Had to deal with a giant spider in my bathroom, bc now I’m apparently not allowed to piss in peace in my own home any more. Then I watched a video of a dog mama being reunited with her puppies and cried. Weird evening, 5 out of 10

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Had to deal with a giant spider in my bathroom, bc now I’m apparently not allowed to piss in peace in my own home any more. Then I watched a video of a dog mama being reunited with her puppies and cried. Weird evening, 5 out of 10
Most Tears
TIE!
For Ava, redmoleskinebooks // Strong, 1dstyle (both with a total of 16 votes each)
"I'm so sorry," she said, voice trembling. She came towards me a little bit, her solitary suitcase aloft in a hand. I couldn't say anything. The pain was too much to bear at the sight of her leaving. Against my own will, my mouth opened and the two words that were choked out were, "Don't go." She looked at me with tea green eyes and softly kissed my forehead, and then she turned away and walked out my life. And that was the last time I ever saw those red locks and green eyes again. I sank down onto the bed and cried. My first real heartbreak.
//
I blinked away the tears so I could see again, expecting to see Hebe's weak smile again. Instead I saw her eyes closed and her head flopped backwards onto the pillow. "Hebe?" I panicked. She didn't respond, clearly having slipped into unconsciousness again. I cast around, looking for the button to call the doctor when a loud beeping started up. One of the monitors Hebe was attached to started flashing something on its screen, accompanied by an ear splitting beep.
The door flew open as a team of doctors rushed in and immediately started fiddling with the machine and attaching a breathing mask to Hebe's face.
"Son, can you wait outside please?" one of them asked me.
"No! I can't leave her!" I protested, unwilling to let go of Hebe's hand.
"You need to wait outside, please son it's for the best."
"Please don't make me leave!" I was still crying without even realising it, Hebe's hand gripped in my own when it was wrenched away by a doctor who was attaching a monitor to her fingertip. "No! Hebe!"