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Here there be whump

@whumpthisway

Whump side blog, call me Loup (replies from looptheloup). 20s, they/them, let me know what to tag :) Fickle fan of many things, writes whumpy AO3 m/m fanfic under "lopingloup", interested in dark corners with occasional NSFW and gore. My profile pic is of my OC, Huck, and was made by Whumpersworld, and my background picture is also Huck, by Haro-whumps :)
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Time Apart

CW: Trauma survivor, referenced noncon and assault, heavy internalized victim-blaming and self-loathing/anti-asexuality (Chris has serious issues from his conditioning around this)

I think you should spend time apart, not with me.

When Chris picks up his phone, it’s not at all the message from Laken he expected to see. Not the kind of thing they’ve ever sent before.

He has to read it two times, then three. The letters swim and shake along with a dull pounding inside his head, but no matter how he tries to make them into other words - tell himself he must have misunderstood, must be missing something - they come back together the same in the end.

I think you should spend time apart, not with me.

Each letter is as crisp and clean as a sterilized blade between each rib, one by one by one by one.

The words are a body blow. They’re a hundred blows, beating him into a barely recognizable shattered shell of himself. It wasn’t supposed to happen this way - it’s been a bad few days, yeah, a bad week really, but until yesterday’s fight it had never occurred to him that Laken might give up on him.

The fight was his fault, anyway.

He meant to apologize last night, but then Nova had come into his room, and he’d lost the rest of the night to lying next to Jake, trying to remember how to stop living inside his head again, how to stop being still.

He’d woke up this morning with his stomach doing butterfly flips inside him, nervous, but he’d really wanted to say he was sorry, for the fight, for all the weirdness lately. He’d wanted to apologize for being difficult.

Instead… he’d woken up to find a missed text from the night before, sent after he’d shoved Nova away but before he could stand to look at anything again.

I think you should spend time apart, not with me.

There it sits.

He hasn’t unlocked his phone yet. Instead, he keeps tapping the button to light up the screen, looking at the message preview that has all he needs to see. Lets it go dark again. As if one of these times he’ll click and it’ll say something else.

But it doesn’t,

It just says the same damn thing.

I think you should spend time apart.

Not with me.

He’s still staring at it when another one comes in. He feels the soft pulse of his phone in his hand, and the screen lights on its own.

LAKEN - NOW Did you see my message? 

He thinks maybe Kauri had it easier when he was the age Chris is now. Back when Kauri carried on entire conversations in emoji form, letting the nuance and ambiguity take over, the recipient working through the meaning on their own. With this, each letter is merciless, each word is unmistakable. He can’t misunderstand it. 

Can he?

He opens the phone with shaking fingers, types back yes, presses send, and turns his phone off.

Then he throws it at the wall.

He’s grateful for the heavy plastic case that makes it bounce off and drop to the floor without breaking. There’s a strip on the back, textured and a soft purple, gray, white, and black. He rubs his fingers over it sometimes in class to keep himself from rocking and being distracting.

Now he just… stares at it.

Laken bought that for him. They bought the shirt he’s wearing right now-

He yanks it off his head before he can think, balls up the soft fabric and throws it as well. It just sort of drifts pointlessly to the floor, a single eyeball from the print of a band he likes staring back at him.

Laken has ranted before about people who break up by text message, and Chris has to breathe through a physical ache in his chest that tightens every muscle at how awful he must be that they’re not doing this face to face. How awful, how used-up, how shredded apart, how fucking pretty he is.

After all, he and Laken have been together for more than a year, and he still held perfectly still for Nova to touch him before he remembered how to move. After all, he’s a grown man who still cried and fell apart when Jake was hurt. After all, after all, after all…

He scrambles across the floor for his phone again, turns it back on. Part of him hopes he’ll see a new text saying they take it back, they didn’t mean it. Or just asking him to apologize for what he’d said that night before, for how he’d thrown their confusion over his reaction to something back at them, echoing out the way Kauri fights sometimes, talking about himself the way he thinks everyone else might be thinking about him, so he says the insult first and no one else gets to surprise him with it.

But there’s nothing new.

He manages to open the texts again, barely, and breathes in gasps, nearly pants, as he types out, you don’t want me at your place?

Not right now.

Is it because of what I can’t do?

It takes them a minute to answer. Every single second ticks by with a slowness Chris hasn’t felt since his days in the cold white room, tied down to stillness, forced to endure every minute that passed in perfect silence or to the soundtrack of his own tears and pleading for it to stop.

When they do respond, it’s just, it’s because of what you won’t do.

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Anonymous asked:

29. — preparation

CW: Discussions of medicating for ADHD (it’s not forced drugging, but Chris has a lot of trauma around pills, so I’m tagging ‘drugging’ anyway), PTSD, trauma responses

“What, what, what if, if, if... if it makes, um, makes me feel like... like it did with, with Sir?” 

Chris’s voice is hushed. He’s hunched in the doorway, staring into the bathroom. The tile is grungy, white but closer to yellowed with time no matter how hard they scrub. There’s an old circular stain in the ceiling, like someone left a coffee cup there upside down. 

Jake hums, filling a clear glass with water and setting it carefully to the left side of the sink. “Then you won’t take anymore. But you should try it for just, for a week or so, okay, Chris?”

“What if it-... what, um, what, what... what, what if it makes me, not, um, not eat? Like before?” Chris is smaller with every sentence, shrinking into himself. “I don’t want-... I don’t, um, don’t want the, the, the the the fog, Jake. I don’t... I don’t want it. I don’t want to feel that way again, you, you promised I wouldn’t h-have to, to feel that way anymore... you promised-”

“I know.” Jake opens the little semi-sheer orange pill bottle with a label wrapped most of the way around it, fake name but real prescription, and takes out a single pill - white on one end and the same orange as a traffic cone on the other. He lays it next to the glass of water. “And I’m not going to force you to take this, but you’ve been struggling trying to study for your GED and I think-... I think we probably should’ve talked about this a long time ago. I think Nat and I have known, and we just... shit. We were just trying to let you have your mind, for a while.”

“Will it... will it, it take my, my my my... my mind away?” Chris’s voice is tiny, infinitesimal, it’s the voice of a child.

Jake swallows against the twist of guilt inside him. “No, Chris. It won’t, I promise. If it’s, if this works, it’ll give all of your mind back to you. You’ll be able to focus when you have to, and get that studying done. You’ll be able to think, even more than you already do. Medicine isn’t supposed to take your thoughts away, especially not medicine like this. If it works, it won’t hurt you at all, it’ll help.”

Chris bites at his lower lip, watching Jake with big green eyes, rocking sideways lightly to knock into the doorframe, twisting one of the hoodie strings in his other hand, pulling and pulling to get the feeling of the tension wrapped around his fingers. “But if I, if I don’t want to do it anymore-”

“Then we stop. One week. Seven days. Seven pills. If after seven days, you can’t stand how you feel, we stop and we figure something else out. No harm, no foul, we tried it and we’ll try something else. But medicine isn’t evil, Chris. It’s just... it’s like a hammer. You can use a hammer to build a house, or to break bones, but the hammer isn’t good or evil. It’s just a hammer. Right?”

Chris swallows, and slowly nods, his eyes on the single, small pill next to that glass of water. “... right.”

Jake is quiet, for a minute, and then he’s in front of Chris, and Chris steps forward into his arms on pure and perfect instinct, knowing they will wrap around him, hold him tightly, hold him close. “I’m s-scared of, of, of drugs,” Chris whispers into Jake’s collarbone, the warmth of his skin. “I’m so scared.” 

His heart beats so fast and so hard Jake can feel it through his clothes, can nearly see the thrum of the pulse in the corner where his jaw and neck meet. He’s so thin, really, and they know he can do gymnastics and yoga and pilates, but he doesn’t look like gymnasts on TV, and yet... there’s a hint of those muscles in him, still.

Like he had them once, and they were siphoned away by starvation and drugs and pain, until a ghost of his strength remains to haunt the body they were able to save.

“I know, Chris. I know you are.”

“I don’t want to, to, to feel that way anymore, I h-hate it, I hate-... I hate it-”

Jake nods, looking out into the hallway, taking a deep breath. “I know. And I’m sorry that you were made to feel like that. I promise you - I swear to you, Chris, and you know I never don’t keep a promise I make to you, no matter what - that if you don’t feel better after a week, I will get rid of this bottle and you will never see it again.”

Chris sniffs against him, twisting fingers into Jake’s shirt now, humming low in his throat, rocking his head forwards and back lightly on Jake’s body, calming himself against the fear that threatens to shatter his fragile peace apart. Slowly, he starts to nod, nodding and nodding and nodding with his rocking, his tapping, finger-twist-tap-tap-tap, and it calms him.

They let him tap here, and rock, and hum, and hold him when it’s too hard and he tries to hurt himself to stop the cacophony of sound that overwhelms him, and they-... they let him have himself, his body, for his own.

Seven days. 

Seven pills.

Jake’s promise is between them, and Jake keeps his promises. Jake comes back, when he says he will. He comes back limping and bruised, battered and hurting, but he comes back.

Chris pulls back from Jake’s embrace, keeping one hand twisted in the bigger man’s shirt, and moves towards the sink. Jake moves with him, watching his face closely, his blue eyes a familiar weight, the kind that doesn’t hurt. “You sure, Chris?”

Chris swallows, and nods, bouncing on the balls of his feet, eyes traveling over the little bathroom, the foggy-glassed window you can’t see in, the shower curtain with dolphins on it that Leila picked out, the sky blue bathmat. “I trust, trust you,” he whispers. “I, I trust you not to hurt me, Jake.”

Jake takes in a hitched breath. “God, I hope I live up to that,” He mutters, and Chris hears him and rocks lightly into his side, then reaches out and take the pill in his hand. It’s so light, barely a brush along his palm. It weighs nothing. It weighs too much.

Jake moves to pick up the glass of water but by the time he does, Chris has already swallowed the pill dry, easy as can be, and feels it move down his throat, closing his eyes against the familiar shift in his esophagus, the little pill traveling to his stomach, where it will dissolve in the acid that lives there and travel through his body.

And he will feel better.

Or worse.

He’s about to find out.

“If it doesn’t help, you don’t have to do it again,” Jake says, softly.

Chris nods, panic a constant white noise in the back of his mind, the threat of the return of the white light, the fog, one thought at a time moving slow as a rock slide that seems like nothing until you are crushed by it. A fire that seems distant until it burns down your house. A rain that threatens on the horizon until the hail starts to slam into your back and make you bleed into the perfect clarity of ice-

Chris whimpers, his moment of courage faltering, and Jake gathers him up again, arm around him, holding him close. 

“I promise it’s medicine,” Jake whispers. “I promise.”

“I trust you,” Chris whispers back, and he does.

But he’s still scared.

--

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I 👏 LOVE 👏 THEIR 👏 BOND 👏 SO 👏 DAMN 👏 MUCH 👏

“It weighs nothing. It weighs too much.”

that line is gonna be echoing in my head all day, thank you very much

!!!!

I am glad you liked it! For me, the hammer metaphor trying to explain the difference between drugging someone and medicine is just... I was so happy to think of that because yes, that IS how Jake would explain it...

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(sturmfrei (german, adj.) - the freedom of not being watched by a parent or superior; being alone at a place and having the ability to do what you want) for anyone, please?

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CW: Emotional abuse from a parent, referenced attempted murder, referenced noncon (vague and brief)

"I have never treated Danny like anything less than-"

"Oh, fuck off, Mom," Ryan groaned, and Nate glanced over at him, the two of them uneasy, instinctive allies in an instant when it came to shielding Danny from further harm. "Vandrum's right. Stop fucking lying, we get it now."

Corrinne's face paled, went ashen under her deep brown skin. "You get it? Get what exactly, Ryan?"

"He's bait. Or he was. That's why he couldn't go any further for college, couldn't travel without me, why he wasn't allowed to think about anything but working for me after graduation. Because he was fucking bait." Ryan snorted, half-drunk and with rage flickering to life in his glowing yellow eyes. "He got stabbed for me, Mom."

Corrine's jaw set in a determined line, and her younger son matched it right down to the narrowed eyes and hint of sharp white teeth. The air shimmered around them both, like staring through a fire and watching heat dance in the air.

"Ryan, I have only suggested that Danny's experiences - and yes, I am including the sacrifice he made for you - might make him a less than ideal parent-"

"Oh, but you were such a grand fucking example, huh?" Ryan laughed, bitter and humorless. "You saying a victim can't be a good parent, Mom? Just because he was r-"

"You need to watch your tongue in this house," Corrine said icily.

"L-let him s-s-say it, Corrine," Nate said, forcing calm into his face, angry the stammer found its way back as soon as he did. "Call it what it w-was."

Danny had sat silent through it all, still staring wide-eyed at his mother. Finally, he stood up as well, chair scraping back, looking to his father.

Patrick stared back at him, mild curiosity the only thing on his face.

"Well?" Danny asked, voice breaking. "Do you think I can do this, Dad?"

"I think you seem very determined to," Patrick responded, each word carefully and somehow carelessly placed, all at once.

Danny's lips thinned. He was all freckles and hair and the red scars that traced his face, the arc of the muzzle that had silenced him.

But he'd learned not to speak his thoughts a long time before there was ever a muzzle.

"It's fine," Danny said finally, heavily. Fury flickered in warm blue eyes, struggled to find footing, finally stuck and stayed and burned brighter.

Puppies aren't allowed to get angry-

"It's fine," He repeated. "I'm glad you said it. I... I am. Because now I know better than to say a fucking word to either of you ever again."

He stalked away from the table, Nate and Ryan meeting eyes in moment of silent communication - I've got him - before Nate followed.

Patrick and Corrine did not move to stop him.

"D-Danny-"

"Don't fucking talk to me until we get to the car," Danny snapped over his shoulder. "Not a fucking word." He slammed open a door into a hallway, tore a photo of himself as a child in a frame off the wall and let the glass shatter.

He made it outside before the anger exploded and he screamed, the sound bouncing off the trees and back at him, in its own mockery.

Nate, on his heels, put a hand out only to have Danny whip around and glare at him with glimmers of tears running through scar tissue.

"I'll be better than they were," He said, voice trembling.

"You will," Nate said, softly. His own voice stayed strong.

"Even with what Abraham did, even with the... even with being in pain, even with scars, I'll be better."

"Yes."

There was a wild despair raging in his husband's face that Nate could not begin to touch - the unloved child pushed down for too many years to control now.

"I'll be better," Danny hissed, "Because given the choice, I'll choose to fucking care."

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