Hi! Can I do a Yandere agriche family x little sister reader? Like, reader is soft hearted and cries at violence and death and blood? Maybe even faints at the sight of them or something? Sorry if it's too complicated 😔
Thank you 😊 (feel free to ignore. If you didn't like it)
EVERLONG -( Yan! Agriche family x younger female reader!)
CONDENSATION: The Black Agriche household had never been capable of feeling the emotion that many called love. till you except you weren't like your siblings. You had the fears that most of them got rid of when they were younger. blood, violence, death—all of it!.
WORD COUNT: 2k
AUTHOR'S NOTE: THANK YOU and happy new years!! sm for requesting; I hope this met your standards! You're like 6 or 8? I didn't specify Lante isn't present here, nor is Dion. Lante is mentioned in passing!!!! (Got too lazy to write a scene with him, okay? okay..)
BEING SOFT AND DOCILE. It was a foreign thing amongst the Agriche family. A bloodline full of bloodshed and violence. The walls were often stained crimson red. To some of the servants it truly seemed never-ending. The screaming and the blood, that is.
So, to say, being born soft-hearted and opposed to everything the family stood for. It wasn't the first time. The head of the family had seen it numerous times before. In older people. Younger people, some with dark hair that the sun never reflected on, others the opposite.
But Lante was never known to be a generous man, nor was he ever kind to his children or his wives.
What mattered most to Lante was how useful his children could be. If you couldn't fight? Fine, you'd just have to master seduction. He found a solution to every little problem that would pop up.
So...what would his solution be for his more softhearted children?. Death, of course!. He couldn't have the Black Agriche be known for anything less than violent.
And that was how it was for an incredibly long time. For generation upon generation, Lante had never hesitated to kill pests who interfered with his vision. That was till a few years ago. And it was as if the impossible had become painstakingly possible.
THE MAIDS had been growing restless for the past few days. Stuck in their quarters, barely leaving their side of the mansion.
“This feels wrong...” once echoed through the then silent room. Her leather-bound shoe tapping against the floor. It didn't make a sound, but it sent similar jitters to every nerve in her body.
There was a murmured agreement amongst the others, all in similar clothes and sitting and moving in the same way.
“Oh, I got it!” Another maid stood up. The room was clustered and small, causing her black dress to thwap others in the face. The victims of that smack sent her some glares. She remained oblivious.
“I think it’s because none of the masters have given us any orders to clean up after them,” she stated the obvious. Others let out some ‘oohs’ and ‘ahhs’ as if they’d thought the same thing.
The first maid that had spoken up met the standing ones. “Yes...now thinking about it...why haven’t they called for us?”
“Maybe they are busy?” stated one.
“Maybe they’ve finally decided against all that violence they familiarized themselves with and ran for the countryside?” said another.
“No, no... what? They’ve obviously all died or abandoned the place!” Another shook her head.
“Who abandoned the place?” a smaller voice asked, peering from behind the standing maid, causing half the speculating maids to screech. And the other half to slump and let out a sigh of relief upon the realization of who it was.
One of the younger kids—or, for more detail, it was you!. Your name left the headmaid's lips, who was seated in the far corner. To which you'd given the weary maid a big smile, running towards her.
The head maid cleared her throat. Trying to find a way to simplify what she wanted to ask without seeming too outward and possibly dying at that spot.
Because, sure, you were sweeter and kinder than your half siblings. But, to the maids. Most of them are there by force; your kindness was a facade.
It wouldn't be the first time someone had fallen for that kind of trick.
And the head maid couldn't help it, not really! With your chubby cheeks and wide eyes, it was as if she could say whatever came to her without thinking about it first.
She pursed her lips for a second before letting out a sigh and asking. “Well, see... I and the maids were questioning where your, uhm, siblings were? They haven't asked for us for some time. And the head chef hasnt been getting orders of food…” The head maid voiced her worry.
Now you were standing in front of her, and she was resting on her elbows on her knees as she was sitting on an empty crate just so she could make eye contact with you.
She watched as your eyes lit up with the answer. You would know that sort of thing whenever you spent a long time around young children.
The way their eyes lit up whenever they knew the answer to something or little quirks whenever they'd lie. Like rubbing their fingers on the side of their nose.
She leaned forward, waiting to hear your answer.
“Oh well, that’s because my dad made them all go to another house!” you declared brightly.
The maids in the tiny room shared confused glances with each other. And so the head maid asked for more clarification.
“What—what do you mean, made them go to another house? In...in what way?” she asked once more. Mostly because the one thing she was thinking about was that the head of the Agriche family had gone mad and murdered everyone in the house.
And that would frankly be even more surprising, as they all thought the younger generation would get to their father before he ever got to them. Hell, they'd put money on that!
“Wellll,” you took your time kicking your feet at the empty air. “One day I was walking because I wanted to show Roxie a paper butterfly I made her,” you began recounting the incident.
“And then I saw blood, and it smelled so strong, and it was everywhere, and it made me feel super duper sticky, and I don’t really like blood, so I started to cry, and it was in my face and hands, and then everything was black.” You were explaining what had happened. With wide gestures with your hands, as kids often do, the maids in the small room clustered around you even more to hear your recollection of events.
“And then when I woke up...Papa said he made them all go away and that they’d come back in...” You raised your tiny hands, one finger going up, then another and another, counting.
You proudly held up your hands, the counted number reaching up to four. “In four days!” The maids weren't questioning anything as much as they were thinking if the head had gone mad.
“Well, are you sure he said this, sweetheart?” asked the head maid, smiling tentatively in a pitiful way that read, “Oh, she’s gone mad like her siblings, but you didn’t catch on.
You nodded your head, and an indiscernible noise came from the back of your throat. You held out both of your hands. “Anyway, can I have a cookie now, please?”
.
.
.
Four days had passed, and the quietness that had once enveloped the Black Agriche had bubbled up and died. The manor is now back to being a zoo. Children in clusters, some fighting for the fun of it. Others are taking it more seriously.
One was currently practicing the skill of climbing atop a chandelier, the expensive crystal wobbling side to side as the child grasped onto another clear, fragile crystal up high.
Unfortunately for you, you'd been making your way towards a very specific item that had caught your eye. But from how far away you were, you couldn't make out anything except how shiny it was.
Ignoring the pushing and your half sibling stumbling and falling in front of you, you didn't mind really. You weren't dumb; you understood it was just play fighting. You were so close when some warm liquid spilled onto your face, causing you to stop in your tracks.
You whirled around towards whoever had thrown whatever they had on you; you hadn't touched your face. You hadn't gotten a chance to look at the perpetrator, a delicate hand flying and covering your eyes.
You raised your head. The back of your head bumping against the person who was concealing your peripheral vision. But it didn't matter.
You'd recognize that calm voice anyway, not belonging to anyone else but Grizelda.
“Is my face dirty?” you asked. Thinking you just got milk spilled onto your face. But, from Grizelda’s point of view. Her smile tightened.
“Yep, just water, sweetheart,” when the crimson liquid was anything but clear. You looked like...well, it looked like someone had just thrown up pints of blood on you.
The brunette didn't remove her hand. Though she continued her faux reassurances. The lies fell from her mouth easily like water moving along in a lake.
At that moment, everyone had turned their heads to a certain blonde that somehow always held the attention of everyone in the room. Roxana moved swiftly in the room till she stood in front of Grizelda.
“What happened?” Her voice echoed across the now silent room. Grizelda didn't say a word. Her eyes moved to the side, eyeing the two who had been fighting to the death, standing bloody and ashamed.
The worse of the two had his eye purple, most of his blood having landed on you.
“Aha,” she acknowledged, turning to where Grizelda had glanced at. With a simple hand gesture, Grizelda walked away with you still in her arms, confused.
Roxana’s crimson eyes grew menacing in a way as she inched towards the perpetrators.
Sure, maybe they wouldn't have known that they weren't supposed to fight or show any violence when you were around. But Lante had addressed it and had forbidden it. And he had never addressed anything before.
Not the death of his wives. The mistreatment or the death of his other children.
So all the children knew about it.
No blood in front of the girl. No violence in front of the girl. Nothing that can even signal aggression in front of her.
And the rule was going as smoothly as you could expect from a bunch of children who grew up surrounded by violence.
“Go see Father,” Roxana said simply. Their appearance would signal why they were standing in their father's office.
If it ever got through his thick skull, Roxana could only hope as she went to find Grizelda. The blonde had expected silence. Not the familiar screeching of Jeremy from the other side of the door.
She pushed the wooden doors open. The scene made her soften almost. Grizelda is sitting next to you on an incredibly huge bed.in probably the pinkest room in the entire house.
Jeremy had his arms on his hips as he stood proudly, chest puffed and all as he proclaimed a bunch of things from the few seconds it took her to get from the door frame to besides her younger brother.
“Next time I see that twerp, I’ll beat him up!” he exclaimed, making you laugh. It was probably all staged. Just so you wouldn't notice the tissues of blood as Grizelda wiped the remnants away.
It wasn't love. Though it was a close feeling to it. Agriche children don't have that emotion even if they all grew up privileged.
It was taken away from them a long time ago. Not you though never you.
Your eyes brighten as you take in Roxana, her name falling out of your mouth in what can only be described as a squeal. Jumping off the bed in a hurry to hug her legs.
“I made you something!” you exclaimed, carrying the same excited tone Jeremy had just seconds prior. Fishing out the gift from one of the folds of your (very) expensive dress. Lace and ribbons and whatnot.
In the palm of your hand was a crimson butterfly. Made from paper the same color as her eyes.
It was poorly made. The edges were crinkled, and some of the blood from the earlier incident had spilled onto it somehow.
But the blonde didn't care. She crouched down to your eye level, her hand outstretched to take the gift, which you so graciously plopped into her awaiting hand with the sweetest sound that most definitely made her break into a smile that bordered on creepy.
Causing your laughter to die and Jeremy to slap his hand over your eyes. “Roxy...stop that; you’re going to scare her,” Jeremy whispered loud enough for her to stop but low enough so you couldn’t hear.
“Do you like it?” you asked, swiping your brother’s hand away.
“Yes, thank you,” she replied, ending her words with your name leaning in to peck your cheek. Making you smile.
And looking at your smile. It made Roxana feel as if just looking at it would bring that feeling of love back into her heart. It made her want to wrap you in a blanket and shield you away from all the violence you already despised.
The blonde knew though that if she told her other siblings, her father, her mothers. The entire household. They would agree with her.












