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Whumptober #14: Tearstained
Marvin’s own deep, rasping sobs dragged him out of a twisted sleep. His hair was tangled wildly around his face, blinding him as he struggled against the suffocating blankets. “S-Stop! Stop! Chase!” It was only when one of his flailing arms hit his nightstand lamp that he lurched fully out of the nightmare.
The magic he had summoned in his sleep lit the room, reassuring him of where he truly was. Home. Safe. Nothing to fear…except everything that could be lurking in the shadows.
Chest heaving, he sank back in trembling exhaustion, met with the wet fabric of his sweaty, tearstained pillow. He couldn’t even bring himself to care when it plastered to his clammy cheek and gradually dampened his hair. Fresh tears were already threatening, catching on his clumped lashes before he blinked them away. Breathing shakily, he hugged his throbbing wrist and stared numbly into the dark.
Liam 2
[Liam 1 was here!]
He was sitting at their kitchen table. His hair was a halo around his head, and his bony hands poked out of the sleeves of the jumper Lindsey had given him, which were damp with wiped tears. They cupped around the mug of tea, loaded with sugar to help him with the tremors that were still running over him from his brief ordeal.
Cat leaned against the counter, arms folded to hide her own hands. Lindsey was sitting opposite him, taking the lead because Cat was the one who had scared him – and because Cat couldn’t trust herself to be what he needed, right now.
Only Time Can Heal A Broken Heart
https://archiveofourown.org/works/21048623#main @whumptober2019
Something was up with Arthur.
Dutch knew the boy like the back of his hand. He’d raised him, after all. Molded him, turned him from a frightened, angry street-rat into a bold, brave, young man.
So he knew that something was wrong.
The boy had taken to leaving camp early in the morning, and returning late at night. Smelled like alcohol more often than not, hackled up when he or Hosea, Susan or Bessie or even Annabelle tried to approach him. He was out more often than he was when they lived near Eliza and little Isaac.
Oh, Eliza and Isaac.
It was hard to believe that his boy was a father—that he was a grandfather. He remembered when he was still a scrawny little thing, all long limbs and knobby knees, too big feet and too broad shoulders. Scared of everything, afraid of he and Hosea, flinching at the first sign of a raised voice, tucking tail and hiding when the alcohol came out.
And that was before Susan, and Bessie, and Annabelle and young John, wasn’t it? So much had changed since they’d taken him in. He’d gotten together with Susan, and broken up with her. Hosea had met Bessie, and married her—legally, in a church, even!—and he had met Annabelle, brought into their fold. And they’d saved John’s life, brought the scrappy kid back to camp.
And Arthur had met Eliza. One night later, and they’d had Isaac. Time flew, and his boy was a father.
Arthur had been happier than he could remember him ever being. He’d been terrified at first, scared to death that he’d be a horrible father. Still was, sometimes, he knew.
But Arthur adored that little boy. Isaac was the light of his life, the apple of his eye. Every time he went to visit, he brought Eliza flowers, bought toys for the boy. Took all the gifts that their family gave him to give to their grandson, their nephew, books from Dutch, carved toys from Hosea, clothes and stuffed animals from the women.
His boy was kinder.
Softer, almost.
More patient with John, more willing to take time out of his day to teach the boy how to do things. Had taken to fishing more with he and Hosea, trying to become better at it so, as he said, he could teach his son, and then his boy could fish with his pa like Arthur had. Had even tried to learn to crochet under Susan, before writing it off as a lost cause.
So long as Arthur kept up his duties to the gang, though, hunted and helped with heists and brought in money, then Dutch didn’t mind. His boy was happy, so he was happy.
But now his boy wasn’t happy, and Dutch worried. Hosea was concerned, too, had tried to approach Arthur but had been sent away in short order, and knew better than to push him, that it would only make him more surly, more withdrawn. Susan and Bessie had brought up their concerns, and Annabelle had tried to talk to him, too; she was all-but his mother, so they were sure she’d be able to get through to him.
But, impossibly, he’d chased her away, too.
And they worried, and knew that something had to be done.
Dutch waited, and watched. Arthur had left camp early that morning, and Dutch knew he wouldn’t be back until late. So he sat in his tent, thumbed through one of the books Hosea had brought him from his recent trip into town—a philosophy book he was surprised to discover he rather enjoyed.
Hosea was off with Bessie, and Susan and Annabelle had gone into town for the night, taking John with them. They knew he was going to try and talk to Arthur tonight, had wished him luck and wanted to give them their privacy.
He listened to the sound of thumping footsteps, slightly unsteady—was the boy drunk again?—and read a few pages more once he heard Arthur go into his tent, letting him have time to unravel and, hopefully, sober up a bit.
Dutch marked his page with his bookmark, finding a good stopping point, and set it aside. This Evelyn Miller, he was discovering, had some good points. It wasn’t often that he dreaded talking to Arthur, but with how temperamental the boy had become lately, he found himself increasingly reluctant the closer he came to his tent.
He hesitated outside of the canvas tent, taking a deep breath—there was a strangled breath, and he paused.
‘Is he hurt?’
Dutch didn’t hesitate to shove aside the tent flap, to step inside and announce, “Arthur?”
His boy froze, shoulders stiff.
Dutch took in the inside of his tent—his satchel, dumped carelessly on the ground, gun belt dropped next to it. And Arthur himself, sitting, slumped on the bed, one of Isaac’s toys—the stag Hosea had carved for him out of antler, that Hosea had given him himself—clutched in his hands. His thumb ran slowly, methodically, over its face, stopping abruptly as he jolted upright to face Dutch.
“What?” he croaked, sounding too tired to be startled, and far, far too tired for someone so young.
He looked from the toy, to Arthur’s tear-streaked face, eyes red and watery, then back to the toy again, a nasty, foreboding feeling settling deep in his gut. “Are you alright, son?”
Arthur blinked at him slowly, and shrugged. Dutch fought the urge to sigh, knowing he’d have to treat carefully-
“They’re dead.”
His thoughts came to a crashing halt. “What?”
His boy nodded slowly, dropping his gaze back to Isaac’s toy stag, rubbing his thumb along the face. “Yeah. Went to visit and,” he cleared his throat, reaching up to wipe at his eyes with the back of his sleeve, “and,” slowly, Dutch sat next to him on the cot, resting his hand on his back.
From there, he could see how much darker the antler was than normal, and his heart broke for his boy, wondering just how long he had sat holding it to his chest.
“And there was just graves.”
Dutch’s heart broke for his boy, unable to stand the way his voice cracked, the way it gave out and how defeated he sounded. “Oh, son,” he stroked his thumb along the knobs of his boy’s spine.
“They was robbed, Dutch.” his shoulders stiffened, “ten damn dollars. Ten.” he clenched his fist around the stag, before loosening it, stroking his thumb along the grain of the carving as though in apology. “One of the neighbors saw me standin’ there. Told me what happened.”
“I’m so sorry, Arthur.” and he was. He’d lost people, had lost his father when he was younger, but never anyone he truly cared for. Had never lost a child, or a partner. But just the thought of losing Annabelle, or Susan, of losing Arthur or John, it was… well, it was unthinkable. He’d lose his mind, would blame himself, blame himself for bringing them into this life.
And, knowing Arthur, that was exactly what was going through his head.
“Dutch,” Arthur croaked, “I’ve killed men for less. Taken wedding rings off of men I’ve killed. Those people I’ve killed… they were people’s sons, people’s husbands, people’s fathers. I’m as bad as they are.”
Dutch sighed, shaking his head. His poor, poor boy. He wasn’t thinking straight, he knew, but it was a thought they all had at some point. Killing in their line of work was an inevitability, no matter how hard you tried to avoid it. And it was impossible not to think about those lives you’d stolen away, late at night when you couldn’t sleep. Had they been married? Did they have kids? Were you leaving another child an orphan? Another woman to raise a child alone?
“Arthur, son. I know you. You’ve only ever killed when you had to. Those men you’ve killed… they were trying to kill you. If you hadn’t killed them, they would have killed you. And they wouldn’t have hesitated, they wouldn’t have cared that they were leaving Hosea and I without our son.”
His boy shook his head, opened his mouth to respond, made a low croaking sound and dropped his gaze back to the stag. “I should have been there, Dutch. I promised I’d protect them and… and I didn’t.”
“Arthur,” Dutch pressed, “you couldn’t have known.” he brought his hand up, ran his fingers through Arthur’s hair—he’d loved that when he was younger, although he had never admitted it. “You were the best father you ever could have been, son. You loved that boy, and that boy loved you. He loved you more than anything. You gave him a good life, better than a lot of kids get.” He softened his voice. “There was nothing you could have done.”
Arthur clenched his jaw, stroked the toy stag, and shook his head. Dutch sighed, and wrapped his arm around him. The man stiffened, but slowly leaned in, burying his face in the crook of his neck, shoulders trembling as he clutched the stag to his chest.
Whumptober - Tearstained
He’d always kept the photo with him, one of the few things he had allowed himself to take out on rescues even in the early days. It was something he’d become glad for whilst floating through space with no way to call for help, at least his boys and his Lucy were with him without being subjected to the same hell as he.
That it had become stained with his tears was something that partly angered him. What good would crying do about the situation? Yet at the same time, a different source of anger, why had the Hood had to threaten the world? The man had family, Tanusha, and the boys didn’t even know it!
Therein lay the fear, the thought that the very news of Tanusha’s family could tear his family apart. All because he had been so determined to protect the world he may have risked everything he had sworn to protect after Lucy.
He had failed, and there was no worse feeling in the world.
Tear Stained - Whumptober Day 14
Before they manage to bring Finn back from Afghanistan, Jess sleeps at his parents house so if there's any news they'll know.
Jess wakes up sobbing on more than one occasion, because Finn's died and she can't do anything and the image just keeps playing over and over again.
When Finn gets stabilised and sent over, Jess is already there. By the time he's in a ward, she's already managed to persuade the nurses for a camp bed by his.
He wakes up at four am, the tube having been removed a few days prior and allowing him to breathe for himself. Jess is draped over the bars on his bed, her hand in his. He doesn't say anything at first, just watching her Finn just watches her as he's just hit by how lucky he is.
He wakes her up by moving her hair out of her face, and she checks him like she always does, but this time he smiles back.
"Hey."
Jess just sobs, full bodied, ugly sobs as she looks at him, alive and awake. They kiss, her hands either side of his face and there's a desperation to it, too. When they pull away, Finn just smiles up at her, one hand against her cheek. She's still crying.
He shuffles over, confused as it hurts, but making room for Jess. She tries telling him no, that she's got the cot and she's fine, but, as always, Finn pouts until he gets his way.
She curls into the side that doesn't have the chest drain, Finn's arm wrapped protectively around her. Their legs are intertwined, her arm resting lazily over his chest. She can feel his heartbeat, and she doesn't want to lose it again
Finn presses a sleepy kiss to the top of her head and they both drift off. In her sleep, she shifts, tucking her face against his side and Finn does too, rubbing her back in his sleep
It doesn't matter that they're in hospital, that Finn's not well, that he's already died twice, they've got each other.
And that's all they need.
It's the first night Jess sleeps properly, Finn waking her with a gentle nudge and a kiss. She blinks at him, bleary and confused but then it slips into place, and she's crying again.
They're happy tears, Jess promises him, and he doesn't really have the concentration to figure out she's not quite telling the truth.
"I just can't lose you, Finn."
"Don't be silly. I'm not going to leave you, gonna marry you one day."
Tearstained - Crawling With Tarantulas / The Coffin
This is the funniest shit I’ve ever heard. THE LYRICS are just so unbelievably campy and bad. If you are a big fan of King Diamond, you have got to hear this shit. It’s so bad that it’s good, honestly! I love it.
I'm dreaming of death, I take deep dive. The rest of my life will drown in your eyes. The words in my mouth will take your heart. Repeating the rhyme that reveals my disguise.
I feel your pain inside of my dreams where is nothing to see at all. I fall into you and I take it all down and reach for my dawn. I will blacken your eyes and mute your mouth, blind love is the bound. I reach to your heart it's cold inside. I'll suffer in flames that burns my eyes.