Hey, friends, just an update. Last week on my mom’s birthday, my aunt (Mom’s sister) almost died. Yeah. That was a day.
I won’t bother you with all of the details but she had a stroke 10 years ago from extreme blood pressure that left her paralyzed on her left side, so life is just a little harder for her already. Add that to her living in a state where “healthcare” is the biggest joke that can literally kill you (they sent her home with her blood pressure at 197/110 and, if you know blood pressure, yours should have just raised a little bit at reading that) and well... Stress level has been at about 10 million, give or take a few. (She’s had to call 911 twice more since then, can’t get in to see her doctor until next Friday. Good thing it’s not life-threatening or anything, right??? /s)
Anyway, apologies for all of the messages I’m behind on and just on being gone in for so long in general. I’m hoping to get back to writing to take my mind off of RL but, honestly, I go between sitting around staring at nothing and FULL PANIC MODE so we’ll have to see how that goes.
Love you all, hope you’re well. Take care of yourselves. ♥
Mitzy put her phone back in her pocket and began some muscle relaxation techniques Moxxie taught her. Doing so, she closed her eyes and started humming the first song that came to her head (Probably musical theater related).
"Chill Mitz." She whispered to herself "This'll pass. Just keep humming."
todoroki comforting his ftm s/o who had a rough day? lots of stuff happened today. i just wanna be held by him </3
So i’m mildly basing this off the day I had at work the other day. MAJOR TRIGGER WARNING FOR SENSORY OVERLOAD INDUCED PANIC ATTACK.
--
~~Deep Breaths~~
Shoto blinked as he came into the apartment. It was pitch black save for the glow of the laptop playing soft ambient music. He frowned as he came into the bedroom, seeing Y/N curled up on the bed, wrapped in a blanket.
“Baby?” He asked gently. A small whine was all that was heard. Shoto finally heard the frantic breathing and hurried in, pulling Y/N against him. “How can I--” His mouth was instantly covered and he nodded, laying in the bed with him as he pulled him close.
He rubbed his back gently, using his quirk to give him a slight chill as the cold had always calmed him. Y/N gulped and opened the blanket. Shoto smiled and slid his hands under Y/N’s shirt, pulling him close as their skin touched. The sigh of relief that escaped Y/N melted his heart.
Shoto gently kissed the top of his head, soothing him gently. Soon enough, Y/N’s breath came in soft even snores. He smiled, waiting a long while before slipping away and tucking him in.
He could ask him later, but he guessed he knew what happened.
@eggplant8 said: I would love to see Madge’s POV of picking him up from his family and response to his blurted out confessions.
+++
“Your grandma seems nice.” My words cut through the silent air, the first thing either of us had spoken in the twenty minutes that had passed since I picked Gale up.
A grunt was the only indication he gave me that I’d been heard, and he kept his gaze focused outside the window. Leg bouncing uncontrollably. Jaw clenched with tension.
Oookay, so he didn’t want to talk, then.
I tapped the beat of the music on my steering wheel lightly, focusing on the dark stretch of road ahead of me leading back to Panem.
There’d been something exciting about the impromptu road trip when I’d first headed out to Waukesha. I liked being the person people depended on. The one that got calls in the middle of the night because a car broke down. I was curious what he was doing out there on a Thursday night, though. Last I’d heard from him he had a major test to study for. It wasn’t like I needed the play by play of his life, but it did seem strange no conversation of him going home had come up.
For all of the conversations we’d had, all the truth and dare games at Hoffman’s, I didn’t know all that much about his family. I knew about his three siblings, two brothers and a sister, but I didn’t even know their names. Not that I’d exactly been an open book with him either about my family. It was just that there wasn’t much to tell. We were boring in that sense.
There was nothing boring about Gale’s family dynamic though, and the more he kept tight lipped the more curious I became.
The first small glimpse I’d gotten of any of his siblings came from the little boy asleep on the couch. Even with a blanket curled up around his shoulders and face pressed into a pillow, the resemblance to Gale was uncanny. There was no denying their familial relation.
“I can’t believe how much your little brother looks like you,” I laughed. I almost wished he’d been awake, so that I could’ve seen his eyes and his smile. Heard his voice. I wondered if their personalities were anything alike. Gale continued with his silence, only nodding his head a little and I sighed.
“Do they live with her? Your grandma?” It seemed that way, just based on the small bit of the house I’d seen. There were backpacks and school books scattered in the dining room. An open pantry with all kinds of kid-friendly cereal inside. More than one pair of small shoes at the front entrance by the door.
For as little as I knew about Gale’s siblings, I knew even less about his parents. Thinking back, I wasn’t sure if the conversation had ever come up at all. If it was true, that the kids did live with Hazelle, it must’ve come with good reason.
One of the girls in my neighborhood growing up lived with her grandparents because her mother died shortly after giving birth to her from complications. I didn’t know what happened to her father, never asked, but I remembered going to the graveyard with her every year on her mother’s birthday to place down daisy’s at the tombstone.
For a dark moment, I wondered if something similar had happened to Gale’s parents, too.
“Yep,” he answered, shortly, only adding to my terrible theory.
“Oh. How long?”
He finally looked at me, or at least turned his head in my direction. His eyes went straight through me though, lost in a thought too deep for me to reach.
“A while.”
“Hmm,” I hummed, trying to do the math on how old the brother I’d seen on the couch might’ve been. He’d told me his sister was eight, if she was the youngest that meant his mother couldn’t have died all that long ago. I felt a lump forming in my throat at the thought.
“Did you grow up with her, also?” I asked quietly and then he was back in the present, eyes boring into me with irritation as his eyebrows pinched.
“Stop,” he told me harshly, turning back to the window. “Just not tonight, okay? I’m exhausted and not in the mood for your psychoanalytical bullshit.”
Psychoanalytical bullshit? Wow, okay.
“I was just asking a question,” I muttered, annoyance clear in my tone.
I wasn’t the only one.
“No, you weren’t.”
“Okay, why are you mad at me right now?” I shot back, unable to help it. It wasn’t like I’d dropped everything I was doing to pick him up in the middle of nowhere at two in the morning. Granted everything I was doing included hot chocolate, a face mask and a Friends re-watch, but he didn’t need to know that. I hadn’t minded the change of plans at all, but Jesus, I wasn’t going to be the scapegoat for his bad mood, either.
I understood his frustration. I’m sure I would’ve been stressed beyond belief if my car broke down unexpectedly in the middle of winter two hours away from campus. But everything had worked out…
“Because you think you know everything, but you don’t,” he replied back, voice rising.
“That’s not true…”
“I’m not some project for you to figure out!”
The air was tense between us with his words and I bit the inside of my cheek, fighting to keep silent until I felt that I was in control.
“I never said that you were,” I muttered.
“Right,” he scoffed, tone accusatory. “You can’t help yourself, you have to get into people’s business. Well, fine, what would you like to know Dr. Undersee? That the reason my siblings live with our grandmother is because our mother is a junkie who chose drugs over her own goddamn kids?”
His voice cracked with the confession and when I looked over he seemed on the verge of a panic attack. His breaths were shallow, as if he couldn’t get enough air in his lungs and his leg was bouncing uncontrollably.
“Gale,” I tried in what I hoped was a soothing tone rather than the anxiety I felt welling up inside of me.
“Oh, maybe you’re dying to ask how many of us share the same father. Spoiler alert: four kids, three dads, two of which were such scum they wanted nothing to do with their kids and the third so bad it would’ve been better if he’d just left too!”
“You don’t have to--”
“You want to get into how he used to beat me over something as stupid as a lost remote control?” No. No, no, no. “Or how I had to beg our neighbors for food to feed my siblings because no one remembered to go to the store? Go ahead and diagnose the hell out of me, tell me about all the reasons why I’m fucked up trash now that you’ve got all the pieces to your puzzle.”
I wasn’t sure if he was even aware of the tears in his eyes, threatening to spill over, or not. He seemed lost. Floundering. Trying to find purchase to tether him to reality but coming up short.
We needed to stop driving. I searched the road signs passing by quickly for the nearest exit. Five miles.
From the corner of my eye I saw him lower his head between his knees, back rising and falling with each breath, hands clenched in hair that was coming loose from his bun.
“It’s okay,” I promised quietly. “Just breathe.”
I pulled over as soon as it was safe off the highway, near a farm and a cornfield because of course. It couldn’t have been a well-lit parking lot or something.
Gale jumped out of the car without a word, heading closer to the creepy cornfield with his head turned up towards the sky. I wanted to go after him, but reason told me to give him a moment. Let him cool off.
His confession still had me stunned. After months and months of vague answers and subject changes, he’d poured it all in such haste I was almost positive he would have regrets over it.
When minutes passed, but he remained outside, I tentatively got out to join him.
“You can go,” he told me as my feet crunched closer in the snow. “I’ll call Peeta or something.”
Yeah, sure. I was going to leave him in the middle of nowhere at two in the morning where the children of the corn could feast on his body before sunrise.
“I’m...not going to do that.”
He jerked out of my reach as my hand touched his forearm and took a few steps further down the field.
That’s fine. I didn’t like being touched in the middle of an attack, either. I remember my mom read one time that pressure helped to calm people down and she came and wrapped her arms around my body in a hug that felt closer to a straight jacket. I couldn’t breathe, let alone speak to tell her to stop, and when I finally managed to get air out, I screamed so loudly that she cried.
Focusing on Gale, not you.
Right.
“You’re right,” I whispered to him, and he turned his head half a fraction. Listening. “You’re not a project. I’m sorry if I treated you that way.”
“It’s not your job to put me back together.”
“I know that.”
He nodded silently and turned back towards the field as the wind whipped, picking snow up from the ground with its fury. It burned my exposed skin and I hopped a little in place to keep circulation flowing but didn’t get any closer to him.
“Truth or dare?” I asked. We could both use the distraction, and somewhere along the line the game had become our weird way of communicating when regular forms felt like too much.
“Truth,” he said back quietly and I couldn’t help but smile in relief.
“Tell me something you like about yourself.”
When he laughed, like the idea was a preposterous one, I felt my heart clench.
“Just one thing. Anything.”
He thought about it for a few painstaking minutes before folding his arms over his middle.
“I’m a good brother,” he croaked. “I think.”
“Yeah,” I smiled. “I think so, too.”
“Your turn.”
I took one step closer, then stopped.
“Truth.”
“How do you always find the best in people? Even when they don’t deserve it.”
The real question was easy to see between the words he spoke. How do you always find the best in me, even when I don’t deserve it?
Like he didn’t deserve it.
“There’s very few people in the world who don’t deserve any benefit of the doubt and you aren’t one of them,” I told him sternly, chancing another step. He didn’t move, or seem to be upset that I was closer to him, so when I chanced placing my hand in his and he didn’t flinch, I gave it a comforting squeeze.
When his hand tightened back around mine, something inside of me jolted.
“Wouldn’t you rather live in a world where we all saw the best things too?”
“Reality makes it difficult.”
“Hmm. That’s true,” I mused. “It’s not always easy.”
He looked down at me, exhausted and broken, and frowned.
“I’m sorry.”
I know.
“Come on, it’s freezing,” I said, motioning back to the warmth--and let’s be real, safety--of the car. “Let’s get back in the car.”
Gale was silent the rest of the way home, staring out the window with his arms folded protectively over his chest. And I let him be. When we pulled in front of his apartment, he seemed surprised that we were there, as if his mind had drifted somewhere else entirely, and he waited until he was almost out of the car to turn back and say thank you.
“It wasn’t a problem,” I promised. It was never a problem. “Gale, I--”
“You should go, Madge,” he interrupted. “Thank you but, you should go.”
The door shut without another word, leaving my unfinished words in limbo.
Gale, I’m always here.
+++
Darius was still awake when I got home. At the sound of the door opening, he wheeled out into the hallway in his chair to look me over expectantly.
“Well?” he asked when I said nothing. “Did all your dreams come true? Did he thank you for rescuing him with sexual favors?”
I burst into tears, adrenaline finally giving out now that I was back in the safety of the apartment. Darius was up in a flash, coming towards me to put a hand on either one of my shoulders.
“Did he hurt you?” He asked, like Gale wasn’t the same guy who brought me soup when I was sick. It was a reflex reaction for him, though. To assume the worst.
I shook my head and he brought me in closer to his chest.
“No,” I hiccuped as he stroked my hair. “Someone hurt him.”
@morganas-pendragons requested: I just really really want more vulnerable Loki, half your stuff makes me sob because I just... I just love him. Maybe Reader helps him deal with his PTSD, which he clearly has after SURVIVING Thanos?!
thank you so much for your kind words! i obviously l o v e vulnerable loki as well. also, i adore your url- morgana was one of the women who made me realize i was bi ;)
hope this lives up to your expectations!
please be aware this fic deals with ptsd. if you are at all triggered by this, i advise you to read a different fic and stay safe. this subject manifests in loki waking up from a nightmare and subsequently being helped by the reader. i have tagged this as tw: ptsd (among others).
for those struggling with this disorder who need help, i would advise going to https://www.mentalhelp.net/ptsd/hotline/
i would also like to say i based much of this off experiences i had from 2016-2017. as i’ve stated before, i only write in subjects i’ve experienced. if it harms you in any way, please let me know so you can educate me and work with me to find a better way to approach these matters. my experiences and way of dealing with things is not universal, and i understand this.
~
Life wasn’t easy for anyone after Thanos, any surviving member of the Avengers would tell you that.
Peter Quill and Bucky perhaps had it the worst: Their loved ones in front of them, yet not quite there. For Peter, it was Gamora, but not his. For Bucky, it was Steve, but.. tinted, like looking through a window. Both of the men’s lovers, the versions they knew, were gone.
Wanda and Clint didn’t even have a whisper of the ones they had been closest to. Vision and Natasha were wiped clear of the face of the Earth, without so much as a body to properly say goodbye to and grieve for. The two had found solace in each other; they had always been close, and Wanda now resided with Clint and his family. She was no replacement for Natasha, and no one wanted her to be, but every so often, her red hair would catch the sun just right...
It was Pepper who garnered the most sympathy. How could she not? The mother whose husband, founder of the Avengers, face of new frontiers, had paid the ultimate sacrifice. Done what no one else could, and left a better world in his wake, for everyone but his wife and young daughter.
No, the world wasn’t the same without Tony Stark.
You felt Loki’s pain was overlooked. But then, you always had.
Slowly but surely, the members of what you once called your team left the Avengers compound. Some had duties, such as Thor and Banner, but many just couldn’t handle the memories. Rooms that had belonged to those that were no more and empty iron suits that would never be worn again was too much for even Earth’s mightiest heroes. All who remained were you and Loki. Loki, who had no one else to turn to, and you, who had been part of SHIELD and then the Avengers, and that was it. You had never had a home besides this. There was nowhere else the two of you could have gone.
Most days were everything you and Loki ever wanted with each other. A huge palace, or the closest thing to it, all to yourselves. Every night food of a level your tastebuds would never grow used to was made; and there wasn’t a single surface where Loki had not laid you out and made you his. The occasional trip to New Asgard kept the pair of you firmly grounded in reality, as well as the odd former friend dropping by for a visit.
But those were most days. Not all.
Not even the famed Tony Stark had been as close to Thanos as Loki had been. There was no one, not on any planet or in any universe, who had been exposed to Thanos as Loki had been. No one had seen the look in Thanos’s eyes as he had attempted to gouge Loki’s out, or felt hands so strong around their neck that tightened with every grimace. The feeling of dread that comes with being a newly endangered species, and animalistic fear of thinking about the sour ends the rest of your kin will come to.
And of course, Loki had thought of you. Of how your body would crumple at the news of his death, of how you would make Thanos’s search for you easier by finding him first. You were a stupid girl when you were angry, Loki had told you many times, but it was in the alien’s grasp Loki thought that with utter despair in place of anger.
All he had wanted to do was survive so he could get back to you.
Loki refused to tell you how he did make it off the spaceship. When you had asked Thor, his eyes had clouded over, a deep trance having overtook him. Magic. You never pressed Loki, or anyone else who had been aboard the Asgardian ship, on the situation since.
Suffice to say, the bruises on Loki’s neck had healed. The ones in his mind had not.
You cradled Loki to your chest, slowly combing your fingers through his hair, as he clutched you late into the night. It wasn’t rare for him to wake up unable to catch the air in the room.
“Lights.” you say. Instantly, the dark room in illuminated, opposite the ship had been the day Thanos and Loki crossed paths. You pull a blanket around Loki’s shoulders in an attempt to make him feel secure, but not confined. A candle is lit within seconds, a talent you picked up quickly upon learning the familiar scent could contribute to the feeling of comfort in the room. You glance at the water glass you fill with fresh water every night before bed just in case this happens, effectively reminding Loki it is there. “Loki.” you tilt the god’s chin up, and guide him so the two of you are sitting up straight on your bed that is too damn soft.
“Breathe with me.” you communicate slowly. You put your hand against Loki’s stomach, and mirror it by placing his hand against you own. “Breathe.” you repeat. “In. Out.” you say these words until you feel Loki’s movements become consistent under your palm. Some nights it works, some in doesn’t. Tonight, with patience, Loki finds the calm.
“I’m sorry.” you hear him say, it comes out a wheeze. You feel you heart ache.
“No.” you say, resisting the urge to clutch Loki to you.
“One year.” he says. “And you’ve stayed by me. I could never understand that, as long as I live.” Loki lays back down, flat on his back, and stares straight into the bedroom lights.
“Because you’re you.” you join him, your shoulders that only thing that touches. “Thanos didn’t take anything from you.”
“Except my sanity.”
“Loki.” you turn to him, but the god won’t meet your eyes.
“You should just leave.” he spits. “I’m hopeless.”
“No.” you retort. “If I thought you were hopeless, I wouldn’t have stuck my neck out for you in New York all those years ago. You are not a burden, Loki Laufeyson, and you never have been. Not then, not now, not ever. You may physically be a god, but you’re human on the inside. I will never fault you for that, not for as long as I live.”
Loki doesn’t respond. He simply turns to face you, then closes his eyes.
When you awake in the morning, the lights are still on and the candle has burned to the end of the wick.
While Stan is still recovering his memories, a moment of clumsiness brings back some particularly vicious ones. It’s up to Ford to calm him down.
Ford was lost in his thoughts and his work.
This wasn’t an especially unusual state of being for him, by any stretch of the imagination. In fact, it was oddly comforting for Stan to see him doing something so “normal Ford.” For the past three days, since the thingy happened that made him lose his memory, he’d been a tiny bit...clingy seemed like the best description. Constantly watching Stan, clearly afraid he was gonna have another memory lapse if his expression became the tiniest bit blank, fussing over him with little or no provocation.
It wasn’t that he didn’t enjoy it; honestly, after forty years more or less alone Stan was happy to receive any kind of positive attention, regardless of how pathetic that made him. But he didn’t want Ford to wear himself out trying to make up for lost time together.
At the moment, his twin was down in his nerd cave, working on what looked like some kind of weird fancy compass thingy, when Stan brought down a plate of sandwiches for lunch and set them at his elbow.
The nerd jumped a little at the realization that he was no longer alone in the room, and blinked a few times before recognizing him. “Oh! Stanley.”
“The one and only.” Stan grinned, and gestured to the plate. “Lunchtime.”
“Already?” Another nonplussed blink.
He was holding a screwdriver in his hand; Stan snatched it, and placed a sandwich between his fingers instead. “Eat. It’s turkey with avocado.”
Ford’s expression changed, the corner of his mouth curling up into a pleased smile. “It’s been a long time since I’ve had real avocados.”
“And you like them, right?”
“Yes, I love them. Thank you.”
Stan grinned; he loved it when he remembered tiny details like that. Yesterday he’d given Dipper some spare pens he’d found in his desk drawer because he’d remembered that the kid liked to chew on them when he was thinking, and went through them like they were candies. For an alarming second Dipper had looked like he was actually gonna cry happy tears; Stan wasn’t sure if it was from getting spare pens, or because Stan had remembered, or a little of both, but either way he’d made him happy, so he was pacified.
As Ford finally began taking bites of his sandwich, Stan examined his project.
“What’s this thing?”
Ford swallowed his most recent bite. “Oh, it’s just a simple device for detecting weirdness fields.”
“Y’mean like the thing you said is surrounding this town?” Stan reached out and spun one of the little arrow dials.
“Yes, but on a grander scale. Say, seeing if there are places in other parts of the world-if I connect it to my watch, it should be able to locate other places filled with anomalous activity.”
“Whoa.” Stan was impressed, but not surprised. If anyone could build a doodad like that, it was his genius brother-
He pulled on another twirly arrow thingy, and it snapped off into his hand.
********
It was like his blood turned to ice.
No no no what did I do NO
“NO! I’m sorry!”
Frantically Stan tried to put the compass arrow back on the spindle, even as his heart lurched in his chest and a little voice screamed in the back of his mind something that sounded a little like NOT AGAIN, and blurred memories began flashing in front of his eyes: a spinning machine with a thing on the front falling off, the indistinct blue of a television screen in a dark room, a sidewalk, dark curtains, a giant metal circle dark and empty with the knowledge that he’d FAILED, he’d FAILED again and he couldn’t go back to being alone please-
Faintly he could hear Ford’s voice on the verge of his hearing, but he didn’t bother trying to make out the words, not wanting to hear the rebuke because he would fix this, struggling harder to fit the arrow on the part of the compass it had come from, barely feeling a slight stinging in his hands and saying in a rapid mantra, “I can fix it, just hold on and lemme fix it-”
“STANLEY!”
Suddenly Ford’s hands were grabbing his, forcing him to drop the piece of equipment and pulling him away from the compass.
Stan thrashed, trying to get back and prove that he could fix it, that he wouldn’t screw this up for Ford again-but then his brother was grabbing his shoulders and ordering him to “Breathe, Stanley! It’s okay, you’re okay, just breathe for a moment.”
“But-”
“Ssh…” With unprecedented gentleness Ford pushed him into a chair, and sat down across from him, still holding his shoulders.
“Do you think you can try to follow my breathing?”
Stan nodded, numbly.
“Good.” Ford did a long, slow inhale through his nose; Stan resisted for a moment, but then followed suit.
“That’s very good, Stanley. Keep going, you’re doing fine.”
He repeated until Stan was no longer hyperventilating, and then said, “Stay here for a second; I’m going to get my med kit for your hands.”
Stan gave him a nonplussed stare as he got up; what was wrong with his-?
Then he at last registered the stinging pain in his palms and fingers, and the fact that there was blood on them.
Oh.
********
When Ford came back, bag in hand, he began cleaning and disinfecting the cuts. For a moment they sat in silence aside from the sounds of Ford at work. At last, though, Stan whispered, “I can fix it. I swear, I didn’t mean-”
“I know, Stanley. Don’t worry about it.”
There didn’t seem to be any anger in Ford’s voice...but Stan felt like there was maybe some reproach. His heart sank.
“I’m sorry!” he protested, hearing his voice crack almost as bad as Dipper’s. “I know this is something you’ve worked really hard on, I shouldn’t have touched it like that-!”
“I’m not angry with you!”
Ford put his hands on Stan’s shoulders again, squeezing.
“Listen to me, Stanley. I’m not mad at you. I was here, I know you weren’t trying to break it, and it’s not a big deal, it’s very easily fixed. Okay?”
His tone was earnest enough that Stan believed it. But something about his brother’s phrasing made him tilt his head and ask, “Who are you mad at, then?”
Ford chewed his lip, and went back to fixing up the cuts. “...Myself. For being part of the reason that you’d get worked into such a state over a stupid mistake.”
He tenderly rubbed some cream into a long cut on Stan’s palm; it started to fade away even as he looked at it.
Stan tried to think of something reassuring or forgiving he could say. But he’d tried taking all the blame when they’d talked about this before, and that just seemed to make Ford feel worse, for some strange reason. All he could think of to do, when at last the smaller cuts had been healed up and the deeper ones bandaged over, was wrap his hands around Ford’s and squeeze gently.
Ford squeezed back, and gave him a half-hearted smile. Then, after a few seconds, he picked up his sandwich again.
“...Tell me more about how this thing works?” Stan indicated the project again.
Ford relaxed a little, and went into lecture mode.
And for the moment, at least, peace was restored.
********
One of my favorite kinds of sandwiches is a turkey-bacon-avocado with mustard and onions. The delicious sharp flavors all compliment each other in all the best ways, and the onions decrease my chances of being bitten by yellow-spotted lizards.
Since I'm currently living in Texas, this is a particular danger for me.
Hi! I just want to say that I freakin love your blog And I was also wondering if I could request. I read over the Request Info, but if I request incorrectly I am sorry. Anyways, I was wondering if you would be able to do a Drabble where the reader is Stiles Stilinski’s younger twin sibling and that the reader has a panic attack. Maybe over the new threat they’re facing, and Stiles helps them through it. If you can’t get to it, or if you want to change it up that’s perfectly okay!! Thanks! :)
Trigger warning:Panic attack.
A/N: Thank you, that’s far too kind of you. I’m glad thatyou like it and thanks for the request, I hope you enjoy it.
Finding out thatthere were supernatural beings in Beacon Hills hadn’t really shocked you. Infact, it was one of those things that actually seemed to make sense. That,however, did very little to make it any easier. The threats that came with theknowledge, with trying to help people, were terrifying.
None of them,however, had been as bad as the Nogitsune. It had left its mark on you, takingover your twin’s body, threatening to take him away from you forever. It hadbeen hard, trying to get through to your brother – a task you found a littleeasier than any of the others, but still difficult. Now, you saw your brother.You saw the sibling that you had always loved, but there was something elsethere.
Fear.
What if you hadn’tproperly got rid of the monster that had taken his form? What if something worsecame? Those thoughts, and many more, swarmed your thoughts all the time. Theyclustered around everything else that you were trying to do, refusing to beignored. They were stifling; but somehow you were able to push them down,squash them into something that you knew would be worse, but couldn’t help.
A noise to the sideof the library startled you from your studies. You looked up, only to see thatthere was nothing there. When you looked back to the book you reread the quote.Reread the line that instantly had you thinking about the last year. About thetrickster who had caused so much havoc.
There was an almostblasé way that the book was talking about the whole thing that put you on edge.You glanced up once more, but there was nothing there.
Nothing other thanthe thoughts, that were beginning to press in on you once more. Your chest feltas though it was getting squashed under the weight of them.
‘Hey.’
Stiles’s voice wasinstantly recognisable to you. You looked up, spotted the concern behind hiseyes. Or was it something else? Was it really him at all?
Stiles put his handsfirmly on your shoulders. ‘It’s all right,’ he soothed, voice soft.
‘What’s – What’shappening?’ you asked, panic clutching at your chest. You needed air, youneeded to be out of the library, somewhere where the air was less stifling.
‘It’s a panic attack,’he told you, voice calmer than you thought it should be. ‘Breathe with me.’ Hemade an exaggerated inhalation.
You didn’t copy.You were too busy trying not to hyperventilate.
He tightened hisgrip on your shoulders. ‘Come on, with me.’ He inhaled again.
You nodded, thistime tried to copy him.
He smiled slightly,before slowly letting out the breath.
You mimicked him,oddly thinking back to when you were little. When you tried to copy him as ayoung child.
Somehow, thathelped.
He kept breathingwith you, until you realised that you were breathing normally again. When yourealised that the tightness in your chest was slowly lessening.
You felt the tearsprickling in your eyes.
‘Hey, it’s allright,’ Stiles soothed, pulling you in for a hug. ‘Have you had many of them?’
You shook your headagainst him. ‘Not like that.’
He placed a quickkiss on the top of your head. ‘I’m here for you whenever you need me.’
‘Iknow,’ you assured him, giving him a big hug. Glad that your twin brother wasstill there to look out for you.
Idk, I didn't see anyone talk about this but. That was a panic attack right? Callum had that? Idk but that was so important to me. Having relatable characters is so nice.