Follow Your Passion: A Seamless Tumblr Journey
I swear theres alot of more things art would've done đĽ´đĽ´đ¤đ¤đ¤
EXPLICIT CONTENT | MINORS DNI
Art the Clown x Reader SMUT ⢠headcanons, how Art fucks, what he gets off to, etc
big content warning! contains some stuff that may gross you out; read at your own risk: menstruation kink, piss kink, oral sex, anal sex, object insertion, blood kink, various weapons mentioned, bondage, human hair and bones, butts and what comes out of butts, public sex, cockwarming, mostly dom!Art and sub!reader
đŞ Remember the work desk with all of Artâs weapons and tools on it? He knows you want him to fuck you, but heâs got shit to do (meaning weapons to build) so he lets you sit under the desk, cockwarming him while he works. Youâre on the ground between his knees, patiently holding him in your mouth. When he finishes constructing his latest instrument of torture/slaughter, Art pats his palm against his thigh, wordlessly telling you to climb up into his lap and ride him.đЏ
đŞ Art enjoys blood and guts, so it goes without saying that during your period, heâs particularly eager to fuck you. He can detect the slight change in your scent, usually aware youâve begun to bleed even before you know. He plays with your pussy like itâs a new, special toy when youâre bleeding, spreading your lips and tracing his name on your inner thighs in red. Seeing/touching/tasting blood that comes from you is special to Art. Itâs the only time he gets to play in blood without it being the result of him hurting someone, so that makes the experience unique for him. He saves your used pads for âalone time,â using them later as a âsleeve,â to masturbate with.đЏ
đŞ Art sometimes fucks you with unconventional objects, like the handle of one of his weapons (knife, axe) or the neck of a bottle. If youâve displeased him but he still wants to fuck you, he might deny you his cock and instead use something else, like the handle of one of his knives or the barrel of an (empty!) gun, to make you come instead of his cock, as a degrading âpunishment.âđЏ
đŞ Art loves bondage. He knows what heâs doing when it comes to tying knots, as evidenced by the multiple victims youâve watched him restrain. He enjoys the power dynamic of being in absolute control of another person. When that crosses over into sex, you both get off on him tying you up and doing whatever the fuck he wants with your body.đЏ
đŞ Artâs methods can border on sadistic at times (I mean how could they not??) but because he wants to keep you around to play with for the long haul, he never pushes you beyond the limits of safety, no matter how many new ways he comes up with to plug every hole in your body. If we know anything about Art, itâs that heâs perceptive. He studies the way your body responds to different forms of stimulation and mentally catalogs the information for later. All of his skill in crafting tools of torture means heâs able to create customized âtoys,â to fuck you with. But the thing is, theyâre never normal, or sweet; they always contain something fucked-up and sick. Art once surprised you with a whip heâd put together for you. Its strands were soft and felt so good gliding over your clit. You came so hard when Art whipped your pussy till it was puffy and leaking. It would have been a wonderful gift, if you hadnât realized later, upon closer inspection, that the strands now wet with your cum were in fact strands of human hair. And the custom dildo Art made for you, the one that was so smooth and colored beige/white? You later found out Art had chiseled and smoothed down a human bone to make it for you. The information almost made you sick on the spot. Art found your horrified reaction hilarious, of course, and it didnât stop him from laying you down and fucking you with it all the sameâŚđЏ
đŞ ANAL ANAL ANAL ANAL ANAL ANAL âŚ
He loves to fuck you in the ass. Artâs a nasty little motherfucker when it comes to the stuff that comes out of butts, and Iâm not gonna elaborate here, but you can use your imagination to follow where Iâm going with thisâŚđЏ
đŞ Art has zero inhibitions: he kills anyone, anywhere. Imagine that relating to sex; of course heâs going to fuck you wherever he wants, including places where you might get caught. Sex in public/risky spaces feels natural to Art, because he literally does not give a single fuck. Remember the first time you ever saw him? When you stumbled out the back door of that sleazy little bar in your home town, so drunk off your ass you thought you were leaving through the front? Art was in the alleyway behind the bar, black garbage bag hoisted over his shoulder, not even looking for anyone to fuck up but when he saw you, he knew heâd found a victim for the night. Heâd planned to stalk you home and do unspeakable things to you-but as you took the lead and approached him, there in the alleyway, he was caught off guard, his whole plan upended the moment you slid your arms around his waist, stood up on your tiptoes, and placed a soft, sloppy kiss on his cheek. He was awestruck, and even if he could speak, Art would still have been at a loss for words. You walked him backward a few steps, lining him up against a dumpster in the alleyway. You began fondling him through his costume, grinning when you realized his body had already begun to respond. One thing led to another, and within minutes, Art had you bent over that dumpster, with a fresh hole torn in the front of his costume where your bodies were joinedâŚđЏ
đŞ No one would associate The Miles County Clown with tenderness, but if they knew Art, they would see a softer side of him only you do. Heâs still fucking deranged, donât get me wrong. But Art also has moments of vulnerability, when thereâs nothing he wants more than to hold you. Sitting in Artâs lap, he wraps his arms around you and stays still, so still, just enjoying the soft thump of your heartbeat against his, and the low hum of your breath on his chest. Your nearness calms the monster inside Art so well that sometimes, he forgets he is the monster itselfâŚđЏ
đŞ Another benefit of having you in his lap? Art realized he could use his strength to make you stay in his lap no matter how badly you had to get up and take a piss, forcing you to wet yourself all over him. You felt him gradually getting hard under you as you began to wriggle on his lap. Art could see your discomfort, and when you told him you needed to get up and take a piss, he refused to release you. Youâd expect him to be smiling at you at a time like this, silently mocking you; but the look in his eyes was deathly serious, pitch black and full of a demented lust that would have had you locked you in place even if his arms hadnât. Blushing into his shoulder, you accepted the fact that Art wasnât letting go of you any time soon, and that he really was into this. He wanted this to happen. You allowed your bladder to empty, a soft trickle saturating your panties, followed by a steady stream of hot piss that spread over Artâs lap. His clothes were soaked through below the waist, your piss running down between his thighs and dampening the couch cushion beneath you. Art was rock hard by this point, his wet cock throbbing against your pussy. He lifted you off his lap just enough to reach between your bodies and position his tip against your entrance, then used your piss as a lube to slide inside youâŚđЏ
ÍÍÍÍâłâĽ đ˛đđ đŹđşđźđđžđ x fem!reader
ââ A/N ââ Based on this request. I apologize if I got the characterization wrong. I just feel like the darker side to his character is never properly explored. As goofy as he was, he was also a serial killer lmao
⏠Summary ⏠Stu's your best friend, you know him as well as you know yourself. At least you thought so. A snoop through his closet leads to a terrifying discovery. Now, everywhere you turn, that haunting mask is right there waiting.
âGod,â you toss the remote on the cushion beside you. It bounces off the oversized couch and flops to the floor. âThereâs nothing on TV,â you lament, draping yourself dramatically over the cushions.Â
Stu snickers and kicks his legs over the arms of his chair, shrugging with a smug look. âI told you we should have stopped by the video store.â His gaze drifts back toward the TV, grimacing at the obnoxiously loud MTV episode you stopped on.Â
âHell no, Randyâs working tonight,â you scold, sharp gaze snapping toward him. Heâs got a stupid grin on his face, clearly having decided that his form of entertainment tonight is going to be pissing you off. âI donât feel like having him critique me for an hour on my poor taste in movies.â
He snorts and reaches to take a large handful out of the popcorn on the coffee table between you. âMaybe if you didnât just rent stupid chick flicks all the time, he wouldnât.âÂ
Stu doesnât have time to duck as you chuck one of his momâs overpriced throw pillows at him. âDonât act like you donât love Pretty in Pink.â The pillow knocks the popcorn out of his hand, scattering it across the ornate rug Mrs. Macher bought last week. If she saw the state youâd gotten the house in this weekend, that ever-pulsing vein in her head would burst. As it is, theyâre never actually at the house, itâs an oasis for practically half the school during the weekends Stu decides to throw a party.Â
For the first time in a while, though, itâs just you and Stu. No one else is here to rile him up or force him to put on a show. Heâs at his calmest when itâs just the two of you. Which, honestly, doesnât mean much for him, but still.Â
âI do not,â he objects, stretching out his lanky body and getting to his feet.Â
You roll your head lazily to face him, giving him a knowing smirk. âBilly isnât here, Stu. You donât have to lie,â you assure him, holding out your arms as he stops in front of you. You already know what he wants, heâs got that specific gleam in his eye as he smiles down at you.Â
âI mean,â he shrugs, âitâs not bad,â he concedes. Without another word, he throws himself on top of you, even prepared for it, you still feel the breath rush out in one hefty wheeze. Another thing you donât see as much when others are around, just how goddamn clingy he is.Â
Sure, with his multitude of girlfriends, heâs touchy. But this is something different entirely. He clings to you like he would burrow into your skin if he could. Heâs been that way since you guys were kids. While the feeling of others touching you might set you on edge, Stu fits against you like your missing piece.Â
Hands drifting up to play with his hair, you settle yourself against the cushions while he goes back to channel surfing, pleased to have you as his pillow.Â
The TV drones on, a dull buzz in the background now that Stu has the volume down. With his head practically buried between your boobs and your legs wrapped around his waist, you snicker.Â
Frowning, he props his chin on your chest, staring up at you. âWhat?â He demands, hating to be left out of a joke.Â
âNothing,â you shrug as much as you can with him steadily pancaking you. âJust wondering what your girlfriend would think of us like this.â
âOh,â he sets his head back down and places your hands back on his head to continue playing with his hair. âWe broke up,â he tells you, like it means absolutely nothing.Â
âStu!â You slap his shoulder, and he winces dramatically. As if you could ever do real damage to him.Â
âOw!â He whines, bracketing himself up on his elbows so he can look down at you. âWhatâs your problem tonight?â
His hips are still lazily pressed against you, pressure increasing the longer he hovers above you. Swallowing thickly, you try to ignore the flush spreading through you. âYou didnât tell me you guys broke up.â
He rolls his eyes, glaring down at you. âI just did,â he points out sarcastically. You swat at his shoulder again, but this time, he catches your hand in his, lacing your fingers together with a smug grin as he keeps you trapped.Â
âYouâre collecting these girls like theyâre trading cards.â Despite his tight grip, you manage to slip out slightly from under him and prop yourself against the arm of the couch. âI donât even remember the last oneâs name.â
His face goes slack, lips parting as you see the cogs in his brain turning. He laughs and glances back at you with a dismissive shrug. âNeither do I. I just remember the tits.â
âUgh,â you yank your hand out of his, ignoring his petulant frown. âYouâre absolutely disgusting. Whatâs the point of even dating them?â
He slinks back against the other end of the couch. âI just said why,â he points to your chest with a grin, and you reflexively cross your arms. Stu tips his head back, dangling it over the edge as he stares up at the ceiling with a forlorn sigh. âI donât get it,â he tosses his hands up, and you already know where this is going.Â
Head tipped back up, he narrows his eyes at you, âI donât know why we donât just date.â
You give him a deadpan look, arms still tight around your chest. âDude,â you chide, âafter what you just told me. Seriously?â When you were younger, him saying this used to set you alight. Youâd get all dreamy-eyed, imagining what it would be like to be Stuâs girlfriend. Of course, youâd taken too long thinking about it, and by then, heâd already found a different girl to set his sights on. It had broken your heart, and their relationship had barely even lasted a week.Â
By now, you know better than to take anything he says seriously. Everythingâs just one big joke to him. Heâs so fickle you canât trust that he would actually put effort into anything more blooming between you. You seem to be the only girl in his life that he actually thinks of as a person, going on a few dates with him isnât worth screwing that up. Besides that, youâre not going to ruin the only friendship youâve ever had thatâs lasted more than two months.Â
Stu opens his mouth like he wants to say anything, but it snaps shut a moment later. His face sets into a glower, and you worry for a moment that you might have actually hurt his feelings. Youâve always thought the suggestion was just a sort of inside joke between the two of you. Though, he has been bringing it up more and more lately.Â
Your stomach flips unpleasantly, heart aching with guilt. It doesnât last long, the feeling always remains fleeting. Youâve conditioned yourself for years to dismiss anything that might actually encourage you to pursue something with Stu. You love him, but you two would just be a spark waiting to light up.Â
âYouâre staying the night, right?â Stu changes the subject, picking up the remote once more and not meeting your eye. Your lips part, and he cuts a glare toward you, âNo girlfriend,â he stops you before you can even say anything. Your brows furrow, and he looks back to the TV. âNo sleepovers if Iâm dating,â he mocks the pitch of your voice, reminding you of the rule you'd enforced so long ago. Your lips fall in a flat, irritated line at his imitation of you.Â
âNo girlfriend,â he reminds you, feigning indifference even though you can see right through him. Your plan was to go home, but you know him well enough by now. The set of his jaw, the stubborn way he wonât look at you, thereâs no actual choice. Youâre staying.
âYeah,â you acquiesce with a low huff. âIâll need to borrow some clothes.â
âYou know where they are,â he tells you, still not meeting your eye. Heâs never been this sensitive after youâve rejected him before. Whatâs his problem? Eyes narrowed, you get to your feet, glaring at him the whole way up the stairs. He never loses the indifferent look, passive-aggressively turning the TV up.Â
Usually, you just grab some pants from the guest room. But with Autumn descending, itâs been getting colder, especially in Stuâs drafty old house. Thereâs a soft yellow sweater that youâve always tried to steal from him, and heâs never let you get away with it.Â
Nabbing it would probably ease up the weird tension. He is a freak, he does love seeing you in his clothes. You figure itâs a solid plan and slip across the hallway, quietly opening his bedroom door.Â
As always, his room is a hot damn mess. The bedâs unmade, sheets completely untucked, and half of them sprawled across the floor. Thereâs a clearly well-loved nudie mag lying open on his nightstand, boobs bared boldly to the world. Rolling your eyes, you shake your head and turn toward his closet.Â
Your brows furrow, head tilting at the closed door. As odd as it is, Stu never closes his closet. Itâs just another tedious task to him. Besides, he likes to just ball all his clothes up and toss them in wildly. You know his familyâs old maid threatened to quit if she had to clean his room ever again. But you wouldnât believe that looking into the closet now.Â
Itâs not just clean, itâs pristine. Clothes hung up, sorted by color and sleeve length. Jeans all neatly folded away. The box of old books and junk he had just lying about are tucked up on the top shelf. âWhat the hell?â You whisper, looking around like you just stepped into Narnia.Â
Hell, maybe itâs a portal to a bizarro dimension, it would make more sense than him cleaning up after himself. Whatever, you donât have time to dwell on Stuâs oddities, youâd just be standing here forever if you did.Â
You start in the yellow section of his closet, then drift toward the sweaters. And, of course, the only one you want isnât anywhere to be found. It has to be buried somewhere in here, and youâre not giving up until that sweater is yours. You dig through his folded pile of jeans recklessly, hoping for a bright spot of yellow to be buried somewhere within them.Â
Tugging a little too hard on one of the stacks, something hard clatters against the wooden floor of his closet. âAh, shit,â you hiss, shoving the jeans back and kneeling to try and spot whatever fell. Lowering your head to the ground, you peer under the hems of his shirts on the lower rack and squint into the shadows.Â
Thereâs a vague shape of something, and you reach toward it. Head tilted the other way, your arm stretches under the sweaters, blindly groping for whatever you sent tumbling. Your fingers snag on fabric, and you grin, thinking itâs the sweater youâve been coveting.Â
Pulling it out, your smile stills, heart rapidly increasing speed until it feels like itâs going to beat out of your ribs. Thereâs a twisting pain in your stomach, anguish and immediate denial flooding through you as you stare down at the mask in your hands.Â
Itâs just a cheap drugstore mask. Around Halloween, you could find it anywhere. You could easily dismiss it as something Stu bought as a fucked up joke. Were it not for the flaking copper on the chin of the howling mask. Your fingers tighten around it until you think it might crack.Â
Slowly, you tilt your head back toward the shirts. This wasnât what fell. A part of you screams to just chuck the mask back and pretend you never saw it. You could go downstairs, continue your movie night with Stu, and pass out beside him on the couch. Lying to yourself would be so damn easy. Itâs just a mask, half the guys in school bought one because they thought it was a fucking joke.Â
But your body isnât interested in weak excuses. Bowing over, your hand swipes across the wood once more, wrapping around the object that fell. Before you even drag it out, you already know what youâre going to see. A pulsing pain spreads through your chest, eyes watering as you stare down at the knife in your hand.Â
A serrated hunting knife, to be exact. The same one Dewey said was used to kill Casey only a week ago. God, how had you not seen this? How could you have been so blind?
Stu had been the number one suspect, but Billy had been his alibi, no one could place him at the scene of the crime.
There has always been something twisted about Billy. It only got worse when his mom left. Maybe this was all his idea, maybe Stu was just dragged into this, but he doesnât really want-
Your thoughts fade into a dull silence in the back of your mind. Thereâs no excuse. Stu has always been different, just slightly off. His jokes nearing the wrong side of dark. But you never would have thought him capable of something so brutal.Â
Footsteps sound up the stairs, and your brain shocks itself awake. Quickly, you toss the mask back under the clothes and shove the knife into the jeans. Wiping your eyes, you leap to your feet and rush out of the closet just as Stu barrels into his room.Â
The both of you pause, staring blankly at each other. You, a deer caught in a hunterâs snare. He, the drooling wolf, waiting to pounce.Â
Slowly, his eyes drift toward the closet, the light you left on, and the door you hadnât had time to close. He turns back to you, and something twisted curls at the edges of his lips. Adrenaline shoots so fast through you it nearly knocks you off your feet.Â
âLooking for something?â His tone is light, barely audible, as he takes a step closer. It takes every ounce of self-control not to back away from him.Â
Something too strained to be a smile curls your lips up. âUm,â you lick your lips, swallowing down the dryness coating your tongue. You laugh nervously and take a step toward his bed. âJust that sweater I love.Â
He stalks towards you, and your eyes widen, heart fluttering in your chest. Just when you think he might run you over, he steps around you and heads toward his dresser. You turn, afraid to take your eyes off of him.Â
Peeking above the corner of a drawer is a yellow sleeve. He slips it out easily, holding it out to you with a grin that shows off all his teeth. âThank you,â you whisper, voice cracking around the words as you snatch the sweater out of his hands.Â
âI made more popcorn,â he tells you, eyes wild as he stares down at you. âHalloweenâs on.â Itâs a simple invitation to a movie, but it feels like thereâs a knife to your back. You have no choice but to step out of the room and head down the stairs. Every bit of you screams to act natural, to pretend that thereâs nothing wrong.Â
How could you be? Your best friend, the boy youâre practically in love with, is slaughtering your friends. Heâs running rampant through your town and killing girls just because they broke up with him.Â
Risking a glance over your shoulder, you see him already looking at you. The smile is gone, now heâs just watching you with this bemused expression, like heâs waiting for you to break and make a run for it.Â
You take a seat on the couch, lean against the pillows, and glue your eyes to the screen. Suddenly, Jamie Lee Curtis babysitting is the most interesting thing in the world to you. Stu takes his seat beside you, sinking into your side and wrapping his arms around your waist. Stiff as a board, you canât find it in you to return the touch, too petrified by the thought of all the blood on his hands.Â
He doesnât care for your trepidation, taking your arms and wrapping them around himself. He presses his face into the crook of your neck, lips brushing against the sensitive skin as he speaks. âWhatâs your favorite scary movie?â
Avoiding Stu has been easier than you thought it would. Usually, heâs more persistent in making you hang out with him. Especially when your parents are both out of town at the same time. But heâs been suspiciously quiet since you prematurely ended your weekend stay last week.Â
You managed to make it through the night. Though, while Stu dozed on top of you, you had been wide awake. Limbs stiff, eyes unblinking, the whole night had been spent on high alert. Youâre not sure if he knows you know, or just suspects it. Either way, you should have turned him in by now.Â
The second you left his house, you should have gone straight to the sheriff. You know who's behind the Woodsboro murders. You know who the infamous Ghostface is, and have a suspicion who his other half might be. You could have stopped all this.Â
Casey and Steve would be avenged. If you had something, another person wouldnât have been killed two days ago. You didnât know him personally, youâd never even seen Stu or Billy interact with him. But this felt less like an attack on him and more like a threat for you.Â
Keep quiet, or youâll be strung up by your intestines.Â
Triple checking all your doors and windows are locked, you head upstairs to your room. Prepared to camp out for another sleepless night. If you turned him in, you wouldnât have to live with this paranoia anymore. Every corner you turn wouldnât be prefaced with the idea that he might be waiting behind it. No matter how hard you try, you canât pick up the phone and call the cops.Â
You lay back on your bed, listening to the radio in the hopes it might lull you to sleep. It never works, but you hold out hope. The shrill ring of your home phone echoes throughout your empty home. Sitting up on your elbows, you glare at your closed door like it might shut the damn thing up.Â
Abruptly, it cuts off. The empty halls of your home fall silent once more, the low droning of your radio barely audible above the blood rushing through your head. You hold your breath, eyes peeled on the door in front of you, waiting for⌠something.Â
The phone goes off again, and you jump, shooting off your bed and grabbing the bat by your nightstand. Slowly, you open your door, peeking your head out before you attempt to cross the hall to your parentâs room. Thereâs a phone in there, and youâre more comfortable up here than you are beside your glass patio doors downstairs.Â
You practically kick the door open, jumping inside the room like youâre prepared to bludgeon someone with your bat. The shadows are thick inside, but you donât see a cloaked figure waiting for you within one. Feeling confident enough, you run toward your parentâs nightstand and grab the phone. Running back to your room as fast as you can and slamming the door closed behind you, you sink to the floor.Â
Thumb hovering over the button, you let out a shaky breath and answer. âHello?â You try and instill confidence in your voice, but you canât hide the tremor.Â
âHey,â Billyâs voice croons on the other end, he says your name, and a shudder rolls down your spine.Â
âBilly?â His name is a hoarse croak as you feel your heart thud dully inside your chest. âWhatâs up?â
âI just wanted to tell you something.â He pauses, and you bite your lip, nails digging into your palms as you wait for him to speak. âIâve always wondered,â thereâs a click, and then a raspier, unfamiliar voice speaks, âwhat do your insides look like?â
Something slams against your front door, and you drop the phone with a shrill scream, jumping to your feet and whirling around. You hear Billyâs distorted cackle echo through the speaker before abruptly cutting off. On the floor, three low beeps sound out. Bending down, you pick up the bulky phone and press it to your ear. Nothing but white noise. You toss the phone on your bed and swallow down another scream. No service.Â
Youâre all alone.Â
The startling realization of silence rushes over you, gooseflesh rises along your arms, the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. The banging downstairs has quieted and your house is once more silent. But itâs no longer the same vacant stillness it was before. Thereâs someone here, itâs an instinctive feeling. Long buried prey instincts warning you of a predator sniffing you out. Â
Creeping quietly across the floor, you avoid the creaky wood that would give your movements away and once more open the door. It seems foolish to put yourself so boldly out in the open. Being cornered in that room is no better. No matter what, itâs just you and him all alone out here.Â
You wonder, as you peek your head around the banister, if this is just Stu stalking you. Is Billy getting rid of a liability? Is it both of them?
One, you could handle on your own. But if it was the both of them, the only thing you could do was go down swinging. If you were going to die tonight, you werenât going to let it be easy for either of them.Â
Your front door is wide open, an easy escape. There was no point in running. Either one of them is waiting outside for you, or theyâve cut the brakes on your car. You crouch, peering through the railings and silently making your way down the stairs. Try as you might, you donât see signs that anyone has come inside.Â
Besides the door, there are no clues to give away where they might have gone. You donât want to play the role of the bimbo in their sick fantasy. Despite the instinct to call out for someone, you swallow it down and continue through your home.Â
Beyond the stark terror of facing your own mortality, there is also the pain of being so thoroughly betrayed by Stu. You know the truth of what he is, of what Billy is. And you kept it quiet. You buried his dark secret like it was your own, protected him. This is how he repays you?
This is his answer after years of you loving him. How could he?
You stand in the middle of your living room, bat hanging limp by your side. The aching pain of grief and fear stills your body. The fight wanes inside you, debating whether or not prolonging this is worth it. The others all fought back, and they died bloody. Maybe if you just gave in, it would be quick, painless. Stu could at least grant you that.Â
Thereâs a brief flash of movement in the reflection of your patio door. Itâs slight, like a shifting shadow. Only one thing gives him away, the white, howling mask. Instinct overrides sensitivities, you whip around, bat flying. Thereâs a low groan as it smashes over his head.Â
Reaching up, he snatches it in his hand, using it to jerk you forward. Youâre quick to let it go. Instead, you aim for his throat. Hands outstretched as you reach up, gripping his neck as tight as you can. Thereâs shock in his stuttered breaths, like he hadnât thought you would fight back. You were beginning to doubt yourself, too.Â
Turns out youâre too stubborn to die.Â
The bat clacks loudly against the wood as he stumbles back into your motherâs glass coffee table. His legs kick up, tripping you and sending you stumbling into his chest. The both of you go plummeting backward, glass shattering around him and the wood crumpling like a tower of cards.Â
Jagged shards cut at your arms and bare legs, but you know he takes the brunt of it. Your grip on his throat is unrelenting, you pick his head up and slam it against the wood. He lets out a dazed groan, and you would laugh were you not trying to stop your best friend from killing you. He seems ridiculous, wearing this stupid cheap mask and moaning like a cartoon character with a bump on their head.Â
He bucks under you, hips pressing up against yours as he flips you both over. Pain rips through your back as the glass digs into your skin. Letting out a low whine, your hands slack on him for just a moment. Itâs still long enough for him to get the upper hand.Â
He straddles your waist, pinning you below him with his weight as he kneels on your swinging arms. Youâre utterly paralyzed, with no other choice but to stare up at him as tears stream, hot and slick, down your cheeks.Â
Stu rips his mask off, eyes wild as he grins down at you. âDamn, sweetheart,â he laughs, and it only makes you fight harder against him. Screaming through your teeth as you try to buck him off of you. âDidnât know you had it in you.â
He tosses the mask to the side and motions to the knife in his hand, âSurprise,â he practically sings the word, watching for your reaction. You bite your tongue, hiccuping on a sob as you stare up at him through blurry eyes. âRight,â he concedes, tilting his head, âyou already knew.â
You can feel the blood pooling beneath you, the glass digging further into your shredded skin. It only makes this all the more unbearable. âStop,â you beg, voice breaking as you struggle to hold back the tears. âI didnât tell,â you shout at him. âWhy are you doing this?â The tears break around the rage slipping through your voice as you glare up at him.Â
âWhat are you talking about?â He snaps, his amusement waning the harder you cry.Â
âBilly!â you shout the name out, just barely managing to wiggle one wrist free. He snatches it up instantly, the knife falling beside you as he leans over you, digging your hand into the glass above your head. âHe said you wanted to see my insides,â thereâs no controlling the sobs now. You donât want to die. You donât want Stu to be the one to kill you. Somehow, though, you think this would have hurt worse if it was Billy holding the knife.Â
Stuâs face falls before quickly twisting up into something angry. He backs off, easing his weight just enough for the press of glass to sting a little less. âNo,â he utters, shaking his head. âNo, thatâs not the plan.âÂ
Stu looks nearly manic as he stares down at you. Something unfurls inside you, years of friendship have you reaching up with your free hand. You donât know what your plan is until heâs leaning into your touch, eyes never leaving yours.Â
His hand grips your waist, easing you into a sitting position. You want to curl up into a ball and go hide in a dark corner. You want to shove glass down his throat and run. The knife looks particularly appealing beside you.Â
But you do none of that. You let him tug you closer, hand tightening to the point of pain around your waist, but you donât think he realizes, and youâre too afraid to point it out. âYouâre our final girl, baby,â he practically fucking giggles, and you struggle not to flinch from the sound. âHe was just fucking with you.â
âYeah?â You snap, fingers trailing toward his hair and yanking until his face crinkles with pain. âThen what the fuck,â venom coats your tongue, voice low and deadly, âare you doing right now?â
He smiles, leaning into the way you rip at his hair. âScrewing around,â he laughs, and he sounds like a goddamn idiot. Scoffing, you release him, jerking out of his grip and ignoring the way it pulls at the wounds on your back.Â
âGod,â you crumple into yourself, shoulders hunching forward as you hide your face behind your hands. âI canât believe I ever thought you could love me. Youâre sick, Stu,â you snap, holding back more tears.Â
Blood and glass surround you both, the shattered fragments of your friendship. Stu looks more hurt than when you strangled him. He reaches for you, and you jump back, shaking your head. âI was never going to kill you,â he swears. But what does the promise of a murderer mean to you?
âI donât believe you,â voice a whisper, the tears spill over once more. He looks between you and the knife like he canât decide what to do. You wait for it, for the snap before he just plunges the knife into your gut. Twisting it and dragging your death on.Â
Instead, he lunges forward, wrapping his arms around yours and forcing you into his embrace. âStop,â you claw weakly at his shoulders, snagging your nails in the cheap cloak. You shake your head, but the fight is over before it even begins. Your arms curl around his neck, and you sink into his familiar embrace.Â
His gloved hand skates over the wounds on your back, and you whine, arching away from his touch. He offers a whispered apology, but you donât believe it. âBillyâs not going to touch you,â he swears. âIâm never going to hurt you.â
âYou already have.â
His arms only tighten around you, pulling you into his lap as you cry. You might not believe him, but he knows the truth of it. Youâre his best friend. The only person besides Billy heâs ever actually cared about.Â
You are his perfect final girl, and heâs never going to let you go.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Scream, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
ÍÍÍÍâłâĽ đ˛đđ đŹđşđźđđžđ x fem!reader
ââ A/N ââ Based on this request. I apologize if I got the characterization wrong. I just feel like the darker side to his character is never properly explored. As goofy as he was, he was also a serial killer lmao
⏠Summary ⏠Stu's your best friend, you know him as well as you know yourself. At least you thought so. A snoop through his closet leads to a terrifying discovery. Now, everywhere you turn, that haunting mask is right there waiting.
âGod,â you toss the remote on the cushion beside you. It bounces off the oversized couch and flops to the floor. âThereâs nothing on TV,â you lament, draping yourself dramatically over the cushions.Â
Stu snickers and kicks his legs over the arms of his chair, shrugging with a smug look. âI told you we should have stopped by the video store.â His gaze drifts back toward the TV, grimacing at the obnoxiously loud MTV episode you stopped on.Â
âHell no, Randyâs working tonight,â you scold, sharp gaze snapping toward him. Heâs got a stupid grin on his face, clearly having decided that his form of entertainment tonight is going to be pissing you off. âI donât feel like having him critique me for an hour on my poor taste in movies.â
He snorts and reaches to take a large handful out of the popcorn on the coffee table between you. âMaybe if you didnât just rent stupid chick flicks all the time, he wouldnât.âÂ
Stu doesnât have time to duck as you chuck one of his momâs overpriced throw pillows at him. âDonât act like you donât love Pretty in Pink.â The pillow knocks the popcorn out of his hand, scattering it across the ornate rug Mrs. Macher bought last week. If she saw the state youâd gotten the house in this weekend, that ever-pulsing vein in her head would burst. As it is, theyâre never actually at the house, itâs an oasis for practically half the school during the weekends Stu decides to throw a party.Â
For the first time in a while, though, itâs just you and Stu. No one else is here to rile him up or force him to put on a show. Heâs at his calmest when itâs just the two of you. Which, honestly, doesnât mean much for him, but still.Â
âI do not,â he objects, stretching out his lanky body and getting to his feet.Â
You roll your head lazily to face him, giving him a knowing smirk. âBilly isnât here, Stu. You donât have to lie,â you assure him, holding out your arms as he stops in front of you. You already know what he wants, heâs got that specific gleam in his eye as he smiles down at you.Â
âI mean,â he shrugs, âitâs not bad,â he concedes. Without another word, he throws himself on top of you, even prepared for it, you still feel the breath rush out in one hefty wheeze. Another thing you donât see as much when others are around, just how goddamn clingy he is.Â
Sure, with his multitude of girlfriends, heâs touchy. But this is something different entirely. He clings to you like he would burrow into your skin if he could. Heâs been that way since you guys were kids. While the feeling of others touching you might set you on edge, Stu fits against you like your missing piece.Â
Hands drifting up to play with his hair, you settle yourself against the cushions while he goes back to channel surfing, pleased to have you as his pillow.Â
The TV drones on, a dull buzz in the background now that Stu has the volume down. With his head practically buried between your boobs and your legs wrapped around his waist, you snicker.Â
Frowning, he props his chin on your chest, staring up at you. âWhat?â He demands, hating to be left out of a joke.Â
âNothing,â you shrug as much as you can with him steadily pancaking you. âJust wondering what your girlfriend would think of us like this.â
âOh,â he sets his head back down and places your hands back on his head to continue playing with his hair. âWe broke up,â he tells you, like it means absolutely nothing.Â
âStu!â You slap his shoulder, and he winces dramatically. As if you could ever do real damage to him.Â
âOw!â He whines, bracketing himself up on his elbows so he can look down at you. âWhatâs your problem tonight?â
His hips are still lazily pressed against you, pressure increasing the longer he hovers above you. Swallowing thickly, you try to ignore the flush spreading through you. âYou didnât tell me you guys broke up.â
He rolls his eyes, glaring down at you. âI just did,â he points out sarcastically. You swat at his shoulder again, but this time, he catches your hand in his, lacing your fingers together with a smug grin as he keeps you trapped.Â
âYouâre collecting these girls like theyâre trading cards.â Despite his tight grip, you manage to slip out slightly from under him and prop yourself against the arm of the couch. âI donât even remember the last oneâs name.â
His face goes slack, lips parting as you see the cogs in his brain turning. He laughs and glances back at you with a dismissive shrug. âNeither do I. I just remember the tits.â
âUgh,â you yank your hand out of his, ignoring his petulant frown. âYouâre absolutely disgusting. Whatâs the point of even dating them?â
He slinks back against the other end of the couch. âI just said why,â he points to your chest with a grin, and you reflexively cross your arms. Stu tips his head back, dangling it over the edge as he stares up at the ceiling with a forlorn sigh. âI donât get it,â he tosses his hands up, and you already know where this is going.Â
Head tipped back up, he narrows his eyes at you, âI donât know why we donât just date.â
You give him a deadpan look, arms still tight around your chest. âDude,â you chide, âafter what you just told me. Seriously?â When you were younger, him saying this used to set you alight. Youâd get all dreamy-eyed, imagining what it would be like to be Stuâs girlfriend. Of course, youâd taken too long thinking about it, and by then, heâd already found a different girl to set his sights on. It had broken your heart, and their relationship had barely even lasted a week.Â
By now, you know better than to take anything he says seriously. Everythingâs just one big joke to him. Heâs so fickle you canât trust that he would actually put effort into anything more blooming between you. You seem to be the only girl in his life that he actually thinks of as a person, going on a few dates with him isnât worth screwing that up. Besides that, youâre not going to ruin the only friendship youâve ever had thatâs lasted more than two months.Â
Stu opens his mouth like he wants to say anything, but it snaps shut a moment later. His face sets into a glower, and you worry for a moment that you might have actually hurt his feelings. Youâve always thought the suggestion was just a sort of inside joke between the two of you. Though, he has been bringing it up more and more lately.Â
Your stomach flips unpleasantly, heart aching with guilt. It doesnât last long, the feeling always remains fleeting. Youâve conditioned yourself for years to dismiss anything that might actually encourage you to pursue something with Stu. You love him, but you two would just be a spark waiting to light up.Â
âYouâre staying the night, right?â Stu changes the subject, picking up the remote once more and not meeting your eye. Your lips part, and he cuts a glare toward you, âNo girlfriend,â he stops you before you can even say anything. Your brows furrow, and he looks back to the TV. âNo sleepovers if Iâm dating,â he mocks the pitch of your voice, reminding you of the rule you'd enforced so long ago. Your lips fall in a flat, irritated line at his imitation of you.Â
âNo girlfriend,â he reminds you, feigning indifference even though you can see right through him. Your plan was to go home, but you know him well enough by now. The set of his jaw, the stubborn way he wonât look at you, thereâs no actual choice. Youâre staying.
âYeah,â you acquiesce with a low huff. âIâll need to borrow some clothes.â
âYou know where they are,â he tells you, still not meeting your eye. Heâs never been this sensitive after youâve rejected him before. Whatâs his problem? Eyes narrowed, you get to your feet, glaring at him the whole way up the stairs. He never loses the indifferent look, passive-aggressively turning the TV up.Â
Usually, you just grab some pants from the guest room. But with Autumn descending, itâs been getting colder, especially in Stuâs drafty old house. Thereâs a soft yellow sweater that youâve always tried to steal from him, and heâs never let you get away with it.Â
Nabbing it would probably ease up the weird tension. He is a freak, he does love seeing you in his clothes. You figure itâs a solid plan and slip across the hallway, quietly opening his bedroom door.Â
As always, his room is a hot damn mess. The bedâs unmade, sheets completely untucked, and half of them sprawled across the floor. Thereâs a clearly well-loved nudie mag lying open on his nightstand, boobs bared boldly to the world. Rolling your eyes, you shake your head and turn toward his closet.Â
Your brows furrow, head tilting at the closed door. As odd as it is, Stu never closes his closet. Itâs just another tedious task to him. Besides, he likes to just ball all his clothes up and toss them in wildly. You know his familyâs old maid threatened to quit if she had to clean his room ever again. But you wouldnât believe that looking into the closet now.Â
Itâs not just clean, itâs pristine. Clothes hung up, sorted by color and sleeve length. Jeans all neatly folded away. The box of old books and junk he had just lying about are tucked up on the top shelf. âWhat the hell?â You whisper, looking around like you just stepped into Narnia.Â
Hell, maybe itâs a portal to a bizarro dimension, it would make more sense than him cleaning up after himself. Whatever, you donât have time to dwell on Stuâs oddities, youâd just be standing here forever if you did.Â
You start in the yellow section of his closet, then drift toward the sweaters. And, of course, the only one you want isnât anywhere to be found. It has to be buried somewhere in here, and youâre not giving up until that sweater is yours. You dig through his folded pile of jeans recklessly, hoping for a bright spot of yellow to be buried somewhere within them.Â
Tugging a little too hard on one of the stacks, something hard clatters against the wooden floor of his closet. âAh, shit,â you hiss, shoving the jeans back and kneeling to try and spot whatever fell. Lowering your head to the ground, you peer under the hems of his shirts on the lower rack and squint into the shadows.Â
Thereâs a vague shape of something, and you reach toward it. Head tilted the other way, your arm stretches under the sweaters, blindly groping for whatever you sent tumbling. Your fingers snag on fabric, and you grin, thinking itâs the sweater youâve been coveting.Â
Pulling it out, your smile stills, heart rapidly increasing speed until it feels like itâs going to beat out of your ribs. Thereâs a twisting pain in your stomach, anguish and immediate denial flooding through you as you stare down at the mask in your hands.Â
Itâs just a cheap drugstore mask. Around Halloween, you could find it anywhere. You could easily dismiss it as something Stu bought as a fucked up joke. Were it not for the flaking copper on the chin of the howling mask. Your fingers tighten around it until you think it might crack.Â
Slowly, you tilt your head back toward the shirts. This wasnât what fell. A part of you screams to just chuck the mask back and pretend you never saw it. You could go downstairs, continue your movie night with Stu, and pass out beside him on the couch. Lying to yourself would be so damn easy. Itâs just a mask, half the guys in school bought one because they thought it was a fucking joke.Â
But your body isnât interested in weak excuses. Bowing over, your hand swipes across the wood once more, wrapping around the object that fell. Before you even drag it out, you already know what youâre going to see. A pulsing pain spreads through your chest, eyes watering as you stare down at the knife in your hand.Â
A serrated hunting knife, to be exact. The same one Dewey said was used to kill Casey only a week ago. God, how had you not seen this? How could you have been so blind?
Stu had been the number one suspect, but Billy had been his alibi, no one could place him at the scene of the crime.
There has always been something twisted about Billy. It only got worse when his mom left. Maybe this was all his idea, maybe Stu was just dragged into this, but he doesnât really want-
Your thoughts fade into a dull silence in the back of your mind. Thereâs no excuse. Stu has always been different, just slightly off. His jokes nearing the wrong side of dark. But you never would have thought him capable of something so brutal.Â
Footsteps sound up the stairs, and your brain shocks itself awake. Quickly, you toss the mask back under the clothes and shove the knife into the jeans. Wiping your eyes, you leap to your feet and rush out of the closet just as Stu barrels into his room.Â
The both of you pause, staring blankly at each other. You, a deer caught in a hunterâs snare. He, the drooling wolf, waiting to pounce.Â
Slowly, his eyes drift toward the closet, the light you left on, and the door you hadnât had time to close. He turns back to you, and something twisted curls at the edges of his lips. Adrenaline shoots so fast through you it nearly knocks you off your feet.Â
âLooking for something?â His tone is light, barely audible, as he takes a step closer. It takes every ounce of self-control not to back away from him.Â
Something too strained to be a smile curls your lips up. âUm,â you lick your lips, swallowing down the dryness coating your tongue. You laugh nervously and take a step toward his bed. âJust that sweater I love.Â
He stalks towards you, and your eyes widen, heart fluttering in your chest. Just when you think he might run you over, he steps around you and heads toward his dresser. You turn, afraid to take your eyes off of him.Â
Peeking above the corner of a drawer is a yellow sleeve. He slips it out easily, holding it out to you with a grin that shows off all his teeth. âThank you,â you whisper, voice cracking around the words as you snatch the sweater out of his hands.Â
âI made more popcorn,â he tells you, eyes wild as he stares down at you. âHalloweenâs on.â Itâs a simple invitation to a movie, but it feels like thereâs a knife to your back. You have no choice but to step out of the room and head down the stairs. Every bit of you screams to act natural, to pretend that thereâs nothing wrong.Â
How could you be? Your best friend, the boy youâre practically in love with, is slaughtering your friends. Heâs running rampant through your town and killing girls just because they broke up with him.Â
Risking a glance over your shoulder, you see him already looking at you. The smile is gone, now heâs just watching you with this bemused expression, like heâs waiting for you to break and make a run for it.Â
You take a seat on the couch, lean against the pillows, and glue your eyes to the screen. Suddenly, Jamie Lee Curtis babysitting is the most interesting thing in the world to you. Stu takes his seat beside you, sinking into your side and wrapping his arms around your waist. Stiff as a board, you canât find it in you to return the touch, too petrified by the thought of all the blood on his hands.Â
He doesnât care for your trepidation, taking your arms and wrapping them around himself. He presses his face into the crook of your neck, lips brushing against the sensitive skin as he speaks. âWhatâs your favorite scary movie?â
Avoiding Stu has been easier than you thought it would. Usually, heâs more persistent in making you hang out with him. Especially when your parents are both out of town at the same time. But heâs been suspiciously quiet since you prematurely ended your weekend stay last week.Â
You managed to make it through the night. Though, while Stu dozed on top of you, you had been wide awake. Limbs stiff, eyes unblinking, the whole night had been spent on high alert. Youâre not sure if he knows you know, or just suspects it. Either way, you should have turned him in by now.Â
The second you left his house, you should have gone straight to the sheriff. You know who's behind the Woodsboro murders. You know who the infamous Ghostface is, and have a suspicion who his other half might be. You could have stopped all this.Â
Casey and Steve would be avenged. If you had something, another person wouldnât have been killed two days ago. You didnât know him personally, youâd never even seen Stu or Billy interact with him. But this felt less like an attack on him and more like a threat for you.Â
Keep quiet, or youâll be strung up by your intestines.Â
Triple checking all your doors and windows are locked, you head upstairs to your room. Prepared to camp out for another sleepless night. If you turned him in, you wouldnât have to live with this paranoia anymore. Every corner you turn wouldnât be prefaced with the idea that he might be waiting behind it. No matter how hard you try, you canât pick up the phone and call the cops.Â
You lay back on your bed, listening to the radio in the hopes it might lull you to sleep. It never works, but you hold out hope. The shrill ring of your home phone echoes throughout your empty home. Sitting up on your elbows, you glare at your closed door like it might shut the damn thing up.Â
Abruptly, it cuts off. The empty halls of your home fall silent once more, the low droning of your radio barely audible above the blood rushing through your head. You hold your breath, eyes peeled on the door in front of you, waiting for⌠something.Â
The phone goes off again, and you jump, shooting off your bed and grabbing the bat by your nightstand. Slowly, you open your door, peeking your head out before you attempt to cross the hall to your parentâs room. Thereâs a phone in there, and youâre more comfortable up here than you are beside your glass patio doors downstairs.Â
You practically kick the door open, jumping inside the room like youâre prepared to bludgeon someone with your bat. The shadows are thick inside, but you donât see a cloaked figure waiting for you within one. Feeling confident enough, you run toward your parentâs nightstand and grab the phone. Running back to your room as fast as you can and slamming the door closed behind you, you sink to the floor.Â
Thumb hovering over the button, you let out a shaky breath and answer. âHello?â You try and instill confidence in your voice, but you canât hide the tremor.Â
âHey,â Billyâs voice croons on the other end, he says your name, and a shudder rolls down your spine.Â
âBilly?â His name is a hoarse croak as you feel your heart thud dully inside your chest. âWhatâs up?â
âI just wanted to tell you something.â He pauses, and you bite your lip, nails digging into your palms as you wait for him to speak. âIâve always wondered,â thereâs a click, and then a raspier, unfamiliar voice speaks, âwhat do your insides look like?â
Something slams against your front door, and you drop the phone with a shrill scream, jumping to your feet and whirling around. You hear Billyâs distorted cackle echo through the speaker before abruptly cutting off. On the floor, three low beeps sound out. Bending down, you pick up the bulky phone and press it to your ear. Nothing but white noise. You toss the phone on your bed and swallow down another scream. No service.Â
Youâre all alone.Â
The startling realization of silence rushes over you, gooseflesh rises along your arms, the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. The banging downstairs has quieted and your house is once more silent. But itâs no longer the same vacant stillness it was before. Thereâs someone here, itâs an instinctive feeling. Long buried prey instincts warning you of a predator sniffing you out. Â
Creeping quietly across the floor, you avoid the creaky wood that would give your movements away and once more open the door. It seems foolish to put yourself so boldly out in the open. Being cornered in that room is no better. No matter what, itâs just you and him all alone out here.Â
You wonder, as you peek your head around the banister, if this is just Stu stalking you. Is Billy getting rid of a liability? Is it both of them?
One, you could handle on your own. But if it was the both of them, the only thing you could do was go down swinging. If you were going to die tonight, you werenât going to let it be easy for either of them.Â
Your front door is wide open, an easy escape. There was no point in running. Either one of them is waiting outside for you, or theyâve cut the brakes on your car. You crouch, peering through the railings and silently making your way down the stairs. Try as you might, you donât see signs that anyone has come inside.Â
Besides the door, there are no clues to give away where they might have gone. You donât want to play the role of the bimbo in their sick fantasy. Despite the instinct to call out for someone, you swallow it down and continue through your home.Â
Beyond the stark terror of facing your own mortality, there is also the pain of being so thoroughly betrayed by Stu. You know the truth of what he is, of what Billy is. And you kept it quiet. You buried his dark secret like it was your own, protected him. This is how he repays you?
This is his answer after years of you loving him. How could he?
You stand in the middle of your living room, bat hanging limp by your side. The aching pain of grief and fear stills your body. The fight wanes inside you, debating whether or not prolonging this is worth it. The others all fought back, and they died bloody. Maybe if you just gave in, it would be quick, painless. Stu could at least grant you that.Â
Thereâs a brief flash of movement in the reflection of your patio door. Itâs slight, like a shifting shadow. Only one thing gives him away, the white, howling mask. Instinct overrides sensitivities, you whip around, bat flying. Thereâs a low groan as it smashes over his head.Â
Reaching up, he snatches it in his hand, using it to jerk you forward. Youâre quick to let it go. Instead, you aim for his throat. Hands outstretched as you reach up, gripping his neck as tight as you can. Thereâs shock in his stuttered breaths, like he hadnât thought you would fight back. You were beginning to doubt yourself, too.Â
Turns out youâre too stubborn to die.Â
The bat clacks loudly against the wood as he stumbles back into your motherâs glass coffee table. His legs kick up, tripping you and sending you stumbling into his chest. The both of you go plummeting backward, glass shattering around him and the wood crumpling like a tower of cards.Â
Jagged shards cut at your arms and bare legs, but you know he takes the brunt of it. Your grip on his throat is unrelenting, you pick his head up and slam it against the wood. He lets out a dazed groan, and you would laugh were you not trying to stop your best friend from killing you. He seems ridiculous, wearing this stupid cheap mask and moaning like a cartoon character with a bump on their head.Â
He bucks under you, hips pressing up against yours as he flips you both over. Pain rips through your back as the glass digs into your skin. Letting out a low whine, your hands slack on him for just a moment. Itâs still long enough for him to get the upper hand.Â
He straddles your waist, pinning you below him with his weight as he kneels on your swinging arms. Youâre utterly paralyzed, with no other choice but to stare up at him as tears stream, hot and slick, down your cheeks.Â
Stu rips his mask off, eyes wild as he grins down at you. âDamn, sweetheart,â he laughs, and it only makes you fight harder against him. Screaming through your teeth as you try to buck him off of you. âDidnât know you had it in you.â
He tosses the mask to the side and motions to the knife in his hand, âSurprise,â he practically sings the word, watching for your reaction. You bite your tongue, hiccuping on a sob as you stare up at him through blurry eyes. âRight,â he concedes, tilting his head, âyou already knew.â
You can feel the blood pooling beneath you, the glass digging further into your shredded skin. It only makes this all the more unbearable. âStop,â you beg, voice breaking as you struggle to hold back the tears. âI didnât tell,â you shout at him. âWhy are you doing this?â The tears break around the rage slipping through your voice as you glare up at him.Â
âWhat are you talking about?â He snaps, his amusement waning the harder you cry.Â
âBilly!â you shout the name out, just barely managing to wiggle one wrist free. He snatches it up instantly, the knife falling beside you as he leans over you, digging your hand into the glass above your head. âHe said you wanted to see my insides,â thereâs no controlling the sobs now. You donât want to die. You donât want Stu to be the one to kill you. Somehow, though, you think this would have hurt worse if it was Billy holding the knife.Â
Stuâs face falls before quickly twisting up into something angry. He backs off, easing his weight just enough for the press of glass to sting a little less. âNo,â he utters, shaking his head. âNo, thatâs not the plan.âÂ
Stu looks nearly manic as he stares down at you. Something unfurls inside you, years of friendship have you reaching up with your free hand. You donât know what your plan is until heâs leaning into your touch, eyes never leaving yours.Â
His hand grips your waist, easing you into a sitting position. You want to curl up into a ball and go hide in a dark corner. You want to shove glass down his throat and run. The knife looks particularly appealing beside you.Â
But you do none of that. You let him tug you closer, hand tightening to the point of pain around your waist, but you donât think he realizes, and youâre too afraid to point it out. âYouâre our final girl, baby,â he practically fucking giggles, and you struggle not to flinch from the sound. âHe was just fucking with you.â
âYeah?â You snap, fingers trailing toward his hair and yanking until his face crinkles with pain. âThen what the fuck,â venom coats your tongue, voice low and deadly, âare you doing right now?â
He smiles, leaning into the way you rip at his hair. âScrewing around,â he laughs, and he sounds like a goddamn idiot. Scoffing, you release him, jerking out of his grip and ignoring the way it pulls at the wounds on your back.Â
âGod,â you crumple into yourself, shoulders hunching forward as you hide your face behind your hands. âI canât believe I ever thought you could love me. Youâre sick, Stu,â you snap, holding back more tears.Â
Blood and glass surround you both, the shattered fragments of your friendship. Stu looks more hurt than when you strangled him. He reaches for you, and you jump back, shaking your head. âI was never going to kill you,â he swears. But what does the promise of a murderer mean to you?
âI donât believe you,â voice a whisper, the tears spill over once more. He looks between you and the knife like he canât decide what to do. You wait for it, for the snap before he just plunges the knife into your gut. Twisting it and dragging your death on.Â
Instead, he lunges forward, wrapping his arms around yours and forcing you into his embrace. âStop,â you claw weakly at his shoulders, snagging your nails in the cheap cloak. You shake your head, but the fight is over before it even begins. Your arms curl around his neck, and you sink into his familiar embrace.Â
His gloved hand skates over the wounds on your back, and you whine, arching away from his touch. He offers a whispered apology, but you donât believe it. âBillyâs not going to touch you,â he swears. âIâm never going to hurt you.â
âYou already have.â
His arms only tighten around you, pulling you into his lap as you cry. You might not believe him, but he knows the truth of it. Youâre his best friend. The only person besides Billy heâs ever actually cared about.Â
You are his perfect final girl, and heâs never going to let you go.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Scream, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
Poly!Ghostface x fem!reader
a/n: Iâve wanted to write for Scream for forever and have never gotten around to it. Well, itâs slasher season baby! I finally have my reason. (When I tell you that this movie was my sexual awakening as a child, I mean it. Thatâs not necessarily good, but itâs true. )
Summary: Visiting a Halloween carnival with your two best friends doesnât seem that bad until you reach the haunted house. Youâve never been able to explain your fear of demons to anyone before, you have no idea where it comes from. But you do know, going into a hell themed house with teenagers screaming shitty Latin at you is one of your worst nightmares. You think everythingâs okay until, suddenly, your nights are filled with visits from a strange shadowy entity and you donât recognize the look in Stuâs eyes anymore. (Part of my Halloween Palooza)
âHey! Demons are a perfectly rational thing to be afraid of.â
Billy scoffs and rolls his eyes, nudging you further toward the haunted house. âAlright, alright, would you calm down and just move it.â You stare into the gaping jaw of the devil that serves as the entrance to the house. You know this is all just a way for people to make a quick buck.Â
Thereâs not going to be anything in there except teenage actors and shitty SFX makeup. But that doesnât make the looming doorway any less menacing. It doesnât make your heart stop racing or your breathing any easier.Â
Billy frowns as some people shove past you all, tired of waiting for you to move inside. They cut the line and you canât help but be grateful. Your nails dig into your palms until you feel the warmth of blood and have to swallow down bile.Â
Stu and Billy both lean towards you, varying looks of confusion on their faces. âHoly shit,â a grin breaks out on Stuâs face and he smiles widely at you. âYouâre terrified, arenât you?â He pokes you like you might be a statue, unmoving and solemn.Â
You stumble back and are effectively broken out of your terrified stupor. You swat at Stuâs wandering hands and glare at him. âShut the fuck up,â you snap. But in your anxious state, it all comes out as one jumbled mess.Â
Billy lets out a disappointed sigh and gives you a funny look. âAlright, letâs just go. Youâre not going in and itâs stupid to just stand out here all night.â Stu opens his mouth to argue but Billy shoots him a sharp look. You hate how sensitive they think you are. You can handle one stupid fucking haunted house. Youâre not completely useless.Â
Still, you practically gulp as the Devilâs eyes bore into yours. You feel like your soul is being sucked out through your feet, leaving you startlingly cold. âI,â you clear your throat, waiting until it feels strong enough to speak. âI can do this,â you grit out, sounding like youâre trying to convince yourself more than them.Â
Stuf lets out a brief chuckle and Billy throws his elbow into his gut. Stu doubles over dramatically and you canât help but laugh a little. Billy gives you a raised brow and you nod your head. âI just need a little nudge,â you mutter, glancing back at the house.Â
Stu grins and creeps behind you. âI got you babes,â he tells you in a ridiculous voice. You barely have a second to process whatâs happening before heâs lifting you up and practically tossing you inside. Immediately, thereâs a fake chainsaw in your face and a screaming Bubba Sawyer. You stumble back with a gasp, falling into Stuâs open arms.Â
âHowâs that for a nudge?â Billy mutters as he brushes past you. You grab onto the back of his shirt and follow behind him. He glances over his shoulder at you with a knowing smirk and continues forward. None of the scares get him, but they get you.Â
The actors catch onto that. They also catch onto how fake and dramatic Stu is. Half of them target you for a good scream and the other half avoid you because of how obnoxious heâs being. You can already tell how bored BIlly is. Thereâs not enough gore in here for him.Â
He needs more blood splatter and fresh corpses, while youâre pleasantly surprised by the contents of the house. Youâd really been dreading the demonic themes, but it seems like thatâs not a huge factor. So far itâs just a few overzealous teens and some spiders on a string.Â
Sure, itâs still scaring the bejeezus out of you. But thereâs a difference between a quick scream and a deeply rooted phobia.Â
You donât know when this supernatural fear of yours began. Maybe your parents let you traumatize yourself with the crucifix scene in The Exorcist too young. But you know itâs been with you nearly your entire life.Â
You think youâre safe, that you can just relax and let yourself have fun, then you reach the final door. The lights are flickering so hard you think you might have a seizure, but you can see enough to know whatâs before you. A red, rotted door, with three upside-down nines barely hanging onto it.Â
âOh god,â you whisper and you think the boys canât hear you. But then you feel Stuâs hands suddenly clamping around your neck and you leap into Billy with a shrill scream. Billy flinches away from the noise, turning to glare at you.Â
Stu doubles over, laughing his ass off at your expense and grinning wildly at you. âJesus, weâre not even in there yet. What is wrong with you?â He says it like a joke but you can hear the truth of it lingering. It stings, the slight cruelty in his tone.Â
Thereâs nothing wrong with being afraid of something. Fear is healthy. The absence of fear is idiocy. You shove past Billy and turn to Stu with a mean glare. âIâm going to go in here and when I get out, Iâm fucking leaving you.â
You shove the door open and take a step inside. You put on a brave face for about five seconds before you turn to see if theyâll follow you. You see just a glimpse of them before the door creaks closed. Billy is leaning against the wall, watching you with a half-amused expression. But Stu looks odd.Â
That doesnât even seem like the right word. His face is completely devoid of any emotion. He looks expressionless and youâve never seen Stu like that before. Whether itâs for good reason or not, heâs always making a face. Right now, you donât even recognize him. Were it not for the outfit he was wearing you would think someone else had snuck up behind Billy.Â
The door is closed before you can call out to him and you find yourself plunged in complete darkness. Thereâs no noise for a long few moments. You canât tell which way is the door and which is the exit.Â
At first, you worry you went in the wrong direction and entered an empty part of the house. A sudden cackle breaks through the air, and you leap forward, stumbling into the wall. You can already feel your heart beginning to race. Even though you can hear the static of a speaker and you know, deep down, that it's fake, youâre frozen in fear.Â
Thereâs a brief flash of light, just enough for you to see torn wallpaper and upside-down crosses. And something standing in the corner. âAll alone?â A voice rasps and you whimper, pressing yourself up against the wall. You canât tell if your eyes are open or closed, itâs too dark to know. You hope theyâre closed. Whateverâs about to happen is going to traumatize you, you just know it.Â
A door creaks behind you just as the lights begin flickering on and off. Through brief flashes of illumination, you see something running towards you. Theyâre screaming Latin at you, water hits your face and you begin screaming uncontrollably. Footsteps pound towards you, egging on the racing beat of your heart.Â
A jarring grip lands on your shoulder and you swing out wildly. Your fist connects with something hard and you hiss in pain. Thereâs a brief pause where the only thing you can hear is your panting.Â
âOw!â Someone snaps, an irritated raspy voice. The lights flick on and you squint against the sudden glare, blinking rapidly to try and lessen the burn on your eyes.Â
Billy and Stu stand on either side of you, astonished looks on both of their faces. A teenage boy in a shitty priest costume and red face paint stands before you. Heâs rubbing his eye and cussing at you. âYou fucking punched me!â
âYou ran at me!â You yell back immediately, glaring at the little asshole. âI donât think youâre supposed to touch me.â
He glares at you through one eye and points to Stu and Billy. âI didnât!â He shouts and you flinch back, grimacing. âYour fucking friend did.â You clench your eyes shut, taking in a deep breath. Both you and Billy turn slowly towards Stu. His face is as red as the kidâs as he struggles to contain his laughter.Â
âUnbelievable!â You snap at him, slapping his shoulder roughly. He jolts, narrowing his eyes down at you.Â
âHey!â He protests, âI was joking around. Youâre the one that punched him.â He points the blame to you and you canât argue. You did, technically, punch him. But itâs Stuâs fault. If he hadnât snuck up on you, you would have just kept on screaming. You never would have touched the kid.Â
In awkward silence, you walk the boy out of the haunted house and buy him a cold drink to press against his steadily swelling eye. You can see purple shining through the fading paint and grimace. He throws himself down on a wooden picnic table and sighs forlornly.Â
âThanks a lot, lady,â he mutters bitterly. Stuâs lips twitch as he watches the kid tug at his costume. You glare up at him and shove him away. He stumbles behind the table shooting you a sharp glare. Youâre taken aback by the look.Â
Itâs not like youâve never gotten a little pushy with him before. His love language was manhandling. But the look on his face is unrecognizable. Youâd thought youâd imagined it earlier, how off he had seemed. But itâs not fake now. Youâre looking it clearly in the eye and you canât deny the truth of it.Â
âIâm gonna sue,â the kid grumbles and youâre snapped out of your stare-off. You try and shake off the chilling feeling of unfamiliarity but itâs nearly impossible. Youâre still wound up from the haunted house, youâre sure youâre just imagining things.
Billy shoves his shoulder and the kid falls back onto the table. âYouâre not suing.â
He puffs his chest up and glares at Billy, âI could.â
Billy places his hand on the table, leaning in on the kidâs space until heâs flinching back. You avert your eyes, uncomfortable with the sudden display of dominance. Yet, you donât stop him from bullying the kid out of a lawsuit. âYou wonât,â Billy tells him, a clear threat.Â
The kid gives a shaky nod of his head, but Billy still doesnât let up. Thereâs a slight curl of malice to his lips, you glance over to Stu for support. His attention is rapt upon Billy, something like hunger in his eyes. You feel like youâre watching two lions corner a gazelle, you can practically see the boyâs hands trembling from fear. Â
âAlright,â you clear your throat and tug Billy back by the shirt. He resists you at first and you know he only backs off because he wants to. Itâs not for you. You look at the boy and give him a weak smile, âI really am sorry,â you can hear Stu laughing behind him and roll your eyes. The kid takes the drink off his eye and glares at you.Â
âYeah, whatever lady. Why donât you take a valium or something and chill the hell out?â He gets off the bench and brushes past you, shaking his head. You glance down at your fist and hiss at the pain shooting along your fingers. The skin of your knuckles is split and aching from hitting him.Â
Billy huffs out a laugh and takes your hand in his. âReally got him, didnât you?â
âI didnât mean to,â you argue petulantly.Â
Stu finally collects himself and rejoins you both, throwing his gangly body on the wooden picnic table. âWhy donât you tell his face that?â He practically snorts, looking down at your hand and then laughing all over again. Itâs really not that funny. Even Billy looks confused by his boisterous nature.Â
Heâs a dick, but this is a lot. You and Billy exchange a confused glance before looking back at Stu. But heâs silent now, already staring back at you both. Again, chills go up and down your arms at the empty look in his eyes. His lips are smiling, but his eyes are devoid of anything.Â
âMaybe we should just go home.â You suggest, trying to keep the suspicion out of your tone. âCarnivalâs a bust,â Billy exchanges one last look with you before nodding.Â
âWe still doing movies at Stuâs?â You desperately want to say no. Right now, all you want is to get as far away from him as possible. Earlier, with them and the kid, thatâs normal. Theyâve always had a bit of a mean streak when it comes to people weaker than them.Â
The way his eyes are boring into you right now is anything but normal. Youâve never felt quite so uncomfortable near him, but you canât ignore the feeling. Every primal instinct of survival is screaming at you to run, but you canât. You canât say no. All you do is nod, tongue glued to the roof of your mouth. Stuâs eyes brighten slightly at your words, but itâs still nothing compared to how it should be.Â
You get ahead of Billy, not wanting to walk next to Stu. All you need is a good nightâs sleep and youâll be over this whole thing. Still, you canât shake the feeling of too many eyes lingering on you as you make the trek to the car. The wet straw beneath your feet swallows the sounds of your steps and you try not to be discomforted by the quiet. Itâs a carnival, where did all the people go?
The black-and-white static of the TV is the only thing to illuminate the room. It shines upon your face, makes it so you can only see in that square of light. You assume Billy is on the ground, passed out. And Stu is probably curled up in the overstuffed armchair.Â
Yet, you canât look. As much as you try to crane your neck, try and find some comfort in their presence, you canât move. Your body is pinned down by a weight you canât see, only feel. This isnât sleep paralysis. Itâs like being held down by someone stronger and bigger than you.Â
You have no control over your body. You have no control over anything. Your breathing kicks up, coming in short panicked bursts. Your eyes roll around wildly, trying to find something, anything, to focus on.Â
You find yourself depressingly devoid of any distractions. Until a shadow creeps along the ceiling. At first, you think itâs just your eyes playing tricks on you. Like when you stare at one spot in the dark for too long and start to see impossible shapes.Â
But this is different. No matter how many times you blink or look away, it keeps moving. You whimper as it crawls over you. It dangles from the ceiling. You see nothing, only feel its eyes on you. There is no clear shape lurking within it, just malevolent malice.Â
It drops down behind the arm of the couch and you open your mouth to scream, hoping to wake one of the boys. Nothing comes out but a strangled gasp of air. You struggle for noise but the more you try, the harder you find it to bring air in.Â
Your eyes swim as you go lightheaded. You almost miss the tendrils creeping over the fabric of the couch. You almost donât see it covering your feet. You wish you had missed it. You wish you just closed your eyes and never opened them again. But itâs like something is keeping those pried open too.Â
You canât feel your legs. Thatâs the weight. Itâs not someone holding you down. Your body is completely limp. Itâs as though your bones were replaced with metal, youâre sinking so far into the cushions theyâre rising around you. Even your fingers are too heavy to twitch.Â
You begin to feel it in your head, a sudden sinking feeling as it tips further and further back. Soon, you can only watch the shadow through your peripheral. Cold terror washes over you and fills your veins with something ill.Â
It covers your legs like a veil, slithering on them. Your thighs shoot apart and the blanket goes flying across the room. You can only let out a choked whimper as it dives between your parted limbs.Â
You shoot up with a gasp, sunlight peers through Stuâs living room windows, filling the room with much-needed warmth. You glance down, fisting the blanket and tugging it up to your chest in relief. Your heart is still racing and thereâs sweat caked along your neck. But you can move your body freely again. It must have just been an awful nightmare.Â
You glance to the side and nearly scream. Stu lounges in the armchair, Billyâs still asleep on the ground. Stu stares right at you, empty eyes, wide smile. âGood dream?â he inquires, but the tone of his voice tells you he already knows the answer.Â
You swallow, fighting the sandpaper feeling of your throat and shaking your head. âNo,â you croak, afraid to speak much louder than a whisper.Â
His smile widens and you feel your head feeling heavy again. âI love a good nightmare,â he admits, like itâs an awful secret. He leans back in the chair and turns towards the TV, mindlessly flicking through the channels.Â
With his gaze off you, you glance down and pull the waistband of your shorts down. You swallow down your tears and bile. Your underwear, like you feared, is gone. You glance towards Stu and narrow your eyes at the back of his head. You have an idea who took them.
Your parents are out of town for the week. Normally that means Billy and Stu infesting your home like pests. Theyâre being oddly evasive when you call, though. Not that youâre complaining. You havenât been interested in being around Stu since the carnival.Â
He makes you feel unsafe. As much of a dick as he could be, never, have you ever feared him before. But you do now. Youâre terrified of him. Even thinking about him makes you want to get up and check your closets for unwanted intruders.Â
However, as much as his absence is a relief, it brings with it its own problems. Nothing with Stu can ever be easy, can it?Â
You keep having the same nightmare. Except each night it gets closer and closer. You feel more of it than you ever want to. Theyâre turning into uncomfortably sexual dreams. You wake up wet and without any underwear. You canât blame Stu for that when heâs not even in your house, though. Which leaves you fucking petrified when you wake up.Â
Because you know, deep down, you know someone wasnât in your house. Something was, though. A heavy presence lingers over you during the day and makes you terrified to walk around the open spaces of your home. Youâd lock yourself in your room all week if you could, but even that doesnât feel safe.Â
The door slams behind you and you jolt forward with a scream. You stare at your backdoor with a horrified expression, glaring at it like it might start talking and reveal its secrets. Your house is old, thereâs nothing odd about doors occasionally closing on your own.Â
Except, that hadnât been open. Youâve kept it firmly locked all week, terrified of a possible home invasion. You need to stop watching scary movies on your own.Â
You pull your knees into your chest, staring at your door until youâre satisfied itâs not going to slam shut again. Slowly, you turn back towards your TV and keep watching the only good sitcom you could find at this time of night.Â
The second you let yourself get comfortable, however, you hear your bedroom door upstairs slam shut, followed quickly by rushing footsteps. Your eyes widen in terror and you mute your TV, glaring up at the ceiling and hoping you just imagined it.Â
Footsteps behind you, running across the linoleum. You whip around, nearly shrieking when you spot something black darting into your pantry closet. You scramble for the phone beside you. You slam 911 into the keypad and press it against your ear, keeping your eyes riveted on the pantry closet.Â
Thereâs a steady beep on the other end. The lineâs dead. Someone cut your phone line. Thatâs okay. You can work with that. You can beat something real, but youâve got no hope against something otherworldly.Â
You stand slowly, unmuting the TV so the laugh track will cover your movements better. You creep towards your linen closet, reaching for the bat your dad keeps in there for this very reason. Heâs got different weapons placed all over the house and you blame him for some of your paranoia. But right now, youâre eternally grateful for the protection itâs providing you.Â
You slip into the kitchen, sliding quietly across the tiles on your socks. You position yourself behind the pantry door, your hand shaking as you reach for the handle. Just as you rip it open, the lights go out.Â
You scream wildly, waving the bat around with as much force as you can, hoping to just hit something solid. Glass crashes against the floor and you feel the bat connecting with something. The lights flip back on and your motherâs vase is shattered along the ground. Thereâs no sign of the intruder and you think you might throw up when you hear more footsteps upstairs, two sets this time.Â
But then someone darts through the living room, another flash of black before theyâre gone. Three? How are you supposed to handle three?
Something titters behind you, bordering on a giggle, and you whip around, bat waving through the air recklessly. No one was there, no sign anyone was. And thereâs no possible way for you to have missed them running past you. Thereâs nowhere to go or hide.Â
You think of the shadow youâve seen in the closet and the lights flicker like theyâre agreeing with you. The thing thatâs been haunting your nightmares, itâs in the house with you. The lights flicker again and your stomach drops to the floor. Your heart is in your throat as you hear your voice chanted from upstairs. Â
Itâs like staring at the Devilâs eyes at the circus again. You feel like thereâs something being taken from you. You feel cold, empty, like youâre missing something you need. Somethingâs toying with you. Making you itâs twisted little plaything.Â
You can feel the tears clawing their way up your throat. The call of your voice gets louder and louder until it feels like it's being screamed straight into your ears. You want to run, want to fight, want to do anything but stand here and you canât.Â
You canât move. Itâs just like your dreams. Your bones are metal and you are stuck. Thereâs a rough shove to your back, though you donât feel physical hands on you. And then someoneâs moving you, your legs are puppeteered as youâre directed up the stairs.Â
You stub your toes on every step, crawling up them like a child learning to use them for the first time. Every time you slow down or try and stop, youâre dragged forward again. Your bedroom door creaks open and warmth carves its way down your cheeks.Â
You stumble inside, the bat thudding to the floor as your hand goes limp around the handle. You want to call out to the entity, but your jaw is wired shut. You stand in the middle of your room, sobbing and terrified and completely alone.Â
Your closet door slowly creaks open and you brace yourself for the worst. Billy comes flying out, shouting nonsense at you as you scream until your throat feels bloody. Stu follows behind him, ripping off his stupid mask and giving you a wide-eyed look.Â
You crumple to the floor, covering your head and crying as you come down from the fear that you are being haunted. Stu kneels before you, hands gentle as they take your arms away from your head.Â
He looks like Stu now. He looks like the boy you grew up with. His eyes are full of worry as he pushes wet strands of hair off your cheeks. âHey, hey, alright,â he tugs you into his chest and you throw your arms around him wildly. You cling tightly to him, taking in heaving breaths and trying to find some comfort from his touch.Â
âYou fucking dicks,â you sob into his sweater. âI thought I was going to die.â
Billy scoffs as he stares awkwardly behind him. âYeah,â he mutters bluntly, âI can tell.â He watches you cry for a little while longer before he gets irritated. âHey, this was supposed to be fun. Would you lighten up?â
You suck in a deep breath, astonishment at what he just said temporarily stopping the tears of terror. You rip yourself away from Stu, ignoring the way his hands linger. âExcuse me?â You demand, glaring up at Billy.
He shrugs, âIt was just a prank, chill out.â
You scoff, taking in a sharp breath and nodding your head. âRight, no, youâre right. Itâs not like my friends used my biggest fucking fear against me!â You shout, shoving him backward. He stumbles into the corner of your desk and you glare at him and Stu.Â
âYouâre horrible fucking friends, you know that.â You storm out of your room and pause at the top of the stairs. They linger in your doorway. Stu looks like a kicked dog and Billy looks like heâs about to blow the hell up.Â
âI donât even know how you guys pulled all that shit off, but fuck you.â You give them both an astonished glare before shaking your head and going back down the stairs. âI hate you,â you scream, your voice shrill and full of uncontrollable rage.Â
Billy almost follows after you, probably to give you a shit apology and then let everything smooth over naturally. But he stops, foot hovering over the top of the stairs. He glances back at Stu and frowns, âWhat the hell did you do?â Stu gives him a confused look and Billy glares. âShe wasnât supposed to be terrified for her life, fuckwad. What the hell did you do to her?â
Stu shrugs and gives him a too-wide grin and for the first time, Billy finds himself disturbed by his friend. âMagicianâs secret man, cannot, will not tell.â He zips his mouth shut and tosses the key, winking at Billy. Billy gives him a disgusted scoff and follows after you. They can hear you ranting in the kitchen, slamming your drawers shut, and shouting vile insults at them.Â
Stu watches Billy go down the stairs, his smile slowly fading from his face. Something dark passes over Stuâs face, something wicked, something unnatural. Perhaps it was all just a trick.Â
Or maybe that kidâs Latin wasnât so fake after all.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Scream, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
Poly!Ghostface x fem!reader
a/n: Iâve wanted to write for Scream for forever and have never gotten around to it. Well, itâs slasher season baby! I finally have my reason. (When I tell you that this movie was my sexual awakening as a child, I mean it. Thatâs not necessarily good, but itâs true. )
Summary: Visiting a Halloween carnival with your two best friends doesnât seem that bad until you reach the haunted house. Youâve never been able to explain your fear of demons to anyone before, you have no idea where it comes from. But you do know, going into a hell themed house with teenagers screaming shitty Latin at you is one of your worst nightmares. You think everythingâs okay until, suddenly, your nights are filled with visits from a strange shadowy entity and you donât recognize the look in Stuâs eyes anymore. (Part of my Halloween Palooza)
âHey! Demons are a perfectly rational thing to be afraid of.â
Billy scoffs and rolls his eyes, nudging you further toward the haunted house. âAlright, alright, would you calm down and just move it.â You stare into the gaping jaw of the devil that serves as the entrance to the house. You know this is all just a way for people to make a quick buck.Â
Thereâs not going to be anything in there except teenage actors and shitty SFX makeup. But that doesnât make the looming doorway any less menacing. It doesnât make your heart stop racing or your breathing any easier.Â
Billy frowns as some people shove past you all, tired of waiting for you to move inside. They cut the line and you canât help but be grateful. Your nails dig into your palms until you feel the warmth of blood and have to swallow down bile.Â
Stu and Billy both lean towards you, varying looks of confusion on their faces. âHoly shit,â a grin breaks out on Stuâs face and he smiles widely at you. âYouâre terrified, arenât you?â He pokes you like you might be a statue, unmoving and solemn.Â
You stumble back and are effectively broken out of your terrified stupor. You swat at Stuâs wandering hands and glare at him. âShut the fuck up,â you snap. But in your anxious state, it all comes out as one jumbled mess.Â
Billy lets out a disappointed sigh and gives you a funny look. âAlright, letâs just go. Youâre not going in and itâs stupid to just stand out here all night.â Stu opens his mouth to argue but Billy shoots him a sharp look. You hate how sensitive they think you are. You can handle one stupid fucking haunted house. Youâre not completely useless.Â
Still, you practically gulp as the Devilâs eyes bore into yours. You feel like your soul is being sucked out through your feet, leaving you startlingly cold. âI,â you clear your throat, waiting until it feels strong enough to speak. âI can do this,â you grit out, sounding like youâre trying to convince yourself more than them.Â
Stuf lets out a brief chuckle and Billy throws his elbow into his gut. Stu doubles over dramatically and you canât help but laugh a little. Billy gives you a raised brow and you nod your head. âI just need a little nudge,â you mutter, glancing back at the house.Â
Stu grins and creeps behind you. âI got you babes,â he tells you in a ridiculous voice. You barely have a second to process whatâs happening before heâs lifting you up and practically tossing you inside. Immediately, thereâs a fake chainsaw in your face and a screaming Bubba Sawyer. You stumble back with a gasp, falling into Stuâs open arms.Â
âHowâs that for a nudge?â Billy mutters as he brushes past you. You grab onto the back of his shirt and follow behind him. He glances over his shoulder at you with a knowing smirk and continues forward. None of the scares get him, but they get you.Â
The actors catch onto that. They also catch onto how fake and dramatic Stu is. Half of them target you for a good scream and the other half avoid you because of how obnoxious heâs being. You can already tell how bored BIlly is. Thereâs not enough gore in here for him.Â
He needs more blood splatter and fresh corpses, while youâre pleasantly surprised by the contents of the house. Youâd really been dreading the demonic themes, but it seems like thatâs not a huge factor. So far itâs just a few overzealous teens and some spiders on a string.Â
Sure, itâs still scaring the bejeezus out of you. But thereâs a difference between a quick scream and a deeply rooted phobia.Â
You donât know when this supernatural fear of yours began. Maybe your parents let you traumatize yourself with the crucifix scene in The Exorcist too young. But you know itâs been with you nearly your entire life.Â
You think youâre safe, that you can just relax and let yourself have fun, then you reach the final door. The lights are flickering so hard you think you might have a seizure, but you can see enough to know whatâs before you. A red, rotted door, with three upside-down nines barely hanging onto it.Â
âOh god,â you whisper and you think the boys canât hear you. But then you feel Stuâs hands suddenly clamping around your neck and you leap into Billy with a shrill scream. Billy flinches away from the noise, turning to glare at you.Â
Stu doubles over, laughing his ass off at your expense and grinning wildly at you. âJesus, weâre not even in there yet. What is wrong with you?â He says it like a joke but you can hear the truth of it lingering. It stings, the slight cruelty in his tone.Â
Thereâs nothing wrong with being afraid of something. Fear is healthy. The absence of fear is idiocy. You shove past Billy and turn to Stu with a mean glare. âIâm going to go in here and when I get out, Iâm fucking leaving you.â
You shove the door open and take a step inside. You put on a brave face for about five seconds before you turn to see if theyâll follow you. You see just a glimpse of them before the door creaks closed. Billy is leaning against the wall, watching you with a half-amused expression. But Stu looks odd.Â
That doesnât even seem like the right word. His face is completely devoid of any emotion. He looks expressionless and youâve never seen Stu like that before. Whether itâs for good reason or not, heâs always making a face. Right now, you donât even recognize him. Were it not for the outfit he was wearing you would think someone else had snuck up behind Billy.Â
The door is closed before you can call out to him and you find yourself plunged in complete darkness. Thereâs no noise for a long few moments. You canât tell which way is the door and which is the exit.Â
At first, you worry you went in the wrong direction and entered an empty part of the house. A sudden cackle breaks through the air, and you leap forward, stumbling into the wall. You can already feel your heart beginning to race. Even though you can hear the static of a speaker and you know, deep down, that it's fake, youâre frozen in fear.Â
Thereâs a brief flash of light, just enough for you to see torn wallpaper and upside-down crosses. And something standing in the corner. âAll alone?â A voice rasps and you whimper, pressing yourself up against the wall. You canât tell if your eyes are open or closed, itâs too dark to know. You hope theyâre closed. Whateverâs about to happen is going to traumatize you, you just know it.Â
A door creaks behind you just as the lights begin flickering on and off. Through brief flashes of illumination, you see something running towards you. Theyâre screaming Latin at you, water hits your face and you begin screaming uncontrollably. Footsteps pound towards you, egging on the racing beat of your heart.Â
A jarring grip lands on your shoulder and you swing out wildly. Your fist connects with something hard and you hiss in pain. Thereâs a brief pause where the only thing you can hear is your panting.Â
âOw!â Someone snaps, an irritated raspy voice. The lights flick on and you squint against the sudden glare, blinking rapidly to try and lessen the burn on your eyes.Â
Billy and Stu stand on either side of you, astonished looks on both of their faces. A teenage boy in a shitty priest costume and red face paint stands before you. Heâs rubbing his eye and cussing at you. âYou fucking punched me!â
âYou ran at me!â You yell back immediately, glaring at the little asshole. âI donât think youâre supposed to touch me.â
He glares at you through one eye and points to Stu and Billy. âI didnât!â He shouts and you flinch back, grimacing. âYour fucking friend did.â You clench your eyes shut, taking in a deep breath. Both you and Billy turn slowly towards Stu. His face is as red as the kidâs as he struggles to contain his laughter.Â
âUnbelievable!â You snap at him, slapping his shoulder roughly. He jolts, narrowing his eyes down at you.Â
âHey!â He protests, âI was joking around. Youâre the one that punched him.â He points the blame to you and you canât argue. You did, technically, punch him. But itâs Stuâs fault. If he hadnât snuck up on you, you would have just kept on screaming. You never would have touched the kid.Â
In awkward silence, you walk the boy out of the haunted house and buy him a cold drink to press against his steadily swelling eye. You can see purple shining through the fading paint and grimace. He throws himself down on a wooden picnic table and sighs forlornly.Â
âThanks a lot, lady,â he mutters bitterly. Stuâs lips twitch as he watches the kid tug at his costume. You glare up at him and shove him away. He stumbles behind the table shooting you a sharp glare. Youâre taken aback by the look.Â
Itâs not like youâve never gotten a little pushy with him before. His love language was manhandling. But the look on his face is unrecognizable. Youâd thought youâd imagined it earlier, how off he had seemed. But itâs not fake now. Youâre looking it clearly in the eye and you canât deny the truth of it.Â
âIâm gonna sue,â the kid grumbles and youâre snapped out of your stare-off. You try and shake off the chilling feeling of unfamiliarity but itâs nearly impossible. Youâre still wound up from the haunted house, youâre sure youâre just imagining things.
Billy shoves his shoulder and the kid falls back onto the table. âYouâre not suing.â
He puffs his chest up and glares at Billy, âI could.â
Billy places his hand on the table, leaning in on the kidâs space until heâs flinching back. You avert your eyes, uncomfortable with the sudden display of dominance. Yet, you donât stop him from bullying the kid out of a lawsuit. âYou wonât,â Billy tells him, a clear threat.Â
The kid gives a shaky nod of his head, but Billy still doesnât let up. Thereâs a slight curl of malice to his lips, you glance over to Stu for support. His attention is rapt upon Billy, something like hunger in his eyes. You feel like youâre watching two lions corner a gazelle, you can practically see the boyâs hands trembling from fear. Â
âAlright,â you clear your throat and tug Billy back by the shirt. He resists you at first and you know he only backs off because he wants to. Itâs not for you. You look at the boy and give him a weak smile, âI really am sorry,â you can hear Stu laughing behind him and roll your eyes. The kid takes the drink off his eye and glares at you.Â
âYeah, whatever lady. Why donât you take a valium or something and chill the hell out?â He gets off the bench and brushes past you, shaking his head. You glance down at your fist and hiss at the pain shooting along your fingers. The skin of your knuckles is split and aching from hitting him.Â
Billy huffs out a laugh and takes your hand in his. âReally got him, didnât you?â
âI didnât mean to,â you argue petulantly.Â
Stu finally collects himself and rejoins you both, throwing his gangly body on the wooden picnic table. âWhy donât you tell his face that?â He practically snorts, looking down at your hand and then laughing all over again. Itâs really not that funny. Even Billy looks confused by his boisterous nature.Â
Heâs a dick, but this is a lot. You and Billy exchange a confused glance before looking back at Stu. But heâs silent now, already staring back at you both. Again, chills go up and down your arms at the empty look in his eyes. His lips are smiling, but his eyes are devoid of anything.Â
âMaybe we should just go home.â You suggest, trying to keep the suspicion out of your tone. âCarnivalâs a bust,â Billy exchanges one last look with you before nodding.Â
âWe still doing movies at Stuâs?â You desperately want to say no. Right now, all you want is to get as far away from him as possible. Earlier, with them and the kid, thatâs normal. Theyâve always had a bit of a mean streak when it comes to people weaker than them.Â
The way his eyes are boring into you right now is anything but normal. Youâve never felt quite so uncomfortable near him, but you canât ignore the feeling. Every primal instinct of survival is screaming at you to run, but you canât. You canât say no. All you do is nod, tongue glued to the roof of your mouth. Stuâs eyes brighten slightly at your words, but itâs still nothing compared to how it should be.Â
You get ahead of Billy, not wanting to walk next to Stu. All you need is a good nightâs sleep and youâll be over this whole thing. Still, you canât shake the feeling of too many eyes lingering on you as you make the trek to the car. The wet straw beneath your feet swallows the sounds of your steps and you try not to be discomforted by the quiet. Itâs a carnival, where did all the people go?
The black-and-white static of the TV is the only thing to illuminate the room. It shines upon your face, makes it so you can only see in that square of light. You assume Billy is on the ground, passed out. And Stu is probably curled up in the overstuffed armchair.Â
Yet, you canât look. As much as you try to crane your neck, try and find some comfort in their presence, you canât move. Your body is pinned down by a weight you canât see, only feel. This isnât sleep paralysis. Itâs like being held down by someone stronger and bigger than you.Â
You have no control over your body. You have no control over anything. Your breathing kicks up, coming in short panicked bursts. Your eyes roll around wildly, trying to find something, anything, to focus on.Â
You find yourself depressingly devoid of any distractions. Until a shadow creeps along the ceiling. At first, you think itâs just your eyes playing tricks on you. Like when you stare at one spot in the dark for too long and start to see impossible shapes.Â
But this is different. No matter how many times you blink or look away, it keeps moving. You whimper as it crawls over you. It dangles from the ceiling. You see nothing, only feel its eyes on you. There is no clear shape lurking within it, just malevolent malice.Â
It drops down behind the arm of the couch and you open your mouth to scream, hoping to wake one of the boys. Nothing comes out but a strangled gasp of air. You struggle for noise but the more you try, the harder you find it to bring air in.Â
Your eyes swim as you go lightheaded. You almost miss the tendrils creeping over the fabric of the couch. You almost donât see it covering your feet. You wish you had missed it. You wish you just closed your eyes and never opened them again. But itâs like something is keeping those pried open too.Â
You canât feel your legs. Thatâs the weight. Itâs not someone holding you down. Your body is completely limp. Itâs as though your bones were replaced with metal, youâre sinking so far into the cushions theyâre rising around you. Even your fingers are too heavy to twitch.Â
You begin to feel it in your head, a sudden sinking feeling as it tips further and further back. Soon, you can only watch the shadow through your peripheral. Cold terror washes over you and fills your veins with something ill.Â
It covers your legs like a veil, slithering on them. Your thighs shoot apart and the blanket goes flying across the room. You can only let out a choked whimper as it dives between your parted limbs.Â
You shoot up with a gasp, sunlight peers through Stuâs living room windows, filling the room with much-needed warmth. You glance down, fisting the blanket and tugging it up to your chest in relief. Your heart is still racing and thereâs sweat caked along your neck. But you can move your body freely again. It must have just been an awful nightmare.Â
You glance to the side and nearly scream. Stu lounges in the armchair, Billyâs still asleep on the ground. Stu stares right at you, empty eyes, wide smile. âGood dream?â he inquires, but the tone of his voice tells you he already knows the answer.Â
You swallow, fighting the sandpaper feeling of your throat and shaking your head. âNo,â you croak, afraid to speak much louder than a whisper.Â
His smile widens and you feel your head feeling heavy again. âI love a good nightmare,â he admits, like itâs an awful secret. He leans back in the chair and turns towards the TV, mindlessly flicking through the channels.Â
With his gaze off you, you glance down and pull the waistband of your shorts down. You swallow down your tears and bile. Your underwear, like you feared, is gone. You glance towards Stu and narrow your eyes at the back of his head. You have an idea who took them.
Your parents are out of town for the week. Normally that means Billy and Stu infesting your home like pests. Theyâre being oddly evasive when you call, though. Not that youâre complaining. You havenât been interested in being around Stu since the carnival.Â
He makes you feel unsafe. As much of a dick as he could be, never, have you ever feared him before. But you do now. Youâre terrified of him. Even thinking about him makes you want to get up and check your closets for unwanted intruders.Â
However, as much as his absence is a relief, it brings with it its own problems. Nothing with Stu can ever be easy, can it?Â
You keep having the same nightmare. Except each night it gets closer and closer. You feel more of it than you ever want to. Theyâre turning into uncomfortably sexual dreams. You wake up wet and without any underwear. You canât blame Stu for that when heâs not even in your house, though. Which leaves you fucking petrified when you wake up.Â
Because you know, deep down, you know someone wasnât in your house. Something was, though. A heavy presence lingers over you during the day and makes you terrified to walk around the open spaces of your home. Youâd lock yourself in your room all week if you could, but even that doesnât feel safe.Â
The door slams behind you and you jolt forward with a scream. You stare at your backdoor with a horrified expression, glaring at it like it might start talking and reveal its secrets. Your house is old, thereâs nothing odd about doors occasionally closing on your own.Â
Except, that hadnât been open. Youâve kept it firmly locked all week, terrified of a possible home invasion. You need to stop watching scary movies on your own.Â
You pull your knees into your chest, staring at your door until youâre satisfied itâs not going to slam shut again. Slowly, you turn back towards your TV and keep watching the only good sitcom you could find at this time of night.Â
The second you let yourself get comfortable, however, you hear your bedroom door upstairs slam shut, followed quickly by rushing footsteps. Your eyes widen in terror and you mute your TV, glaring up at the ceiling and hoping you just imagined it.Â
Footsteps behind you, running across the linoleum. You whip around, nearly shrieking when you spot something black darting into your pantry closet. You scramble for the phone beside you. You slam 911 into the keypad and press it against your ear, keeping your eyes riveted on the pantry closet.Â
Thereâs a steady beep on the other end. The lineâs dead. Someone cut your phone line. Thatâs okay. You can work with that. You can beat something real, but youâve got no hope against something otherworldly.Â
You stand slowly, unmuting the TV so the laugh track will cover your movements better. You creep towards your linen closet, reaching for the bat your dad keeps in there for this very reason. Heâs got different weapons placed all over the house and you blame him for some of your paranoia. But right now, youâre eternally grateful for the protection itâs providing you.Â
You slip into the kitchen, sliding quietly across the tiles on your socks. You position yourself behind the pantry door, your hand shaking as you reach for the handle. Just as you rip it open, the lights go out.Â
You scream wildly, waving the bat around with as much force as you can, hoping to just hit something solid. Glass crashes against the floor and you feel the bat connecting with something. The lights flip back on and your motherâs vase is shattered along the ground. Thereâs no sign of the intruder and you think you might throw up when you hear more footsteps upstairs, two sets this time.Â
But then someone darts through the living room, another flash of black before theyâre gone. Three? How are you supposed to handle three?
Something titters behind you, bordering on a giggle, and you whip around, bat waving through the air recklessly. No one was there, no sign anyone was. And thereâs no possible way for you to have missed them running past you. Thereâs nowhere to go or hide.Â
You think of the shadow youâve seen in the closet and the lights flicker like theyâre agreeing with you. The thing thatâs been haunting your nightmares, itâs in the house with you. The lights flicker again and your stomach drops to the floor. Your heart is in your throat as you hear your voice chanted from upstairs. Â
Itâs like staring at the Devilâs eyes at the circus again. You feel like thereâs something being taken from you. You feel cold, empty, like youâre missing something you need. Somethingâs toying with you. Making you itâs twisted little plaything.Â
You can feel the tears clawing their way up your throat. The call of your voice gets louder and louder until it feels like it's being screamed straight into your ears. You want to run, want to fight, want to do anything but stand here and you canât.Â
You canât move. Itâs just like your dreams. Your bones are metal and you are stuck. Thereâs a rough shove to your back, though you donât feel physical hands on you. And then someoneâs moving you, your legs are puppeteered as youâre directed up the stairs.Â
You stub your toes on every step, crawling up them like a child learning to use them for the first time. Every time you slow down or try and stop, youâre dragged forward again. Your bedroom door creaks open and warmth carves its way down your cheeks.Â
You stumble inside, the bat thudding to the floor as your hand goes limp around the handle. You want to call out to the entity, but your jaw is wired shut. You stand in the middle of your room, sobbing and terrified and completely alone.Â
Your closet door slowly creaks open and you brace yourself for the worst. Billy comes flying out, shouting nonsense at you as you scream until your throat feels bloody. Stu follows behind him, ripping off his stupid mask and giving you a wide-eyed look.Â
You crumple to the floor, covering your head and crying as you come down from the fear that you are being haunted. Stu kneels before you, hands gentle as they take your arms away from your head.Â
He looks like Stu now. He looks like the boy you grew up with. His eyes are full of worry as he pushes wet strands of hair off your cheeks. âHey, hey, alright,â he tugs you into his chest and you throw your arms around him wildly. You cling tightly to him, taking in heaving breaths and trying to find some comfort from his touch.Â
âYou fucking dicks,â you sob into his sweater. âI thought I was going to die.â
Billy scoffs as he stares awkwardly behind him. âYeah,â he mutters bluntly, âI can tell.â He watches you cry for a little while longer before he gets irritated. âHey, this was supposed to be fun. Would you lighten up?â
You suck in a deep breath, astonishment at what he just said temporarily stopping the tears of terror. You rip yourself away from Stu, ignoring the way his hands linger. âExcuse me?â You demand, glaring up at Billy.
He shrugs, âIt was just a prank, chill out.â
You scoff, taking in a sharp breath and nodding your head. âRight, no, youâre right. Itâs not like my friends used my biggest fucking fear against me!â You shout, shoving him backward. He stumbles into the corner of your desk and you glare at him and Stu.Â
âYouâre horrible fucking friends, you know that.â You storm out of your room and pause at the top of the stairs. They linger in your doorway. Stu looks like a kicked dog and Billy looks like heâs about to blow the hell up.Â
âI donât even know how you guys pulled all that shit off, but fuck you.â You give them both an astonished glare before shaking your head and going back down the stairs. âI hate you,â you scream, your voice shrill and full of uncontrollable rage.Â
Billy almost follows after you, probably to give you a shit apology and then let everything smooth over naturally. But he stops, foot hovering over the top of the stairs. He glances back at Stu and frowns, âWhat the hell did you do?â Stu gives him a confused look and Billy glares. âShe wasnât supposed to be terrified for her life, fuckwad. What the hell did you do to her?â
Stu shrugs and gives him a too-wide grin and for the first time, Billy finds himself disturbed by his friend. âMagicianâs secret man, cannot, will not tell.â He zips his mouth shut and tosses the key, winking at Billy. Billy gives him a disgusted scoff and follows after you. They can hear you ranting in the kitchen, slamming your drawers shut, and shouting vile insults at them.Â
Stu watches Billy go down the stairs, his smile slowly fading from his face. Something dark passes over Stuâs face, something wicked, something unnatural. Perhaps it was all just a trick.Â
Or maybe that kidâs Latin wasnât so fake after all.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Scream, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
hello, I was wondering if you could do a female reader x Vincent Sinclair. Where the reader is very needy. Like she constantly just wants to be around him. They don't have to be talking just being around him is fine. If you don't write for house of wax that's fine. If you do this thank you. Have a good day!
Thank you for the request, I hope you like it. As Iâm posting this I realized I kind of made the reader gender neutral because I never actually used pronouns. đ¤ gn!reader
Youâre overwhelming, to say the least.
And thatâs being kind.Â
Vincent was his motherâs favorite, but even she had to cover his face. She might have favored him over Bo, but she didnât love him, not the way a mother should.Â
At least, thatâs what you told him.Â
Vincent was never sure if he should believe you or not. Bo had instilled in him that their mother was a saint. It was hard to lose that idealized image of her and replace it with the one you presented. But with the way you clung to him, hovered around him without a word, he started to wonder if maybe you had a point.Â
Growing up, he wasnât allowed to take the mask off. If he had to eat, his parentâs didnât watch. He didn't know if itâs because he was so grotesque to them or because they couldnât stand to see their failure. His mother was an artist, his father a doctor, yet somehow, they had created him. Formed him into this ugly and deformed creature.Â
He struggled to reconcile with the fact that, maybe, someone truly could love him. He struggled with coming to terms that someone as kind as you, could love him. Most days he didnât believe you. He would watch you carefully while you sat by his side.Â
He waited for the inevitable, a look of disgust, a flinch when he came near. It never happened. He figured you were biding your time, sweetening him up and getting him to trust you before you made your escape. It wouldnât be the first time one of the victims had done that to him.Â
He almost wished he was right, that you were just a liar. He waited for you to slip up so heâd have a reason to keep you here forever in Ambrose. But you never did. Each day, you grew bolder, your presence nearly suffocated him.Â
You donât always touch him, you rarely ever talk. Your days are simply spent lingering around him, watching him work or reading while he sculpts. Itâs odd, going from so many years on his own in his workshop to suddenly having a constant presence.Â
He wonders why you donât just go with Bo. He was the more handsome twin, more charming and funny. He could talk, he could walk around without a mask and be comfortable with himself. There was a clear language barrier between you and Vincent.Â
His sign language was choppy at best because heâd had to learn it on his own. Bo and Lester learned some for him, but the family was pretty against it. You struggled to decipher his odd language but you still tried. He didnât understand the effort. There was a âbetterâ brother to choose from and, still, you stuck with him.Â
Just as he looks over at you, you move from your spot by his desk. His fingers loosen around the tools in his hand while he watches you. You stretch, back bowing and a low groan leaving you as you finally move for the first time all day. You shoot him a smile before heading up the stairs out of his workshop.Â
He stills and listens to the way your footsteps echo across the floorboards above him. Youâre in the living room, you give a muffled greeting to Jonesy before heading towards the kitchen. His hands fidget restlessly with his tools but he canât bring himself to get back to work.Â
He hates when you go upstairs without him. Heâs worried that one day heâll hear the door open and close and he won't be able to get upstairs in time to get you back. He worries that heâll hear Bo and you together upstairs, either in a fight or doing something worse.Â
But you always come back. Youâre never away from him for longer than you need to be. Your footsteps rush back towards the stairs and he feels some of the tension leave him.Â
When you come back downstairs, a plate of food for you both, he pulls your chair closer to him. A silent invitation to stay close, one you eagerly accept. You sit beside him, leaning over his shoulder, and admire the sketches splayed out across his desk.Â
You reach out, before he can stop you, and tug at the corner of one, pulling it out from under the others. Your eyes rove over the drawing of yourself, one of you sleeping on the couch he now keeps down here for you. You smile and glance up at him. When you lean forward and press a kiss against his masked cheek he wonders if maybe he needs you around just as much as you need him.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie House of Wax, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
One More Spring
One-shot
Tagging: @dumblittlebunbun bc youâd commented on a previous slasher post
Bo Sinclair x fem!reader A/N: This was a strange little Drabble I came up with when I was experimenting with a different writing style. Summary: You only have one wish, to make it to one more spring in Ambrose. You know that the women donât last long, used and tossed aside, you donât have big hopes. Just one last prayer.
You could always tell what kind of day it would be by how the door closed. Maybe it was because youâd grown up with strict parents, but you could read a mood based off their footsteps.Â
For now, you felt comfortable and remained lounged on your crappy lawn chair, trying to get some sun back on your legs after winter. The screen door closed lightly behind Bo as his heavy boots made their way to you.Â
You didnât bother lifting your sunglasses as you felt him hovering over you. âWhatâre you doing?â His voice was gruff and he sounded like he was panting.Â
âTrying to get some color back.â
You could hear him scoff and glanced to the side to see him stealing a swig from your beer. âDonât have better things to be doing?â
âLike what?â You snarked, rolling over and huffing when his eyes immediately went to your ass. Probably a good thing you chose a skimpy pair of bottoms, he was always more agreeable when he was horny. âPlaying housewife?â
He chuckled under his breath, kneeling down beside you and flicking your sunglasses up. âYeah, maybe.â
You rolled your eyes and swatted his hands away. You propped your head up on your arms and glared at him. âIâll put on an apron for you later, for now, buzz off.â
He shook his head and stood up. âDonât know where all this attitude came from.â You yelped as his hand came down on your ass. He laughed loudly, walking away much too smug for your liking. âBetter not be a damn thing under that apron later!â He shouted as he went back into the house.Â
You looked up to tell him off and finally caught a glimpse of his coveralls. Blood coated the bottom of his pants and you shrank back into your chair. You put your head back down on your arms, closing your eyes and ignoring the way your stomach twinged in anxiety.Â
As requested, youâd made dinner in an apron and nothing else. Bo had subsequently banished Vincent from the kitchen. Youâd felt bad when youâd woken up in the morning, you hadnât gotten a chance to slip him any food. Youâd passed out pretty much the second Bo was done with you.Â
Your eyes darted to the bloody coveralls on your bathroom floor. You sighed, legs aching as you got off the bed. You collected his dirtied uniform and the laundry basket and made your way downstairs.Â
You got started on the laundry, kicking the old washing machine a few times to get it going. It had been on its last leg for a decade, it was a matter of months before it finally conked out. You threw the clothes in, fingers snagging on a lacy number at the bottom.Â
You frowned, tugging it out and holding it up to the light. Youâd never seen this before. It certainly hadnât come from your bag. âYou like it?â
You jumped, whirling around with the shirt clutched to your chest. âJesus, Bo, you scared me.â
He chuckled, face still slightly mussed from sleep. He was only in a white t-shirt and pajama pants, rare to see him in anything other than working clothes. âSnagged that off a tourist yesterday, thought youâd look good in it.â
I thought you would like it.Â
I know youâve got a few shirts like that in your closet.
You always look pretty in this color, baby.
Youâd heard it all a thousand different ways. The same sentence over and over and over again. You were haunted by the women of Ambrose. The ones who came before you, whoâd tried and failed to play house with him. The ones who were yet to come.Â
And the woman who would inevitably replace you when you messed up for the final time.Â
Your nails dug into the lace, feeling it give beneath them as you smiled at Bo. âI love it, thank you.â
He hugged you, lips lingering against your forehead before he wandered off to start some coffee. You turned around, eyes going back to the shirt. Youâd burn it if you could. Rip it apart and scream, instead you tossed it in the wash with the rest of your clothes. You let the lid slam shut, the noise jarring you out of your stupor.Â
You forced on a happy face and walked into the kitchen. Vincent was lingering near the entrance and you offered him a gentle smile. âSorry about dinner,â you whispered as you passed him. He shook his head and took a seat at the table.Â
You grabbed the ingredients you needed, rustling through Boâs ancient cookbook for the French toast recipe youâd found the other day. One day, youâd run out, you wouldnât have any more delicacies to surprise them both with.Â
Bo would tire of the same repetitive food. The same face every morning. The same sounds and movements in the bedroom. Youâd become used up, lose the new shine everyone loved on their toys.Â
You clenched the spatula in your hand, gritting your teeth as you cooked some eggs for the both of them. You brought it over to the table, scooping it onto their plates, Bo got the bigger serving. Bo always got what he wanted.
Your mind flashed to the garage, the straps there waiting for you. âHey!â
You jumped, pan nearly dropping out of your hands as you stared at the dropped eggs on his lap. âSorry, Iâm sorry.â You rushed to the counter, grabbing a towel and kneeling down, frantically trying to get them off his pants.Â
A calloused hand landed on your head, you jumped and looked up at Bo. Your heart raced, expecting malice or a sneer that meant the last nail had fallen and your time was up. Instead he was smiling gently down at you, hand smoothing the hair from your face. âJust a spill, darlinâ, get the bacon âfore it burns.â
You backed away instantly, taking the egg filled rag with you as you went back to the stove. You flipped the bacon, turning off the burner and risking a glance over your shoulder at Bo.Â
He was sipping his coffee peacefully, not a worry in the world. But you could see how tightly Vincent had his fork gripped, the way it shook slightly as he placed it back on his plate. Seems you werenât the only one whoâd thought your time was up.Â
When would it happen?
When spring returned and the birds started chirping their early morning song again?
You wouldnât mind if that was when it ended. If you got to make it to another birthday, that would be even better. Youâd like to experience another holiday, or Halloween. Perhaps that was too much to ask for.Â
Youâd settle for just seeing the buds return to the trees in Ambrose once more. Pink blooming in the absence of death. That would be lovely.Â
Alright, youâll take that.Â
Make it through one more spring and you can happily let go.Â
You could hear the women screaming as you walked down the stairs of the house. See glimpses of who they used to be. Hair clips you knew werenât yours, underwear buried in the back of drawers that youâd never touched. Necklaces and jewelry that didnât match yours.Â
You could hear their voices, disorienting and panicked as you hung the laundry on the line. Felt like the birds echoed their mourning cries in their melody.Â
You saw the red lines around your wrist as you pulled off the dry sheets. You tried not to look at them too much. Bo liked to touch them, rub his fingers along your wrist and admire them. He thought it brought you closer, linked you together somehow.Â
You hated looking at them. Hated the sight of the worn skin. All it reminded you of was the time below. Your pictures that were tacked above the others.Â
You heard a scream further away from the house, bloodcurdling and echoing through the air of Ambrose. It would never make it out. Never travel past the forest bordering the ghost town. You wondered if it was a product of your own fractured psyche or another masterpiece in the works.Â
Your question was answered when you sat on your knees in the bathroom that night, trying to scrub the crimson out of Boâs coveralls.Â
You liked your time with Vincent. You like the candles he kept scattered around his studio, nails dug into them to help him keep time. Heâd sit you down on the couch and would position you like a doll. Youâd let him, mind going numb as you lost time for as long as he wanted to draw you.Â
You knew he liked you the most out of the other girls. You learned sign language for him, communicating with him when Bo got sick of both of you. He enjoyed your face the most. It wasnât model perfect or the type of beauty people wrote songs about.Â
He liked the normalcy of it, the slightly blandness. Heâd told you once, on a nice night, that it was your eyes that gave you life. Not the color of them, but the light behind them.Â
You wondered if he would draw you again when Bo snubbed them out.Â
You folded Boâs clothes, tucking them neatly into his drawers and tossing the basket back into the hall. You moved towards the bed, straightening the sheets and tucking them in tight. You liked it tight, he hated it.Â
Your one act of rebellion.Â
It honestly wasnât hard to fall into this role with Bo. Youâd known if youâd wanted to survive the only chance you had was to make him happy. In a way it was peaceful here. It was quiet and you never had to worry about anything.
You cleaned the house, cooked the food, were the perfect housewife and heâd be content and so would you. He let you have your own time, surprising you with journals to write in. Or heâd dig through tourists bags and bring you back books heâd thought youâd like.Â
You didnât get to go into the city with him, doubted you ever would, but you were okay with this.Â
You picked up his watch, opening up his night tableâs drawer to tuck it away. Your eyes landed on a bright splash of red and your fingers froze from where they hovered above the handle. You glanced over your shoulder, heart thrumming.Â
You turned back towards the drawer and carefully slid the Polaroid out.Â
A picture, a woman with gorgeous red hair splayed along her pillow. She looked beautiful.Â
Or she would.Â
If it wasnât for the gash across the neck, so deep it showed you the inside of her throat. Crimson dripped from the wound, pooling around her and onto the bed below her.Â
Your eyes darted to the bed to your left, hands wrinkling the pristinely kept picture. Without thinking your hand dove further into the drawer, probing, digging, searching for something.Â
You didnât know what until you hissed, hand jerking back as blood blistered out of the gash on your finger. You placed the picture back, popping your finger into your mouth and licking up the metallic taste of your blood.Â
You used your other hand to wrap around the handle of the blade, tugging out the large kitchen knife and staring down at it blankly.Â
One more spring.
You put the knife back, straightening out his drawer and leaving the haunted bedroom to clean your wound.Â
You woke to the sound of birds chirping. To your left was the window, pink buds blooming across the branch of the tree across from the house. Above you was Bo, straddling your waist, a knife held tightly in his hand.Â
âWell,â you wrapped a hand around his, calmly pulling the knife down to your throat. Youâd thought youâd be more upset. Fight, beg, plead for one last winter, or just another day. One last good day. But you were tired, youâd been slipping since summer. Bits and pieces of yourself floating along the wind, joining the cacophony of lost women. âArenât you going to do it?â
Bo stared down at you, his brows furrowed. The whites of his eyes were red and you knew heâs been struggling with this for a while. You werenât sure how long heâd been sitting above you, but you knew it had been before youâd woken.Â
You were thankful, at least, that he had let you see the spring morning before he did this.Â
He yanked his hand out of yours, âCrazy bitch,â he muttered. He scoffed and shook his head, jumping off of you. Your head lolled to the left, you opened up the window, inhaling the fresh smell of new life.Â
You made it another winter and another spring. Your face was plastered along Vincentâs wall. Statues of you adorned Ambrose but you didnât occupy a single one of them.Â
On the outside MISSING flyers with your face faded and fell from lamp posts. Your name was forgotten from the minds of those whoâd been alive to mourn you. You became another statistic, another lost soul. An old news story that would be used in classrooms.Â
What happened to her?
Is she still alive?
Was she the first?
Will we ever know?
No. They wouldnât. You were the girl on the paper trampled beneath frantic feet as they rushed to work. Tossed aside in the garbage when they were done with the morning paper. To the rest of them, you were forgotten.Â
To Ambrose, you were their muse. Inspiration behind their every move.Â
Every morning youâd wake up to a blade pressed against your throat. And every morning Bo would leap away from you and shake his head. Heâd never do it, you knew that now, and it provided you with a careless freedom that freed you from the shackles youâd placed upon yourself.Â
You didnât spread your legs and let him take what he wanted anymore. You didnât submit under his temper, you fought back, raised your voice and threw glass bottles right back at him. You didnât let him bend Vincent under his thumb or scream at him just because he could.Â
You pushed, every day, that invisible line that separated you from the other ghosts in town. Yet, somehow, you never breached it, only managed to extend it.Â
âI want to go with you.â
Bo froze, after a moment he fixed his cap and grabbed his keys from the tray. He didnât look at you as he spoke, âWell, come on then.â
You followed him through the front door, hopping in the truck when he opened it up to you. The engine rumbled, vibrating the seat below you and his hand slid from the keys to your thigh. He squeezed, as if reminding himself you were there, he was really doing this.Â
You could hardly believe it yourself.Â
Bo rounded the bend from the gas station and you felt your heart racing. A hummingbird flitting through your chest, frantically trying to break from the cage of your ribs. He pulled through the old campground, the one youâd been on before your car had mysteriously broken down.Â
You couldnât remember who it was you were with. What their names were.
Youâre halfway certain one of them had been a lover. His name lost to the past.Â
Bo pulls onto the highway and you brace yourself. Youâre not sure for what. Perhaps for him to change his mind, a blade buried in your gut. To start pouring blood down the front of your shirt. Or maybe the car will wreck, divine intervention deciding that neither of you get another day.Â
Nothing happens. Bo slams his hand against the truckâs stereo and rock crackles through the speakers. His hand returns to your thigh and he hums along to the music. After a moment you relax, rolling the window down and letting the breeze cool you down.Â
He makes it to the city, smaller than where you used to live, but a mammoth compared to Ambrose. You buy groceries, marveling over products youâd forgotten even existed. You finally manage to buy the tampons you like instead of getting lucky that another woman has them in her bag.Â
You harass him into letting you go to a secondhand store, buying a shirt for you. Yours and yours alone. Itâs simple, long sleeved and white, nothing special, but it means everything to you. When you make it back to Ambrose, the familiar stifling air and aged walls, you bury the shirt in your dresser.Â
Youâll never wear it and never part with it. This shirt will never be anyone elseâs but yours. Youâll never allow another woman to get her hands on it. Even when youâre gone youâll protect it.Â
âWhat do you think?â
Bo shrugged, taking another swig of his beer as his eyes roved over the journal in his hand. You sat on the edge of your seat, eagerly watching him read. Perhaps a bit too eagerly, he sensed it, pouncing on the chance to make you vulnerable.Â
âYou know I donât read much, baby.â
You rolled your eyes and moved to sit next to him. âIâm aware, itâs real sad, Bo. Now,â you nudged his shoulder with your own. âWhat do you think?â
He chuckled, marking the page and tossing it on the coffee table. His legs spread and you took the invitation, slotting yourself in his lap and wrapping your arms around his shoulders. He grinned up at you, âIt was good. Real fuckinâ good.â
You smiled, cheeks puffing out with the force of it. âReally?â
He nodded his head, âMhm.â He leaned forward, taking you with him, and placed his beer on the table. You reached behind yourself, blindly readjusting it onto a coaster. He rolled his eyes, but you saw the fondness in them.Â
His hands moved down your back, squeezing your ass before they landed on your thighs. Rough calluses spread along smooth skin and goosebumps prickled under his touch. You donât know why you let him read the strange disjointed novel youâd been writing.Â
Maybe because you knew no one would ever see it. Maybe you wanted some part of yourself permanently embedded into his brain. Either way, you enjoyed the way his face changed as he took it in. The expressions shifting with each new sentence.Â
âYou got a fucked up little mind, you know that?â
You hummed, nodding your head and leaning forward to slot your lips against his own. It was his own fault you were like this. Heâd bent you, broke you down, used you until you were a shadow of the woman who used to exist within your body.Â
Maybe he had won.Â
There was a part of you, a spirit, floating somewhere beneath his garage, that had once belonged to you.Â
You ground your hips down against his, biting down on his lip until copper flooded your mouth. He didnât get angry, just gripped your hair and moved you both to the cushions. He groaned into your open mouth, pinning your body below his and manipulating you how he wanted.Â
Then again, maybe youâd ruined him too.Â
You shouldnât be alive. You shouldnât still have a throat to drag air down, but here you were. Shoving against him and forcing him to submit to your whims. You werenât the only one whoâd changed, and you both knew it.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie House of Wax (2005), but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
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