Hi, welcome. I'm chaotic-scraps and I post scraps on here. Pronouns are dealer's choice.
If I complete a story on here, you have witnessed a miracle. I occasionally reblog other stories and/or art/comics/animation.
Feel free to leave asks/requests.
You're a murder victim haunting an old apartment building. The newest tenant's apartment is full of teenagers trying to perform a seance. You're doing your best to be as disruptive as possible because they keep almost summoning your murderer.
There was something intimidating about the blank page. No words seemed good enough, she thought to herself. She looked at the blank page again, crisp and white, like a snowy field frozen in time. "You could be anything", she thought. A furrowed brow. An ink pen caught in between two fingers while scratching her scalp with the rest of them. The rain pladdering against the window 🪟🌧️☔
"You shot me! In the foot!" The god whined, curled up on the floor.
"Well, yeah," you said. "You were about to destroy the whole city."
"My foot! Do you know how long that takes to heal?! I'm going to have a limp!"
"You also killed people. I really can't feel too sorry for you."
"Do you have any idea who you're dealing with?!"
"I know exactly who I'm dealing with." You crossed the room and knelt in front of him. "Do you?"
The God raised his head to glare at you. "Some pathetic human who got lucky," he said at last.
You smiled and raised the gun to his head. "No, I was sent here," you said. "But try again."
"A couple of puny humans--"
"You're too old for this foolishness."
The God quieted, at that. His eyes went wide as something registered. He shrank a little in terror.
"You were summoned by the Gods, weren't you?" he whispered.
You stared down at him with a mixture of pity and disgust. "The Gods will give you a lighter sentence if you come with me quietly."
It was then the room shifted, or tried. You could feel him pull at the fabric of reality, but you wouldn't let it budge.
"You tried that already," you said. You placed a hand on his shoulder. "No more running."
He tried to grapple you, but his power was never in brute force.
"You chose this," you said.
You gripped his head. He shrieked, wide-eyed and terrified, clawing at you desperately. His hands shrank, now short and stubby. His shoes flopped to the ground, feet too small to hold them. The bullet wound became but a tiny birth mark. His head shrunk, his eyes more soft and wide. Soon enough, he was nothing more than a harmless human baby.
You cradled him in his shirt. He screamed and cried and babbled.
"You will live among the humans, stripped of your memories, stripped of your godhood," you said gently. "For as many lives as you have taken, you will be reborn. That is your punishment."
The baby fussed and spit up a little.
"...Lovely. Now, let's go introduce you to your parents."
You've been sent out to defeat a powerful, reality bending god. All have died horrifically trying. And here you are in front of the crying god as they complain about how you just shot them.
The vampire spat out your blood. "God, what have you been eating?!"
CW: implied abuse, wrongful imprisonment
It had been five years.
Five years since Villain heard that laugh.
Their blood ran cold. Their heart pounded in their chest. Too afraid to turn their head. With shaking hands, they pulled out their phone and angled the camera to view behind them.
It was them. Oh God, it was them. Sitting with their friends at a table, like everything was normal. Like they were normal.
Every nerve was in high alert. Throat constricted. Villain left cash on the table and rushed to leave--
THUD.
Villain fell back. Phone slid across the floor.
"Oh my god, I am so so so sorry," the person who ran into them babbled. They held out a hand to help them up. "I didn't even see you-- Are you okay, are you hurt? Let me help you up."
Villain glanced up at the friendly voice. Hero's Sidekick.
Villain quickly ducked away and ignored the hand, instead opting to crawl towards their phone and grab it before--
"Oh, is this yours? Here."
Those boots. That voice.
Villain couldn't move. Couldn't breathe.
Hero crouched face-to-face with them. Holding their phone. Rooted on the spot.
"... Villain?!" A flurry of emotions crossed Hero's face. "You're-- you're alive?!"
Villain bolted. Hero screamed for them to come back. Past the parking lot, past the tree line, into the thick of the forest. Not the best place to cut through to get home, nor the fastest, but an easy way to shake someone off.
They didn't stop running until their legs gave out. Lungs stung with the exertion. They upchucked everything from the bar.
Villain had escaped them. They had faked their death so perfectly. Vanished without a trace, all away across the continent. Hero wasn't supposed to ever find them. Yet here they were.
Villain leaned against a tree to stand up shakily. They needed to get home, grab their cash and whatever they could carry, and leave.
They arrived at their door covered with leaves and dirt. No time to shower.
First thing to do was to grab the money. They crossed the room halfway before they stopped. Something was off. Something was wrong, but they couldn't place what.
Peppermint. They never had peppermint in their house. Hero ruined it for them. Yet they smelled it now.
They turned to leave too late.
Hero was there, blocking the front door.
"You left your phone," Hero said, holding it up.
Villain backed away. "Let me go," they pleaded. "Let me go, please."
The back of their legs hit a coffee table, and they fell backward. The table cracked and collapsed. Hero stood over them.
"Why would I do that?" Hero said. They pressed onto the villain's chest with their boot. "You had me fooled, I'll give you that. Look at the life you've made for yourself here. Nice little apartment. Friends."
They clicked cuffs over Villain's wrists.
"You and I both know your only home is behind bars," Hero whispered in their ear.
"Please..." Villain withered. "Please take me to the proper channels. Please take me to prison."
Hero patted their cheek. "You wouldn't last five minutes in prison, my pet. I built the basement solely to keep you safe and out of trouble."
Villain shook. They tried to keep down the building panic attack and couldn't. They were sobbing, gasping for breath.
"I missed you, " Hero said, caressing the side of their cheek. "You're as perfect as I remember."
They carried Villain into the back of the car.
"Wow. You caught a bad guy on vacation?" Sidekick said.
Villain hung their head.
Hero startled. "Sidekick? When did you get here?"
"I followed you in case you needed backup. You left in such a hurry."
"I don't need your help," Hero said hurriedly. "This is a... Special case."
"It's not trouble," Sidekick said with a smile. "What'd they do, anyway?"
Hero's eyes darkened. "I'm sorry, Sidekick, but that information's classified. Please forget you saw this."
Villain peeked at Sidekick from the corner of their eye.
Sidekick glanced back. If Villain didn't know any better, they would say they looked worried.
"Okay," Sidekick said. "We're still driving back together, though, aren't we?"
Hero groaned. "I thought you were driving back with the others."
"No, they're taking a detour and we need to get back."
Hero relented, and for a while they drove in silence. Sidekick kept checking the back seat.
They reached a rest stop. While Hero was in the restroom, Sidekick ran to the back door.
"Quick. Here's some cash," Sidekick said. "Get out of here before Hero comes back."
"Why--" Villain tried to say.
"I recognize you. You were Hero's first sidekick." Sidekick looked away, expression pained. "I... I know your story. And I believe you. I know why you did it."
"...Thank you," Villain whispered.
"Get out. Now. That truck's leaving."
Villain nodded, then ran for the truck that was pulling away.
Hero screamed. "No, no, they're GETTING AWAY! STOP!!!"
Sidekick smiled and waved sadly as Villain watched them fade into the distance.
You, the villain, faked your death and started over years ago. But you never expected the hero to stumble into your new favorite bar, laughing with their friends.
Villain drove slowly on the dark, ice-covered roads, their eyes searching frantically. Hero fought with Supervillain and barely managed to escape. They had to find Hero before Supervillain.
They'd installed a tracker on Hero's phone, and this was Hero's general location, but they were nowhere to be found.
They could be lying in the snow, bleeding out, or worse.
They rolled down the windows and tried calling Hero's phone. The cold air stung their eyes. They drove back and forth until at last they heard Hero's telltale ringtone.
They leapt out of the car and dug through the snow.
Their stomach dropped.
Just the cellphone.
For the next two hours they called out for them, frantically digging through snow and circling the area for clues or footprints.
Then a thought struck them.
Supervillain must have them.
Supervillain must have kidnapped Hero.
It was only a matter of time before they did something horrible to them. They had to act fast.
Villain nearly lost control of their vehicle in their haste to return to base.
They left the car running, dashed inside. They had to suit up, grab a weapon and some supplies--
"Whoa, whoa, hey, what's the hurry?"
The villain froze.
Hero emerged from the shower, steam rolling out behind them, wearing cozy pajamas and a towel on their head.
"Yeah, things got really bad with Supervillain. Mind if I crash here?"
Villain stared at them, wild-eyed and speechless.
"…Maybe I should've asked--"
"Why," the villain croaked, "Don't you have your cellphone on you."
The hero blinked. "Oh, shoot, that? Yeah, I had to ditch it because someone tried tracking me. Why, did you call?"
Villain stared at them a little too long, their eyes a little watery. "I, uh, got snow in my eye," they said, and brushed past them into the shower.
"O-oh, okay! I'll make you some hot cocoa!" Hero called.
Hero picked a movie for them to watch. Villain returned puffy-eyed and unusually quiet, and refused to let go of their hand the rest of the night.
hero has a fencing sword. villain has a fencing sword.
hop to it
The swords were real. Not just for practice, even though that was what they were being used for. They could cut skin like paper. Paper like air.
Alive was not the right word they'd use to describe the hero. But alive they looked. Overwhelmingly so. The sweat-matted hair sticking to their face. The warm puffs of air let out with every exhale. The sun burning red into their cheeks. Overwhelmingly alive and there and existing.
(But they were not alive, they were very much dead. Dead and revived and more alive than they'd ever been actually alive.)
So alive was the hero, so painfully alive that they felt like a second sun burning the villain's eyes, that they wondered what would happen if they plunged the fencing sword into the hero's chest.
The villain managed to get the hero down on the practice ground, sword fallen away, staring up at them shadowed.
The hero glared up at them. The blazing sun made their eyes squint into narrow crescents.
The villain tipped the hero's chin up by the end of their sword. "Déjà vu much?"
"Not really," said the hero. Their breath came hotter than the air around them like it was winter. The villain hadn't touched them once, since the resurrection. "I'm rather hurt you're not treating me gently."
"I figured you needed something fresh."
"I do. Believe me, I do. I'm rather sick and tired of everyone treating me like I'll die again with one wrong shove. But I hoped that tough exterior would come apart. It's like you don't care about me after all."
The villain gripped their sword tight, and tipped the hero's chin up further so they could see their throat. Their sword left a red line up, but that was the only mark on their neck, and it was so painfully human and alive that the villain's grip on the sword threatened to go slack.
"How did you do it?" the villain asked, because their throat was as smooth as marble.
They'd found them with their throat slit, already dead. Too late to do anything. Hell-bent on revenge. Then they'd found them again, cleaning up the days-old blood on the same spot. They called it fucking social work.
"Like I'd let you know. Like you won't use the info to try and become immortal. Wreak havoc for ever and ever."
The villain twisted their sword, daring them to keep talking. But they didn't dig it in. Didn't dare push further. All that they were was morbid curiosity and no bite.
The hero grinned and threw sand at them. The villain shouted and dropped their sword, too, and felt hands roughly twist into their shirt, dragging them back and slamming them against the wall so fast and so hard that the villain had the wind knocked out of them.
The villain's eyes flew open as they felt the hero's chuckle inches away from their neck.
The hero leaned back, alive and well and overwhelming on the senses. A playful grin tugged at their lip. "Déjà vu?"
Anything else the hero said got snuffed out by the villain's ears as their gaze landed on the little cut on the hero's neck. They darted forward as if on instinct, pressing their lips against the wound.
(And they were so, so, warm and so, so mortal still. Their blood ran hotter than ever and the villain wanted for it to never go cold.)
The wound healed in seconds, moments. It healed with such force that the hero gasped and shook.
The villain drew back to the hero wide-eyed, breathing hard. They looked so rejuvenated and so shocked that there was no doubt that the villain's power had rippled through their entire body.
The villain tensed up against the wall.
"I see," the hero said breathlessly.
"You see nothing," hissed the villain, then choked on air as the hero darted forward and pressed their lips hard against the villain's neck. Stiffening up like a cat.
The hero held them there for a long moment, impossibly warm, burning hot. Then they let go and shifted to nuzzle at the underside of their jaw kittenishly.
"It's sweet that you care." The villain could hear the grin in their words. They tried not to shiver at the hot breath brushing at all their sensitive nerve endings. "That fear in your eyes was frankly delectable. I still won't tell you how I did it."
"I wish you'd stayed dead," they managed to croak out.
"You love me." The hero leaned back to tuck two fingers underneath the villain's chin and make them look. "It's sweet. Really. But don't let it affect practice, hm? We have a mission to complete, after all." They took the sword, threw it for the villain to catch, and picked up their own. In the heat, they looked like a godsent soldier.
They resumed practice.
The embarrassment never left the villain. Ever.
I ran a poll to celebrate reaching 50 reblogs because you guys are amazing, and this topic won the poll.
(This is a bit lengthy, but I advise you to read to the very end. These are the kind of tips you rarely find without a fee, but for your amazing support so far, you get this from me for free.)
Let's dive in!
Before I became a writing coach, lack of motivation was something I battled with. Writing started to feel like a waste of my time, but whenever I stopped, I still found my way back somehow.
After a few more months of struggling and finding a clear routine that worked for me, I became a writing coach. Believe me when I say that it was such a commitment, and you'd never know until you get your first student.
I only knew how to stay motivated as an individual. After two students, I realized that motivation was also something they struggled with, and as their coach, it became my duty to offer solutions. In fact, nine out of ten writers struggle with this same problem, so I came up with the 'why and what' technique.
This technique is a template to figure out the main reason a writer isn't motivated at the current time, which allows for the provision of tailored and personalized solutions to solve the specific problem. In other words: Understanding the why (the main reason for the lack of motivation at the time) to figure out the what (effective solution to solve the main reason).
Lack of motivation is pretty subjective and varies widely. Giving a particular piece of advice may work for some and not for others, which is why I ensured my technique benefits all.
I'll give examples of common reasons writers lack motivation for writing using the template. If you don't find any that relate to you, write it in the comments and get a personalized solution from me.
Why:
- Feeling uninspired by current projects.
- Overwhelmed by the vastness of ideas.
- Stuck in a creative rut.
What:
- Change your environment: Sometimes a new setting can spark creativity. Try writing in a different location, like a park or a café.
- Consume creative content: Read books, watch movies, or listen to music that inspires you.
- Engage in Free Writing: Set a timer for 10 minutes and write whatever comes to mind without worrying about structure or grammar.
- Take a step back: You are no less of a writer if you decide to take a break and watch other writers from afar. Personally, it's difficult to write when I'm not inspired. I find myself editing more than usual and, at times, discarding the piece I spent hours on. So for a little while, I only engaged online and learned other ways to improve my skills with the time on my hands.
Why:
- Worrying that your writing isn't good enough.
- Comparing yourself to other writers.
- Fear of negative feedback.
What:
- Set small goals: Break down your writing project into manageable tasks to avoid feeling overwhelmed.
- Seek constructive feedback: Share your work with trusted friends or writing groups who can provide supportive and constructive criticism.
- Celebrate small wins: Acknowledge and celebrate your progress, no matter how small. Always remember that our writing styles differ from one another, and that is what makes us unique as writers.
Why:
- Busy schedules and other commitments.
- Difficulty prioritizing writing.
What:
- Create a writing schedule: Dedicate specific times in your day or week for writing and stick to it.
- Use writing prompts: Short prompts can help you get started quickly and make the most of limited time.
- Eliminate distractions: Find a quiet space and turn off notifications to focus solely on writing.
- Create or join writing challenges: Activities like the 3-day writing challenge, writing a novel in 6 months, the 7-day character creation challenge, the fantasy writers challenge, etc., have specific guidelines tailored to helping writers stay motivated and at the same time productive in limited times.
Why:
- Striving for perfection in every sentence.
- Reluctance to move forward until everything is perfect.
What:
- Embrace the draft: Accept that your first draft doesn't have to be perfect. Focus on getting your ideas down first.
- Set time limits: Give yourself a set amount of time to write and then move on, even if it's not perfect.
- Practice self-compassion: Remind yourself that it's okay to make mistakes and that writing is a process.
-Listen to writing podcasts or join a valuable writing newsletter: You will learn more about the writing industry and writing processes of other established writers, their wins, struggles, difficulties, appreciations, etc., which can serve as an assurance that you are facing the processes of a typical writer.
Here's a podcast and newsletter for writers I totally recommend—The Shit No One Tells You About Writing. You can listen to The Shit No One Tells You About Writing on platforms like Apple Podcasts and Spotify or sign up for their newsletter.
Why:
- Writing too much without breaks.
- Feeling exhausted and mentally drained.
- Stressed out from other engagements
What:
- Take regular breaks: Schedule breaks during your writing sessions to rest and recharge.
- Engage in other hobbies: Spend time on activities you enjoy outside of writing to refresh your mind.
- Practice mindfulness: Techniques like meditation or deep breathing can help reduce stress and improve focus.
- Listen to music: It's an amazing mind therapy.
Why:
- Feeling isolated in your writing journey.
- Lack of encouragement from others.
What:
- Join writing communities: Connect with other writers through online forums, local writing groups, or social media.
- Find a writing buddy: Partner with another writer to share progress, provide feedback, and offer mutual support.
- Attend workshops and events: Participate in writing workshops, conferences, or webinars to learn and network with others.
- Get a writing coach: Find a coach that will dedicate their time assisting you through your writing processes.
Why:
- Overwhelmed by multiple projects.
- Difficulty prioritizing which story to focus on.
- Constantly switching between drafts, leading to a lack of progress.
What:
- Prioritize projects: Choose one or two main projects to focus on and set the others aside temporarily. This helps you concentrate your efforts and make significant progress.
- Create a project schedule: Allocate specific times or days for each project. For example, work on one story in the mornings and another in the afternoons.
- Set clear milestones: Break each project into bit-sized, manageable tasks with deadlines. Celebrate when you reach these milestones to stay motivated.
- Limit new ideas: Keep a notebook or digital file for new ideas, but resist the urge to start new projects until you complete your current ones.
- Use a timer: Work on one project for a set amount of time (e.g., 25 minutes using the Pomodoro Technique) before taking a break or switching to another task.
Why:
- Feeling stuck or losing interest in projects.
- Perfectionism preventing you from finishing.
- Lack of a clear plan or direction.
What:
- Set realistic goals: Define what "completion" means for each project (e.g., finishing a first draft, reaching a certain word count) and work towards that.
- Embrace imperfection: Accept that your first draft doesn't have to be perfect. Focus on getting the story down, and you can revise it later.
- Find accountability: Share your goals with a writing buddy or group who can help keep you on track and provide encouragement.
- Reward yourself: Plan small rewards for completing sections of your work. This can be anything from a favorite snack to a relaxing activity.
- Reflect on your progress: Regularly review what you've accomplished to remind yourself of your progress and stay motivated.
- Set a clear outline for your story: Having a clear and detailed outline for a story makes it difficult to run out of ideas.
- Share your achievements with others: Achievement posts are one of the posts that receive more engagement from people. I'm quite aware of Substack. The notes with the highest engagement have to do with achievements. People find those notes empowering and inspiring. Share your wins with others and let them celebrate with you.
Why:
- Perfectionism leading to endless revisions.
- Difficulty deciding when a draft is "good enough."
- Fear of publishing an imperfect work.
What:
- Set a draft limit: Decide on a maximum number of drafts (e.g., three to five) before moving on to the next stage.
- Establish clear goals for each draft: Define what you want to achieve with each draft (e.g., plot consistency, character development, grammar).
- Seek external feedback: Get input from beta readers or a professional editor after a set number of drafts to gain fresh perspectives.
- Create a timeline: Set deadlines for each draft to avoid getting stuck in a cycle of endless revisions.
Why:
- Financial pressure to monetize your writing.
- Balancing creative passion with commercial viability.
- Navigating the competitive market.
What:
- Diversify income streams: Explore various ways to earn from your writing, such as freelancing, self-publishing, blogging, or offering writing services.
- Build an online presence: Use social media, a personal blog, or platforms like Tumblr, TikTok, and Instagram to showcase your work and connect with potential readers and clients.
Remember, If you don't find any that relate to you, write it in the comments and get a personalized solution from me.
- Offer exclusive content: Create special content or giveaways for your audience to increase engagement and loyalty.
- Learn marketing skills: Invest time in learning about book marketing, SEO, and social media strategies to effectively promote your work.
- Network with other writers: Join writing communities and attend workshops or conferences to learn from others and find opportunities for collaboration.
Remember, If you don't find any that relate to you, write it in the comments and get a personalized solution from me.
A Man of His Word
(Context: Civilian has a friend that is well known for never breaking promises. This friend also just so happens to have a secret, and Civilian has figured it out.)
Cw: threat of death, knife violence
Civilian smiled across the kitchen at Friend. He was helping them put their groceries away, transferring things from the floor to the fridge. Plastic rustled as he removed milk from one bag and various cheeses from another.
“Thanks again for helping me carry these. You know how much I hate doing two trips.”
Friend sighed, rolling his head back dramatically as he replied, “I know you just keep me around for my arm muscles.”
Civilian glared at their friend, who was now flexing his biceps, for all of two seconds before a smile broke back out across their face.
“But really, it’s no problem at all.”
Breaking the comfortable silence after the amendment, Friend bunched up an empty bag, throwing it straight at Civilian instead of shoving it into the bag-of-bags looped around the pantry door handle.
Civilian gasped as they batted it away, instinctively going for the closest thing on the island that wasn’t breakable. They clutched the freshly-bought apple in their hand before throwing it mercilessly at their friend. Luckily, Friend caught it with a laugh, keeping the fruit from being bruised.
Civilian joined in with some light giggling of their own as they watched him take a bite with a satisfying crunch before continuing to stock the fridge while they conquered the pantry.
“Hey! That was supposed to be for a pie!” They protested.
“Please,” he started, pulling some scissors from the kitchen drawer and cutting open the plastic rings from a six-pack of soda they had broken into earlier. “I saved it from a terrible fate:” He finished, tossing the bird-safe remains into the trash, “The horrors of your baking.”
Civilian gaped in offense.
“No more birthday cakes for you!”
“The best gift I could ever ask for,” he winked, coming over to throw an arm over Civilian’s shoulders and ruffle their hair.
The normalcy sent off a pang in their chest.
A thoughtful, dependable, goofy guy. It was just so easy to believe.
It was a shame they knew it was a lie.
Friend had started to relay some adventure from earlier in his day, which Civilian tried their best to attend to. In the background, the TV in the living room was playing some stupid sitcom with a shitty laugh track that was definitely being overused. They leaned against the counter, basking in the peace of it all for just another moment.
Before it all went to shit.
Civilian made their move after the pantry was shut and they both headed for the next room.
“Hey,” Civilian checked their nails as they spoke, “I want to talk to you about something, but you have to promise me something first.”
An innocently confused, mildly concerned expression plastered itself over Friend’s face as he stopped short of the couch. Civilian’s stomach twisted at the sight.
“Yeah, of course. Anything.”
Friend crossed their arms and leaned against the pony wall disarmingly.
“You have to hear me out. Give me ten seconds.”
An awkward chuckle.
“What is this about?”
Civilian met their friend’s eyes seriously.
“Just promise me. Ten seconds.”
“Okay… Yeah sure, ten seconds,” he assured, shooting them an uneasy smile.
Civilian took a deep breath.
“I know who you are.”
And just like that, Friend was gone. Instead, there was Villain, pinning Civilian to the floor, holding a blade a hair’s width from their jugular.
Where he had hidden the knife, Civilian had no idea, not that was particularly important right now. Only one thing was.
“You promised!” They squeaked out, hating how helpless they were in that moment, how they were betting their life on there being a kernel of their friend left in the man on top of them now.
Inflectionless, he responded, “Nine. Eight.”
Civilian’s relief was very short lived. Shit, they should have said fifteen.
Trying so very hard to stay still, to keep that sharpened metal away from their carotid, they practically whispered their desperate plea to the stone face above them, “I don’t care. I swear to anything I don’t. You have a plan to take down Hero. In- in three days. I need to help.”
“Two.”
Frantically, they stumbled over their words as they added. “Oh! and um- dead man’s switch.”
Despite themselves, they scrunched their eyes shut as their internal countdown hit zero. When nothing happened, their eyelids fluttered open again to see utterly unchanged features. No reaction at all.
“What,” Villain spoke, in a voice that Civilian no longer recognized, “does that mean?”
“If I live, your identity stays between us. If I die…”
A sharp pain lit up their arm as, presumably, the knife that had been at their neck relocated itself into their flesh. Civilian swore.
“Who,” Villain growled lowly, leaning close to their ear, “The fuck. Do you think you are?.”
“Someone with a will to live?” Civilian choked, no longer scared to take deep, heaving breaths to the side now that there wasn’t a blade directly above their artery.
“Clearly not. People who want to live keep their mouth shut and run far, far away,” he spit.
Their head was wrenched back into a forward-facing position via a hand in their hair.
“How long?” Villain demanded.
Civilian blinked. Right, the switch.
“Fifteen minutes.”
Suddenly, they were being hauled up by the collar, then unceremoniously shoved into the light blue accent wall, conveniently within sight of where their laptop rested closed in the middle of the room.
“Disable it.”
“I can’t. It's automatic, every 8 hours. No off switch.”
Spots arose in their vision as their arm was grabbed in a rather unfortunate location.
“Disable. It.”
“I can’t. I swear.”
“I can get the code one way or another,” Villain warned.
“I know you could.” Involuntary tears dripped down their face as they explained, “There’s nothing to get. The answer changes every time. It’s randomly selected. I don’t know it till I see it.”
“You’re lying,” he accused, and Civilian didn’t have to look to know that they were bleeding somewhere else now with just a swipe of his hand.
“I’m not! Give me the laptop, we’re running out of time.”
Civilain gestured wildly to the oak wood coffee table.
“The only person running out of time here is you.”
With that, Civilian was thrown back to the floor, Villain straddling their horizontal form before they could get their legs underneath them to scramble back. The knife returned, only this time it would not be pressed shallowly, and there would be no more counting, no more promises of time, no more hesitation.
”Look! Hero killed my parents, okay?!” They blurted, a last, desperate attempt at getting through to him before he ended their life.
Maybe there was a shred of Friend left in the villain after all, because Civilian caught the slightest moment of pause in his movements, a blip they might never have noticed having never spent time with the man.
“Please, I would never stop you,” they pleaded, searching for another blip deep inside their former friend’s eyes. They came away empty.
They didn’t really know how it happened, but somehow they ended up perched on the couch, laptop open and propped on shaking legs. Villain breathed down their neck every second, watching them like a starved hawk.
They were lucky they could even punch the code in with the amount of nervous movement in their fingers and hands.
“That’s it. We’re good for another eight hours,” they confirmed, slowly closing the lid of their laptop and sliding it back onto the table next to the coaster. “Guess we’re partners now,” Civilian laughed weakly.
“No,” Villain dissented, in a tone that left no room for argument. “You’re a temporarily-alive prisoner.”
He appeared in front of them, pulling them up and off the couch with an alarmingly harsh grip.
“Don’t forget it.”
You don't even have to write responsibly yall, and best of all it's free
did you know that you can write what you want and no one will stop you
Just a little writing blog. Thank you for visiting.Please feel free to leave me an ask!
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