge around everyone lately, convinced theyâre hiding something, that theyâre dangerous. Which is ridiculous.
Rosa wasnât even murdered. She killed herself.
And yetâŠwhen you found her, you felt something. That nagging sense that everything wasnât entirely right. Not that someone killed her, but that something pushed her there. You quickly shake off those thoughts. You don't need, or want to theorize any longer about a dead depressed girl.
Back in your apartment, you shrug off your coat and kick off your snow-covered boots. Despite everything, the outing helped. You feel a little more grounded.
Then you walk into the living room. The TV is on, hissing and crackling with static. You stop short. Youâre almost certain you left it off. But can you trust your memory anymore?
You pick up the remote from the coffee table. As your thumb hovers over the power button, the screen flickers.
For a split second, Rosaâs face fills it.
You yelp and slam the button, plunging the room into silence. Your heart pounds as you stand there, breathing hard.
Another hallucination. Thatâs all.
StillâŠmaybe youâll reconsider Benâs offer.
Just for the distraction.
4:21 p.m., December 24th, 20XX.
You got home from your shift around an hour ago. Yes, you work during Christmas, that's one of the many charms of being employed at a hotel that operates constantly. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, all year round. Holidays were just regular days but with a plastic tree in the corner of the lobby, and a slightly higher traffic. Maybe you'd feel more of a difference if you worked at a fancier place. But who knows? It wasn't that big of a deal anyways.
First of all, you didnât have anything waiting for you at home. No family at the dinner table, friends to spend the day with, not even particular plans for today to keep yourself from growing depressed over this predicament. Second of all, one of the housekeepers brought in cake. Homemade gingerbread cake. She set it down in the break room like it was nothing and told everyone to take a piece before their shifts ended. During Halloween, she had done something similar. Chocolate-stuffed muffins with bright orange and black icing, piped carefully to resemble pumpkins. Theyâd been absurdly good. They melted in your mouth and if you remember correctly you ate five. Of course you pretended you took just one to not look like some food hoarder.
Truthfully, youâd never thought of your coworkers as a tight-knit, found-family sort of group that your boss described to you during your interview. You clocked in, you did your job, you clocked out. There was nothing deeper than necessary between you all. So seeing someone put that much effort into something meant purely for others had caught you off guard at first.
You could never.
Not because you were cruel. You werenâtâŠyou think. You hope so, at least. You would help a kicked puppy! You would hold the door open for someone with hands full of groceries! Give directions to a tourist! All that must account for something, even if you didnât intentionally go out of your way for people you considered strangers. Unlike her. You envied her for that, quietly. The world could use more light like hers.
âŠSpeaking of light, and kindness, you had been thinking about Benâs offer ever since that day.
Well. Thinking might be too generous a word. Because after some quick reflection, a bitter realization had settled in, you didnât even own a console. And while you did have a laptop, using it always felt like playing russian roulette with the CPU. To set itself on fire, or not to, that is the question. Luckily for you, it chose to not do the former as of yet. You can never be too sure with this thing though. The fan sounds like it's working horrendous overtime.
Still, it felt ridiculous to message him days later just to say no. To reject something heâd offered so kindly to you. You will try to make it work. Somehow. Maybe you could tell him about this though, perhaps he was upset you still didn't text himâŠNo, No. He isn't a loser like you. He definitely has a family that he's sitting at the table with as we speak. People who want him around. Talking and having a good time. You sigh, pulling out your phone and staring at the dark screen, thumb hovering uselessly above it as you debate with yourself what to do.
Before you can make up your mind, your phone buzzes and lights up.
Unknown number.
You answer and put the phone on speaker, holding it slightly away from your face.
âHello?â you said.
âAre you still going to prolong that little tantrum?â
Not even a greeting. Of course.
The person on the other end of the line was no one else but your mother. Unfortunately for you, you haven't been away from her for enough time to forget her voice. To make it less ingrained into your brain. You had blocked her number months ago, so she mustâve gone out of her way to call you from somewhere else. The effort alone was almost impressive. You donât reply right away, your thumb moving to linger over the end-call button. You should hang up. You know you should. Yet a flicker of curiosity keeps you away from pressing it.
She continues, undeterred by your silence.
âYou canât even be decent enough of a child to call us during Christmas. I wonât even mention visitingâŠhow could I have raised someone so self-centered?â
âI learned from the best,â you reply finally.
Your mother scoffs.
âAnd you still have the nerve to talk back.â
ââŠIâm an adult. This isnât talking back. Itâs just a conversation.â You rub your forehead, already feeling drained. âWhy did you call me?â
Thereâs a pause between the two of you.
âYour fatherâs sick,â she says. âPancreatic cancer.â
You wait for something, some reaction within you. But nothing comes. Just a hollow acknowledgement of the situation. He had it coming, you think distantly. You donât even feel bad for not feeling bad.
ââŠIâm not a doctor,â you say flatly.
She goes quiet again. When she finally speaks, irritation sharpens her voice.
âYouâre really going to regret only seeing him again at his funeral.â
âAnd who said Iâll go?â
The line goes dead. She hangs up, though you hear her frustrated groan just before it cuts out.
You stare at your phone for a moment longer, the screen reflecting your face back at you. Then you block the number without hesitation and set the phone down, standing from the couch. You feel anger buzzing beneath your skin. The nerve of her. Acting like you owe them anything. Like your mother deciding not to abort you somehow equated to a lifelong obligation towards her, or that sad excuse of a father.
You couldnât care less about him dying. The last time he saw you, heâd wished the same fate on you â maybe not in those exact words, but close enough. He'd told you he hoped your life would fall apart so thoroughly that youâd have no choice but to crawl back to him, to your mother, to that suffocating town you grew up in.
Jokes on him. Even if you needed a kidney, you're sure it wouldn't even cross your mind for a millisecond to come to him.
And now theyâre the ones reaching out, after nearly a year of silence. You expected it to go that way.
After getting yourself a glass of water to calm down, you figure you might as well check how your laptop is holding up. With a small sigh, you head to your bedroom and start digging through your things, pushing aside clothes and half-forgotten items until your fingers finally brush against the familiar fabric of the bag you keep it in. Itâs hard to miss, you'd find it earlier if not for the clutter. It's an almost neon mint color, patterned with orange flowers and other vaguely floral shapes. Very loud. Very early-2000s.
You remember exactly where it came from. A small garage sale back in your hometown, held in the driveway of a modest little house. The woman running it had been somewhere in her late thirties or early forties, you think, living there with just her husband. For whatever reason, sheâd taken a liking to you. When you mentioned youâd just gotten a laptop, she insisted you take the bag for free âas a bonusâ. You had also bought a ridiculous number of books that day, your arms nearly aching by the time you left. Youâre pretty sure you brought them with you when you moved. They have to be hereâŠsomewhere. You'll look for them one day.
Shaking off the thought, you pull the laptop out of the bag. You donât bother getting onto the bed, you just lower yourself to the floor and sit cross legged, setting the laptop down in front of you. When you press the power button, it responds with a few unsettling, almost crack-like noises, and the fan immediately kicks in. It begs you to turn it off and end its suffering. Well, too bad.
The last time you used it, you were sending out CVs â dozens of them, you think â to job listings that blurred together after a while. You picked anything that even remotely fit. There was something about doing that on a laptop instead of your phone that made you feel moreâŠmore professional. Like you were actually an adult who had their shit together.
Your attention snaps back to the screen. You type in your password, muscle memory guiding your fingers, and the homescreen loads. Itâs painfully basic. You still have the default wallpaper put on, zero personal touches at all. You never really bothered customizing it. It feels oddly fitting now, even if itâs a little sad.
You grab your phone again and open Discord. After a brief moment of hesitation, you send a friend request to Ben. Hopefully he isnât too busy. Or annoyed. Or mad at you. Or decided you made up your mind too late. You set the phone aside once more and turn your attention back to the laptop while you wait.
The desktop is bleak. Almost comically so. There are around ten CV files cluttering the screen, and you honestly donât know why you never overwrote the old ones instead of saving new copies every time. Alongside them are several folders labeled with random strings of letters and numbers, you had a habit of keyboard smashing and calling it a day when it came to that stuff. You start by deleting the older CVs, leaving only the most recent one behind. Then, out of curiosity, you click on one of the folders.
It opens to reveal a flood of photos. Selfies, mostly. Theyâre from shortly after you got the laptop, taken during a time when you were hanging out with a friend. You remember finding some dumb website online that slapped ridiculous filters onto your face, and for some reason younger you thought it was a wonderful idea to takeâŠdozens of photos with it. Fifty, at least. Maybe more. You cringe as you scroll. You donât even talk to that girl anymore. Her name was Leah. The last you heard, she had moved to France. After high school, you justâŠstopped keeping in touch. Like with everyone else, really.
The longer you stare at the photos, the hotter your face feels, embarrassment creeping up your neck. You exit the folder quickly and try to delete it altogether. Instead, an error message pops up.
âAn unexpected error is keeping you from deleting this folder. If you continue to receive this error, you can use the error code to search for help with this problem.â
Below it sits the error code, along with two buttons: Try Again and Cancel. You click Try Again. Then again. And again. Nothing happens. Eventually, you give up and reopen the folder, deciding to delete the photos individually instead.
No luck.
âAn unexpected error is keeping you from deleting this file...â
You let out a groan and lean back slightly, staring at the screen. Great. This thing is even more broken than you thought. You abandon the folder entirely and click through a few others, but theyâre filled with nothing remotely interesting.
Finally, you glance back at your phone. Ben accepted your friend request. Thereâs a simple âheyâ waiting for you. Your eyes brighten just a little, and before you can overthink it, you start typing a response.
Y/N: Heyy
Y/N: Im fighting my laptop rn
Y/N: This thing barely works
M4J0R4: You want to play with me then?
M4J0R4: yay!!!!
M4J0R4: U have anything in mind?
Y/N: You choose
Y/N: idk what my amazing quality device can handle
M4J0R4: We could play minecraft
M4J0R4: Oooooor valorant
M4J0R4: Ooooor fortnite
M4J0R4: Ooooooor overwatch
You stare at the screen as he practically spams you with the names of multiplayer games. You decide to settle with the first one, you're pretty sure even your laptop can handle a block game.
Y/N: minecraft sounds good :p
Y/N: You don't celebrate with family?
M4J0R4: Nahhhh
M4J0R4: They live far away
M4J0R4: I couldn't afford to see them this year
Well, this still means he has more of a life than you.
The conversation flows easily enough. After a few more exchanged messages, you find yourself setting up Minecraft on your laptop. You join Benâs world, and just like that, the hours begin to blur together.
Youâre having a genuinely good time, even if your skill level leaves much to be desired. Which is honestly impressive in its own way, considering itâs Minecraft. You keep missing obvious holes in the ground, walking straight into them without realizing until itâs too late. One second youâre strolling along, the next youâre plummeting into a cave, your screen flashing red as everything you were carrying scatters.
Ben laughs it off in chat, reassuring you itâs fine, but when you half-jokingly suggest turning on keep inventory, he immediately shoots it down. Apparently that makes the game âtoo easy,â and suffering a little is part of the âauthentic Minecraft experienceâ, whatever that means. You roll your eyes but go along with it anyway. Even if it's slightly frustrating, at the end of the day you don't care that much.
Eventually, you settle into a rhythm. While Ben runs off to explore, mine, and gather resources, you stay behind and start building a house. You focus on placing blocks carefully (following a tutorial you found online, but let's not mention that anymore and pretend it's fully your work), occasionally stopping to respond when Ben types something in the chat.
Somehow, nearly three hours pass before your body finally makes itself known.
Your back starts aching, a deep, persistent pain that makes you suddenly aware of how youâve been sitting this entire time. Curled forward on the floor in a shrimp-like position, shoulders hunched, neck craned toward the screen. You shift slightly and wince. Yeah. Thatâs not good. You type in the chat that youâre getting a bit tired, half-expecting disappointment, but Ben is immediately understanding. He says it was fun, that you should play again soon.
Heâs been really nice to you the whole time. Patient. Kind. It makes your chest feel warm in a way youâre not used to. For a little while, the paranoia you felt about him, and everything else, quiets down. You stop overanalyzing every interaction. He was right. Distractions do help, at least for a bit.
You say your goodbyes, promise to play again sometime, and shut the laptop off. The sudden silence feels strange after hours of sound effects and background music. You glance at the clock. Itâs only around 8pm, but your eyes feel dry and itchy from staring at the screen for so long.
You slide the laptop back into its bag and lean it carefully against the wall. Then you stand up and stretch, arms reaching overhead. Thereâs a loud, satisfying pop from your back, followed by a wave of relief. Usually, this would be the moment you collapse straight onto your bed and pass out in whatever youâre wearing. Like it was for a while now. Maybe youâd kick off your pants first and settle for sleeping in a hoodie and underwear. Still not ideal, but serviceable.
Tonight, though, youâre in a good mood.
So you decide to practice a little self-care.
You shuffle into the bathroom and grab your toothbrush. Brushing your teeth feels almost ceremonial at this point. Itâs beenâŠwhat, three days? A bit gross, sure, but at least youâre brushing them on the day you ate the most sugar, right? You scrub a little longer than usual, staring at your reflection with tired eyes. Next, you splash some water on your face, using just a tiny bit of soap. Youâre careful around your eyes, not wanting that awful stinging feeling. You dry your face, glance at yourself one last time, and nod. Somehow, splashing your face with water made you more tired. Maybe because the water was rather warm.
Okay. Thatâs enough self-care for one night, actually.
What annoys me heavily in the creepypasta fandom is how some people treat those who write BEN in a way that doesn't align with the ARG.
Like yes, we know BEN doesn't actually look like a twink elf, but when was the last time Creepypasta was fully aligned with the canon source? Yeah, exactly.
BEN has become an almost separate character from the BEN in the ARG. He has many interpretations, and I love that about him. Let's stop acting like it's a war crime to write about the fanon version because the whole fandom is built on the fanon, not canon.