Please send me asks, I can't write but I want to have conversations. Tired of lurking š marauders, criminal minds, cod (haven't played) and PJO fan. I love you all!! Level 19 š
240 posts
pm
-š
That is absolutely amazing, I'm glad I don't have to memorize another timezone
currently 8:11 for this mouse
-š
PM or AM? If it's PM then we're in the same time zone š
thank you love bug <3 (this is my mama coming out)
-š
Of course (its alright dw) if you don't mind me asking, what time is it for you/what time zone are you in?
you wonāt get to know who i am hehe
-š
That's alright, I never want to intrude on something people aren't comfortable with
hi bby š„°
-š (from Cās blog)
OMG HIIII, I love when people sends me asks sorry š
:)
-š³ļøāš anon
HIIIIIII (I'm assuming you're the one from C's blog?) If not welcome ;p
Tumblr used to be so easy, so simple.
DELETE THIS POST
GUYS I HAVE ANOTHER REQUEST THAT I PRAY IS ANSWERED BY WHOEVER SEES THIS!!!!
marauders (any of them tbh), Spencer Reid, 141 (any of them again) or others x POTS reader or a reader with fainting disabilities šš
āIf I had a dick I would stack donuts on itā well donut holes exist and you have a pussy soā¦ā¦ā¦?Get to filling
Just did, same song but one is the original an one is a cover (original is by the chicks, cover is by bruce Robinson) and both are really good. I hope you like them š
ALSO, It's a country song an I only know them because my dad use to play the cover for me all the time when I was a kid
You remind me of the song Travelling Soldier (I can send a Spotify or YouTube like if you want) -š
plz send omg???!
DID YOU KNOW HE DANCES TOO
His name is American Woodcock and no I'm not kidding
https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZT2pBMdh3/
meep.
meep.
Don't you love him, say you love him
His name is American Woodcock and no I'm not kidding
https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZT2pBMdh3/
meep.
meep.
likes to charge, reblogs to cast
Dating Simon "Ghost" Riley is like the song traveling soldier. That's it, end post
"Freaks DNI" is the absolute funniest thing you could possibly put on your blog. This is tumblr.com who the fuck are you even going to interact with. Why are you here
As the Ides of March approaches, let us all remember it not as the day Caesar was stabbed a whole bunch, but for what it truly was: the day a group of organized elected representatives killed a sitting unelected dictator.
I 100% think you shouldnt do it (reverse psychology)
hey does anyone wanna do the funniest thing ever
She didn't even tell me what it was until almost an hour after
I tried a true monstrosity today because my friend tricked me. MICROWAVED TEA AND RED BULL MIXED TOGETHER!! Fucking disgusting lemme tell you -š
i'm nauseous.
@ask-lieutriley
I love jerboas, so i made it Ghoap
Moony but he moons everyone with his sparkling ass cheeks
I'm sorry what? (And by what I mean WHAT)
When ads have fake X buttons that hide the real button
ADS THAT SUDDENLY TAKE UP THE WHOLE PAGE
to the anon that requested this, i know this isn't exactly what you asked for, but inspiration struck. i hope you like it.
cw: wally certified yearner and loverboy, me not knowing how to describe dancing, allusions to reader being murdered in a very traumatic way by her dance partner but no specifics, sfw
wc: 3k
Wally knows that what heās attempting to do is misguided at best, and probably disastrous at worst.Ā
The idea came to him a few weeks ago. Heād been sitting with Charley and Rhonda, shooting the shit in the gymnasium before their meeting with Mr. Martin, when heād asked, āIs it possible to break a ghost out of their loop?āĀ
To Charleyās credit, heād attempted to take the question seriously. Rhonda had just rolled her eyes, removing the ever present lollipop from her mouth before interrupting.
āAgain with this? Come on, loverboy. Not gonna happen.āĀ
Charley sighed, tutting at Rhonda before turning back to Wally, a sympathetic look on his face, āThereās always a chance it could work, but if youāre talking about who we think youāre talking about, Iād say theyāre pretty slim.āĀ
āMore than slim, Iād say,ā Rhonda butts in again, āIām surprised she hasnāt worn a hole through the floor, with the way she dances. Like a ballerina in a music box.ā She spins her lollipop through the air, follows it with her eyes before shoving it back into her mouth.Ā
āHave I ever told you your attitude is annoying?ā Wally asked, sinking back into his chair and crossing his arms over his chest, ignoring the scoff from Rhondaās direction, āIām just saying. Weāve never even tried. What if sheās like, aware in there, like in her mind.ā He reaches up to run a hand through his hair - a nervous tick he hadnāt lost, even in death.Ā
āDoes it matter? Sheās still stuck here like the rest of us. Better to spend eternity dancing than dealing with the banalities of high school.āĀ
Mr. Martin walked in then, effectively ending the conversation. Through the whole meeting, Wally couldnāt stop thinking about it. Heād seen you in the auditorium before, looping over and over, stuck in an endless dance for two but lacking a partner. Itās a rare thing for a ghost to act the way you do - there havenāt really been any other deaths at the school that were traumatic enough to warrant a loop like yours, and heād been determined to break you out of it. Screw Rhonda, heād thought. He could do it, he just needed to figure out how.Ā
The problem was, Wally knew nothing about dancing. He's not the smartest guy. He knows that, but heād been brainstorming different ways to break you out of your loop for a while now, with nothing to show for it. Itād been grating heavily on his nerves.
In a moment heād regrettably look back on, heād gone so far as to join you on stage to attempt a fake out. When heād lunged at you, and you hadnāt even blinked in his direction, he started to think Rhonda was right. You couldnāt see him, you couldnāt hear him. You were stuck up there, doomed to spin around the stage for God knows how long and there was nothing he could do about it.Ā
Then one day, something really fucking weird had happened.Ā
ā
Heād taken to sitting in the audience, to watch you dance. It was weird, more than a little morbid and slightly obsessive, but watching you move was captivating to him.Ā
He found some similarities between dancing and playing football - the finesse needed to dodge and weave through people trying to tackle him was one thing - but heād never seen anyone move the way you do. Every move you made had purpose. The lines created by your arms and legs, the softness with which you carried yourself from one end of the stage to the other.Ā
Preoccupied with the pressures his mom applied to him, the weight of the world on his shoulders, heād never taken an interest in dancing, other than the awkward slow side to side swaying heād done with his Junior year girlfriend at the prom. Now, he wishes he could dance with you - wishes you could teach him to move like you do.Ā
Youāre stuck there, like a spinning top that refuses to fall - unable to fall. Except, as he was watching you, something unthinkable happened.Ā
You were looking at him. Like, looking straight at him.Ā
It took him more than a few seconds to realize what was happening, and even then he couldnāt believe it. Charley had talked to him about dancers having a spot to look at when theyāre spinning - how it keeps them from falling over, keeps them from becoming dizzy and messing up. Was it possible Wally just happened to be in the seat you used as a spot?Ā
He couldnāt tell if there was recognition in your eyes, if you were really looking at him or seeing right through him, the way a living person would. But your gaze was fixated on him either way. And your face, it⦠you just looked so sad. If he didnāt know better, Wally wouldāve thought your expression was pleading, looking for help. It only lasted a few seconds, before you turned your head in a different direction and your body followed. It sent him reeling.Ā
He found Charley and Rhonda in the library, and told them what happened. Charley sat up in his chair, struggling to understand what he meant.Ā
āWhat do you mean she looked at you?āĀ
Wally went to explain it to them again, hoping theyād believe this was out of the norm, āI mean she looked at me, dude. She was up there spinning like she always is, and I was just sitting there watching -āĀ
āYou were watching her? Voyeurism doesnāt suit you, loverboy.ā Rhondaās arms were crossed over her chest, legs folded over each other - closed off, like she always is.Ā
āItās not like that and you know it,ā Wally sighed, exasperated, āIt was weird. At first I thought she was using me to spot, while she was twirling, but the way her face looked? I donāt know, dude. It was just weird.āĀ
āThereās a chance she was looking at you, donāt you think? We donāt really know how looping works, so,ā Charleyās endless kindness is a relief to Wally - especially when he says things like, āI think itās good, what youāre doing. I wish we could help more.ā Charley looks over in Rhondaās direction, nudging her to say something to Wally.Ā
āYeah. As much as I give you flack for it, your whole -ā Rhonda waves a hand in Wallyās general direction, āboy savior thing, I do wish there was something we could do for her. It sucks. Not having a partner to dance with.ā There was a glint of remorse in Rhondaās eye, more than Wally ever thought heād see from her.Ā
A spark lights up in Wallyās head, a hidden spotlight finding its mark onstageĀ - landing on you, your flawless form.
āDo you think if I dance with her, that it could break the loop?ā Wally asks, looking back and forth between his two friends.Ā
āItās definitely worth a shot,ā Charley shrugs, gaze turning to his left, āRhonda? What do you think?āĀ
The beatnik pauses for a second, long enough for them to see the cogs turning in her brain.Ā
āLook, Iām not saying itāll work. Probably wonāt. But maybe,ā Wally starts to smile, āJust maybe, if you try to connect with her on her terms, instead of trying to force some logic onto the situation, something might change.āĀ
āI donāt know how to dance, though. I donāt even know where to start.ā Wally drops his head in his hands, shoulders hunched over. Charley reaches over, splays a hand on Wallyās back and rubs back and forth.Ā
āThink of it like football maybe? Youāve got your plays, right?ā Wally nods, sitting up and urging Charley to continue, āThose are like the steps. Formations could be the positions you take, and in dancing, timing is everything. The same way it is in football, at least from what Iāve gathered of the rants you go on. Rhondaās right. Maybe if you learn how she moves, you can try communicating with her that way.āĀ
Wally sits up, throwing his arms around his two friends, ignoring Rhonda attempting to push him away before jumping up from his spot on the couch. He nearly trips over himself to sprint out of the room and down the hall, towards the auditorium, shouting āThank you!ā behind him.Ā
ā
Wally stood in the echoing auditorium, the stage lights illuminating the otherwise dark room. Every day for the past week, heād come to you - trying to decipher a language he did not speak. He watched you, trapped in your endless pas de deux. Gliding through the same steps, turns, your desperate yearning clear up close.Ā
At first, heād just tried to mimic you. Clumsy and tripping over his own feet, heād stumbled through the basic positions, frustrated with himself. His movements were jerky and awkward, a stark contrast to your effortless grace. He felt silly - like a hulking figure trying to copy something delicate and precise, something that took years and years of training.Ā
Slowly, things started to shift. He stopped just watching and copying, instead starting to feel the music that wasnāt there. He began to understand the reasoning behind your movements, the emotions they expressed. He started to see the gaps in your performance, the place where someone was supposed to fit, to complete the cycle youād been stuck in.Ā
He started to see the places where he could fit.Ā
He wasnāt just mirroring anymore, he was learning the language. Each day he got a little closer, a little less clumsy, a little more in tune with the phantom rhythm that filled the empty auditorium. He was still a football player, and he always would be, but he was learning to use some of that training to become a dancer, too. For you.Ā
Wally knew this might not even work. Heād been in his head about it for a week at this point, and not even Charley or Rhonda could break him out of the loop heād pulled himself into. He stopped going to the life support meetings in the gymnasium, much to Mr. Martinās dismay - instead going to spend all of his free time right there next to you onstage.Ā
He put more effort into practicing for this than he ever did for one of his football games, a feeling of true purpose guiding his every movement.Ā
When the day finally came, Wally felt calm. He felt ready.Ā
He walked onto the stage, ready to put his rehearsing to the test. Ready to run the play, to score the winning point. You began your routine, perfect and meticulous and haunting as ever. This time, though, Wally didnāt just watch. He joined you.Ā
He didnāt try to lead, didnāt try to impose himself or change your dance, he simply became your partner. He matched your movements as best as he could, trying to feel his way through the dance. Trying not to be too robotic, but instead trying to move with the same empathy and yearning that heād watched you dance with over and over.Ā
As you reached the point in your dance where your partner should have joined, Wally was there. He wasnāt a perfect dancer, not by any metric, but he was present. He was the missing piece.Ā
As your movements intertwined, a visible shift occurred. You, you who had been trapped in this endless cycle of longing, suddenly seemed to notice him. Your eyes, usually fixated on some distant point, flickered - focusing on Wally for the first time. Genuinely seeing him. Your eyes filled with tears, and as one of them dropped onto your cheek, Wally went to wipe it away.Ā
The music, which up until this point had only been an idea in Wallyās head, suddenly seemed to fill the auditorium, bouncing off of the walls and echoing around the two of you. Your dance became a true pas de deux, a conversation of movement and emotion.Ā
As the music started to slow, Wally found himself on unsure footing. He hadnāt stopped to think before about how the dance was supposed to end, but it didnāt matter. Grasping his hands in your own, taking the lead and guiding him through the end, the two of you moved in perfect harmony. Spectral echoes of each other, gazes connected and satisfaction blooming.Ā
The yearning in your movements softened, replaced by a sense of completion. The music faded, leaving the two of you in silence. For half a second, Wally thought youād cross over, leaving him onstage by himself. Instead, you turned to him, a small smile gracing your lips. You didnāt fade. You were still there - as solid as he was.Ā
āThank you,ā you whispered, āYou helped me finish.āĀ
Wally stood stock still, surprise still echoed on his features. He couldnāt believe heād actually done it. You looked around the empty auditorium, eyes tracking over the seats before landing on him again, āI canāt tell you how long Iāve waited to finish that dance.āĀ
āIām glad I could help you,ā Wally stutters out, a pink flush on his face, āI know Iām not the best dancer.ā You laugh, a sweet, girlish thing. In the five minutes that had passed since the dance finished, Wally swore he could see the weight being lifted from your chest.Ā
āYou were perfect.ā A flicker of sadness crossed your face, quickly replaced by gentle acceptance, āI⦠I donāt think Iām going anywhere, Iām still here, butā¦ā you emphasized, palms open and gesturing to the stage around you, ābut, I think itās different now. Iām not stuck anymore.āĀ
āThatās good!ā Wallyās face lit up, empathetic and gleeful.Ā
Your own smile brightened, affected by his sheer amount of happiness for you. You took his hand, solid and steady in yours.Ā
āWhat do I do now?ā you asked, eyebrows turned up and inward, āDo ghosts sleep? I feel like I need to sleep for a month.āĀ
Wally giggled, leading you down the side stage steps and down the rows of seats, out of the auditorium, āWe donāt need to sleep, but you can if you want to. You want me to show you my hiding space?ā You nod, following him down the hallway.
When he passes the teacherās lounge, and Charley and Rhonda see whose hand he has grasped in his, he winks at their shocked expressions before continuing down the stretch of linoleum and lockers.Ā
ā
Life - or, afterlife, you suppose - has been weird since Wally broke you out of your loop. The first couple of days were extremely rough, spent trying to understand just how long youād been up on that stage. A new member of Mr. Martinās life support group, everyone has been extremely welcoming to you.Ā
Because ghosts donāt need to sleep, you haven't experienced any nightmares, something youāre exceedingly grateful for. Even so, you wake up from your naps feeling uneasy. Flashes of the end of your life playing in your mind, reminding you of the circumstances surrounding your death.Ā
Youāre not ready to talk to the group about it, but Wally hasnāt left your side since heād woken you from your reverie. You tell him about it in bits and pieces - about your dance partner, a shy, kind boy, turned cold blooded killer. The specifics of it donāt matter anyways. He canāt hurt you anymore, and according to the computers in the library, he couldnāt hurt anyone anymore -Ā following you into that good night soon after the police had taken him away.Ā
You learn that your family moved out of Wisconsin a decade ago, in an attempt to escape the media following them around and shouting questions at them, about a court case that didnāt happen because there was nobody to put on trial. You hope wherever they were, that they found some semblance of peace.Ā
Wally has been an incredible influence on you, and after settling into what the rest of your eternity might look like, youāve had the same effect on him. He didnāt expect you to dance again any time soon, if ever, but heād catch you by yourself sometimes - stretching your legs, sitting on the floor with your arms poised in that certain way.Ā
Then, after a year spent together going to meetings and finding hidden corners in the school to make out like true teenagers, heād found you in Split River Highās newly minted dance room - sock covered feet gliding over the lacquered floor, hope and joy baked into your movements instead of the grief and melancholy heād become so accustomed to in your previous routine.Ā Ā
Out of the corner of your eye, when youād seen him peeking through the window, youād beckoned him in to join you. You started to truly teach him how to dance - guiding him through PliĆ©s and RelevĆ©s and giggling at him when his lanky legs got in his own way.Ā
āYouād be better at this if you were shorter, I think,ā youād said, a smile unable to hide taking over your face, ābut you look pretty good.āĀ
āPretty good? These legs saved you, babe,ā Wally scoffed, wiggling his toes to get you to laugh.Ā He always succeeded in that.Ā
āYouāre right, youāre right,ā you walked over to stand nearer to him, eyes angled upward to meet his honey brown ones, āthe prince to my sleeping beauty, how could I forget?āĀ
āDamn straight, Iām your prince,ā Wallyās warm hands grasped your cheeks, his mouth lowering to meet yours for a few seconds before gently shoving you away, ānow show me how to do that thing again? I think Iām finally getting it.āĀ
ā
Rhonda would never admit it, but sheād been especially proud of the effort Wally had put in to drag you from your loop. She knows everyone thinks sheās cold hearted, and she agrees to a certain extent, but sheād known the agony Wally felt when he thought he couldnāt help you. Sheād never tell anyone this, either, but sheād snuck into the auditorium the night that heād broken your loop - woken you up from your neverending nightmare. Sheād stood alone, in the back and out of view, a smile etched on her features.
āYou go, loverboy.ā
a/n: tysm for this request! this was honestly the most fun i've ever had writing something. the inspiration was crazy and even though i know nothing about dancing i hope this is readable and easy to follow because i'm immensely proud of it. anon if you liked it pls lmk! I'm having such a fun time writing for wally so PLS send in any requests you have!!!
also, don't forget to like and reblog!
Bbno$
One to the kidney, two to the dome
That's left, right, lеft, right, left, right, go
Got a Rollie for the brunch and a Patеk for the show
That's left, right, left, right, left, right, go
bb nos
It's BB no$ aka baby no money
One to the kidney, two to the dome
That's left, right, lеft, right, left, right, go
Got a Rollie for the brunch and a Patеk for the show
That's left, right, left, right, left, right, go
bb nos
I wrote this a while ago but I don't think I'm good at writing so I haven't posted it yet
āit is both a blessing and a curse to feel everything so very deeply.ā Regulus said as one of his final words to james before he left for the cave "Why's that moonlight?" Is all James asked, trying to understand his lover "It's a blessing so I can understand the world around me but it's a curse because no one understands me like I understand them" "Then teach me" "What?" Regulus asks, confused "Teach me to understand"
āI can tryā āi want to be great or nothingā Regulus said two hours later when he was trying to sleep āwhyās that?ā āI want to go out with a bangā and right before bed āi feel as if im made to understand but not to be understoodā James said one late night with regulus, little do they know itās their last night together āi was made to be understood but not to understandā regulus said before kissing him softly āwe can learn how to be understood and understand togetherā (cut three weeks later) James is sobbing on the floor wishing Regulus could hold him, but thatās an impossible wish, as Regulus had indeed gone out with a bang, James never got to understand his lover, his moonlight, his life. His last conversation with him was meaningful but he felt sad, he never got to fully understand.
SO SORRY IF THIS ISN'T GOOD š