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@mysthereseious
the imagery in this part of the ep was actually insane like this is genuinely beautiful
Asylum
Chapter Three: Tangled Webs
PAIRING(s): Psychiatrist!Agatha Harkness x Patient!Reader x Inmate!Rio Vidal
SUMMARY: Wrongfully imprisoned, Reader becomes the obsession of Agatha, a cunning psychiatrist, and Rio, a fiery inmate. Together, they’ll ensure she’s theirs—forever.
WARNING(s): Obsession, Manipulation, Violence, Confinement, Madness, Dubcon, and Betrayal.
A/N: Getting impatient so I've written the chapters a little bit longer this time, lol. 💜💚
The asylum corridors stretched endlessly, the hum of fluorescent lights casting an eerie glow against the pale walls. You walked with purpose—or as much as you could muster with the guards escorting you back from another monotonous group therapy session. The others had shuffled out, their faces blank or twitching with nervous energy, but you had lingered, reluctant to return to the silence of your cell.
Still, something about this day felt heavier, as though the walls themselves were closing in.
You let your eyes wander to the narrow windows set high in the walls. They offered no view of the outside world, just streaks of faint sunlight blotted by grime. You hadn’t breathed fresh air since the courtyard incident two days ago—the day both Agatha and Rio had laid their first unmistakable claims on you.
Since then, things had only gotten worse.
Agatha was growing more possessive, though she cloaked it under the guise of "help." Her nightly visits were no longer requests—they were commands.
"How are you feeling today?" she would begin, pulling her chair closer to the foot of your bed, her body radiating professional detachment. But her eyes betrayed her, glinting with something far darker.
The questions always began the same. Innocuous. Gentle. But as her visits stretched longer, her inquiries became probing, almost intimate.
"Tell me about your dreams," she asked one night, her voice a low hum that wrapped around you like a coil.
"Why does it matter?" you countered, trying to erect barriers against her quiet, predatory intensity.
"Dreams are where the mind reveals itself, darling," she replied, the endearment slipping from her lips with a slow, deliberate precision.
She leaned closer, her face framed by the cold fluorescent glow. Her eyes, sharp and bottomless, felt as though they could see everything you wanted to keep hidden.
“Is someone here making you... uncomfortable?” Agatha pressed, her tone soft but edged with deadly purpose. “Rio, perhaps?”
Your stomach twisted. Agatha had developed a habit of bringing up Rio unprompted, usually just before slipping in warnings: She’s dangerous. You mustn’t trust her. Tell me if she bothers you.
And then there were Rio’s games.
Unlike Agatha’s cold calculation, Rio’s attention burned. Her obsession wasn’t hidden behind masks of professionalism—it was raw, wild, and impossible to ignore.
She found you in the common areas, corners of hallways, even the cafeteria line. Wherever you tried to blend into the background, she pulled you out, commanding your attention like it belonged solely to her.
“Eat with me,” she demanded one afternoon, her tray thudding down beside yours without hesitation.
You opened your mouth to argue, but Rio was already pulling your chair closer to hers with one long arm, the metal scraping loudly. The eyes of the other patients turned briefly toward you both before averting just as quickly—no one dared cross Rio Vidal.
“Look at you, sitting all stiff like someone’s about to shank you,” she said, biting into an apple, her teeth slicing through the flesh with a sharp crack. “Relax. I don’t bite.”
The sharpness in her grin told you that was a lie.
You focused on your food, ignoring the prickling heat of her gaze as it roamed over you.
“Bet it drives Agatha crazy,” Rio mused suddenly, her voice dropping low. She shifted closer, her breath brushing the side of your face. “The way I keep talking to you. She watches, you know. She always watches.”
“I—what?” you stammered, glancing toward her.
Rio chuckled, leaning back and tossing her apple core carelessly onto her tray. “Sweetheart, don’t play dumb. She’s obsessed with you.” Her eyes glinted with amusement, but her smile quickly turned predatory. “Not that I blame her. You're special. Different from all the broken toys here.”
Your throat tightened as you tried to process her words. Rio was lying—or was she?
“She wants to own you,” Rio continued, her voice dropping lower, dangerously intimate. “Just like I do.”
Her words were like a slap, and your hand trembled as you set down your fork.
“I don’t belong here,” you whispered, your voice cracking.
Rio’s expression shifted for a split second, something unreadable flickering behind her confidence. Then, she reached across the table, brushing a stray strand of hair from your face.
“That’s where you’re wrong, mi amor.” Her grin turned wicked. “You’re exactly where you need to be.”
When Agatha appeared in your doorway that night, you weren’t surprised. The light in the hallway framed her figure, tall and commanding as ever, though there was something different in her expression—a tightness in her jaw, an edge to her gaze.
"May I come in?" she asked, though you knew it wasn’t a question.
You nodded reluctantly, retreating to the far corner of the room as she stepped inside.
Agatha closed the door with deliberate care before turning her full attention to you. She didn’t sit this time, instead choosing to hover close, her presence suffocating in the small space.
"Rio speaks to you often," she said abruptly, skipping all pretense.
You froze, panic fluttering in your chest. How much did she know?
"She's dangerous," Agatha continued, her tone as cold as the steel walls surrounding you. "Impulsive. Unstable. You must be careful."
“She’s...” You paused, uncertain whether to defend Rio or stay silent. “She hasn’t hurt me.”
Agatha tilted her head, her dark hair catching the faint glow of the overhead light. For a moment, you saw something flicker in her expression—a mix of disappointment and... jealousy?
“Not yet,” she said finally. Her voice softened as she took a step closer. “But she will, darling. That’s what she does. She destroys everything she touches.”
Her hand reached out, brushing against your arm. You tried not to flinch, but your discomfort must have shown because Agatha’s lips curved into a smile, one that was meant to soothe but only made your skin crawl.
“You’re fragile,” she said softly, almost to herself. “You need someone to protect you.”
She didn’t need to finish the thought for you to know who she meant.
Hours later, when sleep evaded you, the sounds of the asylum echoed eerily in the darkness: the distant murmur of a night guard’s radio, the soft cries of another patient two rooms down, the clanging of a metal tray.
And beneath it all, a faint whisper—one growing louder.
When your door creaked open, panic shot through your veins. Your breath caught in your throat as Rio’s familiar silhouette slid into the room, her movements fluid and silent as a cat’s.
“You shouldn’t be here,” you hissed, heart hammering against your ribs.
Rio smirked, leaning back against the wall as she crossed her arms. “Relax, sweetheart. Just thought you might want some company.”
She stepped closer, the dim light from the hallway casting shadows across her face. “She’s got her hooks in you, doesn’t she?” Rio asked, her voice soft yet charged. “Agatha. She’ll convince you that she’s the hero in this little story, but let me tell you something.”
Her hand tilted your chin up, forcing you to meet her burning gaze.
“Heroes don’t exist in here,” Rio whispered. “Only survivors.”
Her lips curved into a smile that didn’t reach her eyes before she turned and slipped back into the shadows.
But her parting words stayed with you, an ominous echo of the tangled web ensnaring you.
The days in the asylum passed in a haze of monotony and growing dread, the line between reality and nightmare fraying at the edges. Every corner of the facility seemed to hum with a tension that you couldn’t shake, leaving your skin perpetually prickling as though you were being watched. And in truth, you always were.
Rio’s smoldering presence and Agatha’s calculated grip formed a prison within the asylum itself—a labyrinth with no way out.
But something new had begun to take root within you. Fear, yes, but also something more potent. A gnawing awareness of how deeply entangled you were in their obsession, like prey ensnared in a web woven by two hunters.
You weren’t sure how much longer you could stay sane.
The nightmares began subtly—flashes of Rio’s gaze boring into you, Agatha’s hand brushing yours with possessive care, rooms filled with distorted laughter or walls closing in. But they grew sharper over time.
One night, you startled awake, heart pounding, after dreaming of Agatha standing over you, her hands ghosting down your arms like you were a fragile doll she was piecing back together. Her whisper echoed in your ears even as you sat in the dark, wide awake.
“You’ll always belong to me.”
Even hours after waking, the weight of her imagined touch lingered, sending chills down your spine.
Waking hours weren’t much better. The asylum was never loud, but recently, every sound seemed sharper—every scrape of shoes on the tile, every hushed conversation. Were they talking about you? Watching you?
Rio and Agatha’s presence had grown suffocatingly frequent.
Rio slipped notes beneath your tray at breakfast, always crude but strangely charged: You looked lonely last night, or You don’t want her; you want me.
Then there was Agatha. She circled your mind like a vulture, appearing during therapy sessions, during nighttime "check-ins," and sometimes in your peripheral vision when you least expected her.
"Are you feeling better today?" she asked one morning as she approached your table, her voice dripping with concern but her gaze cool, calculating.
You stammered a reply, but her next words cut through your panic like a scalpel.
"I saw Rio talking to you again," Agatha said, her tone conversational but her meaning clear.
"She’s not dangerous," you found yourself saying before you realized it, almost defensively.
Agatha tilted her head, and something flashed in her expression—a flicker of annoyance, quickly replaced by calm control. She crouched beside you, her long fingers curling lightly around your wrist.
"I understand why you might think that," she murmured, her voice almost hypnotic. "But people like her... they thrive on breaking things. On breaking people."
Your pulse thudded beneath her touch, not from fear this time, but from a growing sense of suffocation.
“I don’t want you speaking with her anymore,” Agatha said, her tone leaving no room for argument.
But that wasn’t something you could promise. Rio wasn’t someone you could simply avoid. She found you wherever you went—pulling you into corners, whispering dangerous secrets in your ear.
One afternoon, she cornered you in the hallway leading to your cell, her smile sharp as she twirled a thread from her sleeve.
“You’re looking... jittery,” she teased, her tone half-amused but tinged with something darker. “Let me guess—Agatha’s been filling your head with her usual crap about me?”
You glared at her but didn’t answer, pushing past her, only for her hand to shoot out and snag your wrist.
“Hey, chica, I’m trying to help you,” she said, her tone dropping as she tugged you back, her eyes boring into yours. “Agatha’s got a nice little fantasy running in her head, and trust me—you don’t want to star in it.”
“What do you want, Rio?” you snapped, the weight of your fear and anger finally pushing words past your lips.
Her expression shifted then, her confidence faltering just slightly. “I don’t want her to own you,” Rio said softly. “I’m not lying when I say you’re special. Too special to let her twist you into something you’re not.”
Her hand loosened, and she stepped back, giving you space to move. But you hesitated, the words she left hanging in the air sinking deeper into your mind.
"Think about it, mi amor. You're not crazy. But staying here? It’ll make you crazy. Trust me—I know."
The cracks in your psyche widened that night, your head spinning as you tried to unpack everything that had been said to you. Agatha’s reassurances, Rio’s cryptic warnings—both felt like chains dragging you deeper into the asylum’s abyss.
But their words weren’t the worst of it.
What terrified you most was the growing sense that they were both right—and both wrong—at the same time.
You pressed yourself against the cold wall of your cell, desperate to reclaim the person you used to be before this nightmare. Your fingers traced the faint scratch marks etched into the walls, left by previous tenants whose desperation had taken different forms.
Would that be you someday?
When a sharp knock broke through the thick silence, you flinched violently.
Agatha entered a second later, her presence commanding as she shut the door behind her.
"You look tired," she said softly, her piercing eyes taking you in as though cataloging every crack in your facade. "Are the nightmares worse?"
You hesitated, and she took your silence as a confession.
“We’ll get through this, darling,” she murmured, sitting beside you on the narrow cot. The bed dipped under her weight, her closeness sending ripples of unease through you.
“You and I?” Agatha continued, her voice quiet but resolute. “We’re going to fix what they broke in you.”
You froze, realizing she didn’t see you as the person you were—but as something she wanted to mold, something broken that she could claim.
When morning came, you expected Agatha’s grip on you to relent, but instead, you found Rio waiting by your cell door, her wild grin sharper than usual.
“Morning, beautiful,” she said, tipping an imaginary hat. “Let’s skip breakfast, yeah?”
You shook your head. “I can’t—”
But before you could protest further, she grabbed your arm and pulled you down the hallway, her pace quick and assured.
“Rio, where are we going?” you hissed, panicking as you glanced around for guards.
She stopped abruptly, spinning to face you and gripping your shoulders with alarming intensity.
“Out.”
The way her eyes burned sent your head spinning.
“I’m getting you out of here.”
Her words, combined with Agatha’s controlling presence, twisted into a knot deep inside your chest. Was escape even possible? Was it what you wanted?
One thing was clear as Rio and Agatha loomed larger in your mind:
You were losing yourself.
_-_-_
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PARKS AND RECREATION | 3.10
"I think probably 90% of these are gonna be people telling me they want me to run them over with a car or like stomp on their face or something."
This reminds me of my dash....🤣🤣😉😉
New Rio bts video dropped. Posted @Danielselon on instagram
AUBREY PLAZA as RILEY JOHNSON Happiest Season (2020) dir. Clea DuVall
Asylum
Chapter Two: The Fire Inside
PAIRING(s): Psychiatrist!Agatha Harkness x Patient!Reader x Inmate!Rio Vidal
SUMMARY: Wrongfully imprisoned, Reader becomes the obsession of Agatha, a cunning psychiatrist, and Rio, a fiery inmate. Together, they’ll ensure she’s theirs—forever.
WARNING(s): Obsession, Manipulation, Violence, Confinement, Madness, Dubcon, and Betrayal.
A/N: Sorry for writing them short 😅
Chapter 1
The clang of the cafeteria doors echoed loudly in the cavernous hall as the crowd of patients filed in, their shuffling steps blending with the murmur of guards barking half-hearted orders. Every part of the room felt wrong. From the chipped white tiles to the flickering fluorescent lights that made everyone’s skin look pale and sickly, it was designed to strip you of any sense of dignity.
Your tray clattered as you slid it onto the table, lowering yourself into the corner seat you’d claimed the past few days. The stares from other patients were impossible to avoid. Some were blank and distant, their minds a thousand miles away, but others were laser-focused, studying you like a predator waiting for its moment to pounce.
Rio Vidal was one of those predators.
You had noticed her the first day you’d been herded into the cafeteria. How could you not? She moved like a force of nature, every step deliberate, every sway of her hips radiating confidence. Her olive skin and piercing eyes—blazing with some barely-contained energy—set her apart from the broken shells of the other patients.
She was dangerous. You didn’t need her record to know that. The way she smiled, sharp and slow like a blade sliding into its sheath, told you everything you needed to know.
“Nice seat,” her voice drawled, rich and melodic, as she sank into the chair across from you without waiting for an invitation.
Your gaze snapped to hers, the food on your tray forgotten. Her smile widened, like she could feel the nerves prickling under your skin.
“I don’t—” you began, but the words faltered under her intense scrutiny.
“You don’t what?” she pressed, resting her chin in her hand as if she were utterly captivated by you. Her posture was relaxed, but there was something taut and alert about her, like a tiger lounging just before the kill.
“I—nothing,” you muttered, forcing yourself to focus on your food. You stabbed at a piece of gray meat, hoping she’d grow bored and move on.
Instead, she leaned closer, the metallic scent of the room replaced momentarily by the faint, earthy spice of her perfume. “I’ve seen you,” she said softly, almost like a confession. “All quiet. Trying not to be noticed.” Her grin widened. “Doesn’t work on me, though. I notice everything.”
Your breath hitched, the chill in the air replaced with the suffocating weight of her presence.
“I’m Rio,” she offered, her hand sliding across the table toward yours.
You didn’t move to shake it, but she didn’t seem offended. If anything, she seemed amused, her eyes glittering with challenge.
“I didn’t ask,” you managed, though the words felt weak, your defiance like a candle trying to burn against a storm.
Rio laughed then—a throaty, melodic sound that should have been beautiful but sent shivers racing down your spine. “Oh, I like you already,” she purred, pulling her hand back but not her attention.
For the rest of the meal, she sat across from you, her gaze heavy and unrelenting, even as you pretended not to notice.
Later That Day
The courtyard offered little relief. Enclosed by tall concrete walls topped with razor wire, it felt less like an open space and more like a cage. Still, it was a break from the sterile walls of the asylum, and the pale sunlight brushing your face almost made the frostbite of Rio’s attention worth enduring.
The few patients brave enough to venture into the yard that afternoon kept to themselves, pacing the perimeter or sitting in isolated clusters. You found a quiet corner near one of the dead trees and sat with your knees drawn to your chest.
For a moment, you let yourself believe you were alone. But then you heard her voice.
“Found you.”
Rio’s shadow fell over you as she leaned against the wall beside you, casually twirling a cigarette between her fingers.
“There’s nothing to smoke here,” you said before you could stop yourself, glancing up at her.
She smirked. “Doesn’t mean I can’t pretend.”
Her gaze lingered on you, her weight shifting as she crouched down to your level. Her knees brushed against yours, the casual touch igniting a spark of unease in your chest.
“You’ve been quiet,” she said softly. “Makes me wonder if you’re scared of me.”
Your lips parted, but you had no answer. Were you scared of her? The logical part of your brain screamed yes, but there was something more than fear bubbling in your chest—a strange, reluctant curiosity.
“I’m not afraid of you,” you finally said, though your voice wavered.
Rio’s lips curved into a grin. “Liar.”
Before you could reply, the sharp click of heels interrupted the moment, each step crisp and commanding. You didn’t need to turn around to know who it was—Dr. Harkness’s presence was unmistakable.
“Ms. Vidal,” Agatha said, her tone smooth yet laced with warning. “Shouldn’t you be in session?”
Rio didn’t flinch, standing and slipping her cigarette into her pocket. “You mean the one you canceled, Doc? That’s on you.”
Agatha’s expression didn’t shift, though her eyes narrowed faintly. “Take a walk. Now.”
Rio held your gaze for another second before shrugging and flashing you a wink. “See you later, querida.”
As she strode away, her footsteps blending with the whispers of the other patients, Agatha stepped closer, her shadow falling over you now.
“Are you alright?” she asked, her voice softer than before.
You nodded hesitantly, but the way her gaze lingered on your face made it clear she wasn’t convinced.
“Ms. Vidal has...a tendency to latch on to people,” Agatha murmured, her fingers lightly brushing your shoulder. “If she’s troubling you, I need you to tell me. Immediately.”
You looked away, her touch sending a chill down your arm despite its gentleness. “I’m fine,” you said, though you weren’t sure if it was true.
Agatha knelt, lowering herself to your level. Her eyes searched yours, their steel-blue intensity burning with something indecipherable. “You’re not alone here, [Your Name],” she said quietly. “No matter what you may think.”
Her words sounded kind, but the undertone—calm yet undeniably possessive—made your stomach twist.
_-_-_
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Hollow Flames
PAIRING(s): Rio Vidal x Reader
SUMMARY: Loving Rio Vidal means enduring the fire—but how much can a heart take before it burns away completely?
WARNING(s): Heavy Angst, Manipulation, and other Dark Themes.
A/N: I need to post this so bad before continuing "Asylum".
The sky was gray the day you decided to leave.
Not the kind of ominous storm gray that brings thunder and lightning, just a dull, heavy shade, weighted with the knowledge that nothing good was coming. Nothing could ever be good where Rio Vidal was concerned. You learned that the hard way—bit by agonizing bit.
You stood by the window of your shared apartment, watching distant shapes move outside. The world was bustling, alive—unlike the air inside. It had been suffocating for a while now, a thick fog of tension and sharp-edged words that lingered in every corner of your small home. And yet, she was still your sun. Blinding, scorching, and too painful to look at directly.
“I know what you’re thinking.”
Her voice cut through the silence like a blade. Low, almost a growl, just like always—Rio didn’t speak softly even when she wanted to. Her words carried weight and warning. They always had.
You didn’t turn. You couldn’t look at her, not yet. “And what is it you think I’m thinking, Rio?”
She snorted, a bitter, humorless sound. “You’re running again. That’s all you ever do, isn’t it?”
“Run?” The word lodged in your throat like glass, and before you knew it, you’d spun around, your glare meeting hers. She was there on the edge of the couch, leaning back like she owned not only the room but the world itself. Her dark curls fell carelessly around her face, a cruel contrast to the sharpness in her gaze. The look that used to set your heart on fire now left nothing but ash.
“I stayed,” you spat, voice trembling. “I stayed, Rio, while you tore everything apart. I stayed through your moods, your lies, your games. And now I’m running?”
Something flickered in her eyes—a flash of guilt maybe—but it burned out as quickly as it appeared, swallowed by the inferno of her pride. She stood slowly, with that predator-like grace that once made you feel so safe.
She didn’t respond immediately. Instead, she crossed the distance between you until she was so close you could smell her—smoke, whiskey, and faint perfume that clung to her like a memory. Her hands found your arms, gripping just enough for you to feel the strength she so carefully controlled.
“Don’t act like you didn’t love every second of it.” Her voice was quiet now, almost tender, but it carried poison underneath. “You loved the chaos. You loved me. Don’t pretend you didn’t.”
“I did love you.” The confession slipped out so quietly it made you wince. “I loved you so much it destroyed me.”
That hit her harder than anything else ever could. Rio’s grip slackened, her eyes softening with something undefinable—regret, maybe, or pain. You never knew with her. Emotions crossed her face like shadows; they came and went too quickly to catch.
“You don’t walk out on someone you love,” she said finally, voice raw. “Not ever. Love isn’t supposed to be—”
“This isn’t love, Rio!”
Your voice shattered the silence, loud enough to make her flinch. Tears welled in your eyes, unbidden and unwanted. You hated crying in front of her; you hated giving her the satisfaction of seeing you this broken. But it was too late to stop now.
“It’s not love if you have to destroy me just to keep me,” you whispered. “I was good for you—I tried to be everything you needed. I gave you everything I had, and you—you left nothing of me behind.”
The silence after your words stretched between you like a chasm, deep and endless. Rio just stared at you, her expression unreadable for the first time in a long time. When she finally spoke, her voice was barely a whisper.
“So, what? You’re done?”
A painful, empty laugh broke free from your chest. “I’ve been done for a long time, Rio. I just didn’t want to admit it.”
She took a step back then, dropping her hands away like your skin burned her. You saw something unfamiliar flicker across her face this time—something closer to panic—but you didn’t stay to watch it unfold.
You turned before she could stop you and moved toward the door, every step feeling heavier than the last. For a moment, you thought she’d let you go, thought you’d walk out of that apartment with nothing more than your memories weighing you down.
But you should have known better.
“Don’t you dare walk away from me.”
Her voice came low and cold, freezing you in place. When you turned around, she was closer than before, breathing hard like she’d been the one running all this time.
“Don’t do this,” Rio muttered, and this time, there was no mistaking the desperation in her tone. “You leave now, you don’t come back. You hear me? You don’t come back.”
And yet, even as she said the words, it was clear she was begging you to stay.
You looked at her—really looked at her—and for the first time, all you saw was a woman trapped in her own brokenness, clawing at everything she loved until it turned to dust in her hands. You wanted to save her; maybe you always would. But saving her meant losing yourself, and you couldn’t afford to make that sacrifice again.
So, you turned away.
Without another word, you opened the door, stepped out into the hallway, and didn’t look back.
But even as you walked away, the ghost of Rio’s voice followed you, echoing like a curse—soft and dangerous all at once.
“You don’t come back. But you’ll wish you had.”
And God, a part of you already did.
The apartment door slammed behind you, the sound reverberating like a gunshot in your chest. You didn’t turn back—you couldn’t. But as you stepped onto the street, the weight of Rio’s voice lingered like smoke, curling into every shadow of your mind.
You don’t come back. But you’ll wish you had.
Days passed in a blur. You went back to somewhere—anywhere—that felt like safety, somewhere Rio’s shadows couldn’t reach. Friends welcomed you, but their pity was obvious. They didn’t say it, but they didn’t have to: You let it go too far. You let her ruin you.
But how could they understand? Rio wasn’t just a chapter you could close. She wasn’t a cut that would scar over and heal. She was the kind of wound that bled you dry. A part of you wanted to hate her, and yet the longing ached far worse than anything else.
At night, when sleep refused to come, you’d lie still, remembering every look, every word, every touch. Love shouldn’t feel like drowning, but she made you want to stay under the water.
And then she found you.
It was two weeks after you’d left. Two short weeks of rebuilding yourself piece by fragile piece before the foundation cracked again.
You were walking back to your friend’s apartment late one evening when you felt it—eyes watching you from the shadows. You didn’t need to see her to know it was her. Your body recognized her presence like it was burned into you.
“Did you think I wouldn’t find you?”
Her voice was calm, too calm, but there was an edge beneath it, sharp and dangerous. When you turned, Rio was leaning against the streetlight just behind you, half her face shadowed. She looked the same, as untouchably beautiful as ever—except her eyes burned with something darker.
Your heart leapt into your throat. “Rio—what are you doing here?”
“I told you, didn’t I?” she said, her voice low as she pushed off the streetlight and stepped toward you. “You don’t come back. But you still belong to me.”
“You don’t own me,” you shot back, fists trembling at your sides. But your voice wavered, and you knew she could hear it.
Rio smiled at that. A cruel, knowing smile. “Then why are you shaking?”
She wasn’t here to hurt you. Not really. But Rio had her ways of making you question everything you knew. Every time you thought you’d pulled yourself free of her grip, she was there, whispering promises that sounded like threats and threats that sounded like love.
“I let you leave,” Rio murmured as she brushed a strand of hair from your face. “But don’t think for one second that I don’t still own a part of you. You gave that to me, remember?”
Your breath hitched, a tremor running through you at her touch. “You need to let me go.”
Her hand stilled, fingers lingering at your jaw. For the first time, there was something unreadable in her eyes—a glimmer of vulnerability.
“You want me to let you go?” she whispered. “Fine. Tell me you don’t love me anymore. Look me in the eyes and say it.”
The words were there, on the tip of your tongue, but they refused to come. Because as much as you wanted to let Rio go—as much as you needed to—you still loved her. And you hated yourself for it.
She saw your hesitation and smiled softly, a victorious and heartbroken look all at once.
“That’s what I thought,” she whispered.
The days after that became a slow, suffocating push-and-pull. Rio didn’t take you back to the life you once shared—not yet—but she lingered at the edges of your world, close enough to remind you she could pull you back in anytime she wanted.
You should have blocked her, disappeared completely. But a part of you missed her—the way she looked at you like you were the only thing that mattered, the way her chaos made you forget everything else.
“You keep running,” she said the last time you saw her, eyes burning into yours. “But you’ll come back. You always do.”
You didn’t answer her.
But as you watched her disappear into the night again, you knew deep down she was right. No matter how far you ran, you’d never be free of her.
The days turned into weeks, weeks into months, but Rio’s presence never truly left you. She was a shadow lingering in the corners of your mind, a scent caught unexpectedly in passing—a phantom that refused to let go. You tried to rebuild your life, stitching yourself back together in a way that felt somewhat whole. You smiled again. You laughed. But under it all, her ghost haunted you.
It was a late winter evening when she came back—this time, not waiting for you to stumble into her world.
You returned home, to your quiet apartment, only to find her already inside. She was sitting on the windowsill, silhouetted against the cold glow of city lights. Like always, Rio looked like she belonged there—dangerous, beautiful, untouchable.
Your heart stopped. “How did you—?”
She turned, a sly smile curling at the edge of her lips, like she’d never been gone. “It’s me, baby. Locks never stopped me before, did they?”
The anger you thought had burned out reignited, a desperate flame. “You can’t keep doing this, Rio! You can’t—”
“Can’t what?” she interrupted sharply, standing now, closing the space between you in only a few strides. “Keep wanting you? Keep loving you? Because if you think I’m capable of stopping... you’re lying to yourself.”
Her words made your chest ache. “This isn’t love, Rio. It’s obsession.”
She paused at that, jaw tight, eyes flickering with something deeper—an emotion you couldn’t quite place.
“Maybe,” she said softly, her voice dropping low. “Maybe it is. But don’t you get it yet? You did this to me. You made me want you in a way I can’t turn off.”
Her hands found your face, cradling it with a gentleness you didn’t expect—but her grip was firm, inescapable. You tried to push her away, but your body betrayed you, still remembering how her touch could soothe even while it burned.
“Let me go,” you whispered, though the words lacked strength.
She shook her head slowly, her dark eyes locking onto yours with an intensity that stole the air from your lungs.
“I can’t,” she whispered back. “You belong to me. And maybe that’s selfish, maybe it’s twisted... but tell me you don’t still feel it too.”
Her words carved through you like a knife because part of you did still feel it—that magnetic pull that had drawn you to her in the first place. It was intoxicating, ruinous, and completely impossible to ignore.
And Rio could see it—the truth you couldn’t speak.
Her lips brushed against your forehead as she murmured, “You’re mine. You always will be.”
And for the first time, you didn’t fight her. The tragedy wasn’t that you were trapped—it was that you never really wanted to escape.
Rio’s confession—you’re mine, you always will be—lodged itself in your chest like a splinter. For a moment, the air was too thick to breathe, your own heart betraying you as it hammered loudly in your ears. You hated her for saying it, and you hated yourself more for how much you wanted to believe her.
Her hands trailed down to your shoulders, holding you steady in that calm but possessive way she always did. “There’s no one else who understands you like I do,” she murmured. “No one else will ever want you the way I want you.”
You squeezed your eyes shut as if that might block out the truth. “This isn’t right,” you breathed, more to yourself than her.
Rio let out a soft, knowing hum. “No?” Her voice was low, teasing, like she was unraveling you thread by thread. “You can keep saying that, but it doesn’t make it true. You’re just scared.”
And you were scared—terrified, even. Of her, of yourself, of the way her presence was starting to feel like home again. She saw through you too easily. Rio always knew which wounds to touch, which words to say, like your soul was just another lock for her to pick.
“I came back tonight because I’m done playing these games,” Rio said suddenly, stepping back. Her gaze was locked onto yours, still burning with that quiet intensity. “No more running, no more pretending. You and I both know you don’t want me to leave.”
“Rio…” Your voice broke around her name.
“No.” She cut you off sharply, shaking her head. “You don’t get to push me away and keep hoping I’ll come back. I’m here now. You’re here. So tell me the truth, baby. What’s it gonna be?”
You didn’t answer, because you didn’t know how. Because every time you thought you’d freed yourself, she pulled you back in—and you let her. Whether it was because of love, obsession, or simply the emptiness she filled, you couldn’t tell anymore.
Rio sighed then, though there was something softer to it this time. Like she could see just how torn you were. “It’s okay,” she whispered, brushing her knuckles gently across your cheek. “I already know your answer. You don’t have to say anything.”
Her touch lingered longer than it should’ve, but you didn’t move to stop her. Instead, you stood frozen, your body betraying you all over again. Because she was right—there was a part of you that wanted her to stay, to piece you back together even if she’d been the one to tear you apart.
And Rio, the master of reading you, smiled softly at your silence.
“Good,” she said, as if this had already been settled. “Now stop pretending, baby. You and I—we’re not done yet. We’ll never be done.”
Her words wrapped around you like a noose, suffocating and warm all at once. You knew it was a warning just as much as a promise. And as she pulled you into her arms—kissing you softly, possessively, like she was sealing your fate—you felt the last threads of resistance slip through your fingers.
Because when it came to Rio Vidal, escape had never really been an option.
Aftermath: Fractured Chains
The days following Rio’s return were as volatile as they were intoxicating. You tried convincing yourself it was different this time—that she was different. That her words, her touch, her promises weren’t laced with the same obsession that had swallowed you before.
For a while, it worked.
Rio was gentler—softer, even. She smiled more, her rough edges smoothing just enough to keep you under her spell. The chaos in her voice became less biting, her anger less frequent, as if she was trying to convince both of you that she could change. That the fire within her could ever be anything but destructive.
“I told you I’d take care of you,” she whispered one night, her head resting against your lap, eyes half-lidded as you played absentmindedly with her hair. “And I meant it. You don’t have to be afraid of me.”
You wanted to believe her so desperately that it hurt. And for a brief, fleeting moment, you thought you could.
But shadows like Rio’s don’t disappear—they just learn to hide.
One evening, you overheard the call.
The unmistakable sound of Rio’s voice, low and furious, echoed through the walls of your apartment. You hadn’t meant to eavesdrop, but something in her tone set your teeth on edge. You stepped closer, pausing just outside the door.
“I don’t give a damn what they think!” she snapped, her voice sharp as glass. A silence followed before she spoke again—softer, yet far colder. “She’s mine. That’s all you need to know. No one’s taking her away from me.”
Your blood ran cold. The words shouldn’t have surprised you, and yet they still knocked the air from your chest. After all this time—after all the whispered assurances that she was changing—Rio was still the same. The obsession still simmered just beneath the surface, waiting to erupt.
You backed away from the door as quietly as you could, trying to collect your thoughts, your pulse thrumming wildly in your ears. Was this your life now? Had you truly let yourself fall so far back into her arms that you couldn’t escape again?
You’d wanted to fix her once. You’d told yourself that maybe your love—your devotion—could soften her edges and heal her wounds. But the truth settled in your chest like lead. Rio Vidal didn’t change. She adapted, she manipulated, she controlled.
And you? You were still caught in her web.
That night, Rio curled up beside you in bed, her arm draped protectively over your waist. She buried her face into your neck, pressing soft, lingering kisses into your skin as if to stake her claim.
“Where were you tonight?” she murmured, her voice low and affectionate in a way that made your stomach churn. “You seemed distant.”
You forced yourself to sound calm. “I was just… tired.”
She pulled back slightly, her dark eyes studying you for a moment—too sharp, too calculating. It was as though she could see straight through the lie. But instead of pressing further, she smiled softly.
“Don’t overthink things, baby.” Her lips brushed against your temple. “I’ve got you. You don’t need to worry about anything anymore. Just trust me.”
But trust was the last thing you felt.
The days became heavier after that. You couldn’t look at her the same way. Everything—the touches, the kisses, her promises—felt like chains tightening around you.
And Rio noticed. She always noticed.
“What’s wrong with you?” she asked one evening, slamming a glass onto the kitchen counter when your silence stretched on too long. “You’ve been pulling away.”
You flinched at the sharpness in her tone, carefully keeping your expression neutral. “I just… I need space, Rio.”
Her laughter came bitter and harsh, a sharp contrast to her earlier softness. “Space? Don’t give me that.” She stalked toward you, her presence overwhelming as she leaned in close. “You’re mine, remember? There’s no space between us. There never was.”
Her words made something in you snap.
“No, Rio!” you shouted back, stepping out of her reach. “I’m not yours. I can’t keep pretending this is love when it’s tearing me apart.”
For the first time, Rio froze. Her dark eyes widened, and in the silence that followed, the tension between you cracked like thunder.
Her lips parted, as if to say something, but no words came. For a second, she looked lost, like a flame starved of air.
“You don’t mean that,” she whispered finally, her voice fragile—like it hadn’t been her hands that broke you in the first place. “Tell me you don’t mean that.”
But you held your ground, even as tears blurred your vision. “I can’t do this anymore, Rio.”
She stared at you for a long moment, searching your face for any sign of surrender. Finding none, the softness in her expression hardened once more, like armor slipping back into place.
“Fine,” she said coldly, though her voice shook. “Leave, then. Run, like you always do. But don’t you forget—I gave you everything. I loved you more than anyone ever could.”
She turned sharply, storming into the other room without another word, leaving you standing there, shaking and broken.
And in that moment, you knew this was the beginning of the end.
Rio’s love burned everything it touched—but this time, you wouldn’t let her flames consume you.
Not again.
The silence that followed Rio’s storm was unbearable. You stood in that empty kitchen, the weight of her final words hanging in the air like smoke. I loved you more than anyone ever could. But love, you realized, shouldn’t feel like suffocation.
That night, you didn’t sleep. Every creak of the apartment made you wonder if Rio would burst back into the room, filled with apologies or anger—or something darker. But she didn’t. The apartment felt cold without her presence, and yet the absence felt like the first breath of clean air you’d had in months.
By sunrise, you knew you couldn’t stay. You gathered what little you had and slipped out quietly, without a note, without a goodbye.
Days passed. You found sanctuary miles away, in a small, forgettable town where Rio’s shadow couldn’t reach you—at least not immediately. But her voice echoed in your mind, reminders of all the promises, the threats, the way she knew how to make you feel like you needed her as much as she needed you.
You began to rebuild yourself slowly, piece by fragile piece. Life returned in small, painful doses—a sunrise that made you feel hopeful, the laughter of strangers in a café that reminded you of what freedom once tasted like. It hurt, at first. Healing always does.
But you were getting better. Stronger. For once, you felt like yourself.
And then Rio found you.
It wasn’t a knock at your door or her waiting in the shadows. No, it started with a letter—a single envelope slipped under the door to your rented room.
You stared at it for an eternity before picking it up. There was no address. Only your name, scrawled in familiar, looping handwriting.
Rio’s handwriting.
Your hands trembled as you opened it, finding only a small note inside:
“You really thought I’d let you go? I’m always watching. You’re still mine.”
Your heart froze.
From that moment on, the paranoia crept back in, like poison flooding your veins. Every time a stranger glanced your way, you wondered if Rio had sent them. Every shadow felt heavier, every closed door no longer safe. She wasn’t here, not yet, but her presence had wormed its way into your world once again.
You thought about leaving—running again, maybe somewhere farther, somewhere Rio could never trace. But deep down, you knew the truth. You could run to the ends of the earth, and Rio Vidal would always find you.
The final time came two months later, on a night not unlike the others. You were walking back to your place after a long shift, the streets empty and drenched in quiet. It wasn’t until you reached the building’s entrance that you saw her.
Rio leaned against the railing by the stairs, shrouded in her usual dark coat. Her hair fell over her face slightly, but even in the dim glow of the streetlight, you could see it—the look. The look that pinned you in place like prey, like she already knew you wouldn’t fight.
You froze. “Rio...”
She pushed off the railing, slowly stepping closer, and as she did, her calm facade melted into something haunted—something almost tender.
“I tried to give you time,” she murmured softly, voice barely audible. “Tried to let you go. But you knew it wouldn’t last, didn’t you?”
“You don’t own me,” you whispered back, though your voice cracked.
She stopped just in front of you, her dark eyes studying your face with something unreadable—a mixture of obsession and sadness. “No,” she said quietly. “I don’t. You’re not mine because I own you. You’re mine because you’re the only thing that makes me feel alive.”
For the briefest of moments, you saw something raw—something broken—beneath her bravado.
“I can’t fix you, Rio,” you replied, tears stinging your eyes. “I can’t be what you need.”
She gave you a small, heartbreaking smile. “You don’t have to fix me.”
Rio stepped forward, pressing her forehead to yours with a gentleness that broke you apart inside.
“But if I can’t have you,” she murmured, her breath warm against your face, “then no one can.”
Your heart stopped. “Rio—”
It happened fast—faster than you could react. You felt her hands slip around you, holding you too tightly, her voice murmuring softly as you fought to break free.
“No more running. I’m keeping you, one way or another.”
In the distance, you thought you heard the faint echoes of sirens—the ones that you’d called for, just in case. But it didn’t matter anymore. Rio’s world had consumed you completely.
And as you sank into the dark, the last thing you felt was Rio’s lips pressing softly against your temple, her voice like a whisper of a prayer.
“You’ll always be mine.”
_-_-_
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Aubrey talking about how Patti LuPone almost killed her a when they lived together
Agatha All Along 10/?
... we could be so cute and violent together
crazy how those two witches could either be yapping about their green witch girlfriends or their respective life partners named ethan
This is Agatha.
She loves her personal space.
And Rio?
Rio also loves Agatha's personal space.




