Dracula (1931)
You will need ~
-A piece of paper
-A pen (preferred red/pink)
-Red/pink lipstick
-Crystals (optional)
-Red/pink/white string
-Red/pink/white candle
Get a piece of paper and fill it with how much said person loves you (eg; __ is obsessed about me, __ dreams about me .etc)
Add hearts to the page
Fold it towards you and turn clockwise about three times
Hold it to your heart and visualise the paper being engulfed by a glowing red/white light and think about said person being in love with you
Label the paper âLOVEâ like your sending a letter
Put on lipstick and kiss the paper a couple of times
Drip candle wax on it
Leave it on your alter to charge for atleast a few hours (optionally with crystals around and on top of it)
After itâs charged, remove the crystals and tie a red string around it
Leave it in a manifestation box or at least store it in your alter
hope this helps <3
Adding this amazing "Sinners Syllabus" too for further resources to educate yourself. The books above are ones I have in my personal library, but some very cool people put together an entire webpage of information. Check it out HERE.
- youâre gay - can read - support gay people - want to hold a match between your fingers as you wander the halls of an ancient castle because itâs your only source of light amidst the ghosts of people long past - are an antelope - or want a chocolate bar.
No one will know which applies.
To enchant an item is to infuse it with magical energy. This energy can come from a variety of sources, including celestial bodies, elements, crystals, herbs, or even yourself.Â
Some individuals use the words âenchantâ and âcharmâ synonymously as a way to describe the process of infusing something with energy, but for the sake of this post and due to my own beliefs, you enchant something and it then becomes a charm. Alternately, a charm can be something with its own innate energy, like a crystal or herbal amulet.Â
Enchanting items to turn them into magical objects involves more than just intent - you must learn to channel and manipulate energy, and direct it into that item for enchanting to be successful.Â
Although, the process of enchanting is extremely versatile and there are many ways to do it.
Here are a few ideas on how to enchant items, in no particular order:
Surround the item with crystals of corresponding intent
Surround the item with herbs of corresponding intentÂ
Place the item in a jar filled with herbs that represent your intent
Place the item in front of a candle and meditate on your intentÂ
Anoint the item with an oil, charged water, or crystal elixir of corresponding intentÂ
Hold the item in your hand(s) and visualize it filling with the appropriate energyÂ
Hold the item in your hand(s) and speak or sing your intent aloud
Craft a symbol to keep near the item in an envelope or sachet
Sew, stitch, or carve a symbol into the item Â
Write your intention on paper and keep in an envelope with the itemÂ
Pair the item with a corresponding runestone or tarot / oracle card in an envelopeÂ
Take the item and put it in a box with other items that represent your intent such as crystals, herbs, talismans, amulets, etc.Â
Bury the item in soil with herbs and/or crystals that match your intent (please donât put salt on your lawn though, unless you want dead grass)
Pass the item through incense smoke that matches your intentÂ
Pro Tip:Â Time your enchantments with the appropriate planetary hour, day of the week, time of day, or lunar phase to increase your chances of creating a successful charm.
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Jonathan, looking out the window and once more watching Dracula scale the walls like a lizard:
Simon 'Ghost' Riley x Reader
Crossposted on AO3
Previous << || >> Next
Word count: 5.2k
Summary: where Simon finally gets it.
18+
CW: angst, hurt/comfort, canon typical violence, fluff
Masterlist đŚ | In The Walls Masterlist đŚ
Staring straight at the screen wonât make that form fill in, yet itâs all youâve been doing.Â
The office is cold. Freezing. Your fingers are stiff when you punch the keys, rough skin tight at each knuckle.Â
Price has asked you to do it. Heâs tired and needs to lean on you for a moment. You know how hard it mustâve been for such a proud man to ask for help, so you donât have the heart to refuse him. Even if youâre just as exhausted, just as worried, because the op went tits up so quickly and suddenly that youâre still recovering from it.
Faulty intel. Ambush. Tactically placed C4 blew the place up into smithereens. Mayhem ensuedâyou all lost sight of each other and then met again.Â
The ringing in your ear still sounds fresh. A new cut on your brow your new shiny scar, the crescent of speckled mauves under your eye yet another reason for the brass to come and shower you with meaningless praise so youâd keep up with this unforgiving job without rest.
Chest candy as a prize. As if you care.
Your eyes burn. They squint at the unforgivingly bright screen; bloodshot sclera and a healing bruise, cheekbone swollen and tender.
Casualties And Damage Assessment.Â
The cursor on the document blinks right next to it.Â
Write above the dotted line. Do it. Itâs there. Itâs not hard, itâs just a nameâa name among thousands. You could be typing John Doe, and it should feel the same.
So do it, love.
Type it in.
Type âSimon Rileyâ.
You feel your eyes sting wet.Â
Johnny is still out there, searching for his whereabouts. Kyleâs with him, probably trying to be the voice of reasonâthe only one with a head still on his shoulders. The one who grabbed you and handed you to Price so he could slam you in the helo for takeoff. It left without Gaz and Soap in it.
Without Simon.
Crystal clear is the memory of Priceâs finger pointed at your face as you huddled your knees to your chestâglossy, bloodshot eyes seemingly lost as they looked back at him, trying to find a compass to guide you through this dreadful darkness, through ice cold fear.
Instead, you found a scowl that struggled to mask a quiet threat beneath it, something you knew heâd been almost impatient to tell you.
Something you knew he knew.
You shouldâve known better than to bring feelings into the job. I trusted you and your judgment and you failed me. You failed us.
But now all that feels so unimportant. Priceâs disappointment is only another notch to your belt of failures, and you know itâs gonna get even thicker and tangled if you donât type that name into that form.
If you don't prove to him and everyone else, yourself included, that youâre still somewhat sane. That you didn't lose your marbles on that day, only a chunk of your heart.
Nails tap nervously on your desk. The clock ticks out of beat. Your eye twitches restlessly, but you punch the keys.Â
Simon Riley â MIA
A weary breath escapes you.Â
Good girl.Â
And the leftovers of your heart crack something vicious, a perpetual hairline fracture that will not go away. Your molars grind until your head hurts. Your eyes water, because itâs all happened so rapidly, that you donât think youâve had the time to metabolize it.
Sâalright. Sâalright. You did right.
You sniffle. Wet your lips. Your face screws up to keep it all inside because you canât have him see you like thisâheâs not here, and yet he might as well be, with how clear his voice is echoing in your head.Â
Why shouldnât it be? Your last talk was barely a week ago. Your last kiss not even ten days prior.Â
Softer than the ones heâd given you before. Wet lips stealing your breath, big hands holding you tight by the waist.
The slow, purposeful drag of his cock inside of you as he flattened his chest to yours. The wordless whispers tumbling out of his mouthâuncontrolled, reverent of you.Â
His lips on your skin, both selfish and selfless: descending to your throat, where the taste of you intoxicated himâand where you shivered, moaned, sunk your fingernails into his back, painting it red.
Your brows pull tight, but you canât stand it a moment more, as that name typed black on white looks at you expectantly, like you could pull it out of there and bring it in your arms.
Donât, sergeant. Need you sharp.
You cry, because logic is knocked back into you, and there is no Simon Riley if not the memories rushing in your head.
If not the weariness with which heâd invited to his flat for the first time. Burnt the eggs he cooked for you the next morning, as you slept soundly in his bed. Asked you to stay, even if you were as cautious as can beâa gazelle in the lionâs den.Â
âNot fuckinâ it up, this time,â heâd told you.Â
And even in your caution, you could recognize that silent pleadingâthat almost a year without you has taught him the pains he would endure to not go through it again.
It didnât soothe your worries, but it did smooth down the line carved between your brows.Â
You slump back on the chair and think of the times heâs told you there were no strings attached between you two, and how those strings inevitably formed.
How heâs annealed them, as time passed, going against everything heâs ever vouched for.
How he watched you snoop around his bedroom, allowing you to study his home and his habitsâvoluntarily and without an ounce of reluctance in him.
Sobs wreck you as you recall that night: you hadnât even bothered wearing something, just tiptoed around naked the way you left the bed.Â
You tinkered with the few framed photos he had on the shelves, recognizing the people in them: the team, your face squinting at the sun while wearing khakis, and the family he told you about as the muscles of his jaw jumped with tension.
How you scoured through his books, giddy when you double-tapped those youâd read too.Â
Or how you smiled when you found the wrinkly receipt of that drive-through, dated on that day, being used as a bookmark in the novel youâd recommended him ages ago.Â
You glanced his way every once in a while, just to make sure he was still asleep. Instead, you found a man bathed in moonlight and lazily wrapped in wrinkled sheetsâa knowing smirk on his lips, one that made warmth bloom on your chest, all the way to your cheeks.Â
Heâd patted the spot next to him on the bed, inviting you back beside him.Â
That was the first night you held each other for no other reason than the pleasure of being close.
In the days that came after, there were countless nights just like it.
And now, drowning in your own tears and snot, you donât know if there will be more.
If youâd feel his thumb run along your jaw again, his fingers brushing down your spineâor pinching your cheeks to make you take a breath when you rambled on.Â
If youâd feel his lips on yours, tasting you and your voice, with the veiled excuse to make you quiet.Â
Wondering if heâll ever smear greasepaint on your brow, if heâll ever fix the straps of your vest.
Each tear that falls now is chock full of memories, old and lost. The ones you couldâve had but youâre not sure theyâll ever be. You cry, as you hold yourself togetherâarms around your chest, nails digging into your biceps, painful enough to anchor you back to earth.
You cry until your throat burns, until your eyes yield, and you fall asleep; the document blank on the screen, only his name as the blatant proof of your failures.
A hand rests on your shoulder.Â
Itâs soft at first, a thumb brushing against your collarbone. When you only shift, the grip gently tightens in a brief shake.
âSergeant,â you hear.
Your eyes blink open, then, struggle against the crust formed between your lashes. They focus on an equally as tired pair of blues, a mouth that breathes some relief in your weary bones.
âJohn,â you croak, stretching your limbs behind your head until you hear a sequence of pops in your spine.Â
You look around to assess where you are. The sunlight, dimming behind the windowpane, tells you that youâve slept on your chair for half of the day.
Your neck tingles as it wakes, aching from the awkward position in which you fell asleep.
Blinking away the drowsiness, your eyes land on the document plastered on the screen.Â
Your stomach turns into a boulder once again.
âWhat is it?â You say, returning your focus to Price standing next to your chair. You press your thumb between your brows to dispel a migraine sure to fall upon you. âAlmost done with the report, gimme a few more hoââ
âHeâs back, darling.âÂ
Your body deflates pitifully. Dread clogs your throat with ice, because Simon being back doesnât necessarily mean heâs back alive.Â
Your hands tremble as they land limp on your thighs, and you donât care if youâre giving too much away; John already knows, after all, doesnât he?
And he senses it: the gnawing fear, the supplication in your eyes.
âHeâs in the med bay, overall lookinâ fine.â
You stand up so quickly that the chair is knocked back.Â
Your vision gets spotty, and suddenly the poor nutrition of the past days rears its ugly head in the form of low blood sugar.
John senses it and places a hand on your bicep when you wobble on your feet.
âBit dehydrated, few scraps here and there, but ehâ" A tired smile stretches his lips as he squeezes your shoulder. âWe both know it takes a lot more to bring down thaâ bastard.â
John canât even finish his sentence that youâre curled on your laptop, typing something he canât see. You stand upright, and with a rush of thank yous that barely make sense, you bolt out of the door.
The captain huffs and rubs his face in exhaustion, before his eyes swivel to the screen.
Casualties And Damage Assessment.Â
Simon Riley â MIA & found
He sits there, hunched on the gurney like heâs too big to fit on it. His uniform has taken a lighter hue because of sunlight and dust from the unforgiving desert. A nurse is fumbling with a tube on his arm, a needle already inserted in the crook of his elbow for rapid hydration. There are two crumpled bottles of water on the shelf right next to the gurney, and even though Simon's still hiding under the mask, you're sure he's just finished chugging on both.
Johnny stands by his side, arms crossed and a lazy smile on his face. Sunburnt cheeks and a dusting of freckles on his nose.Â
Kyle talks to a doctor, fiddling with his cap in handâyou catch words like âbruised ribsâ and âsunstrokeâ and something about his ankle but youâre not sure. They get lost in the chatter surrounding you when Simon lifts his head and clocks you at the door.
You stare at each other for what feels like centuries, his eyes always sharp as those of a hawkâyet a little more tired, this time. A little more rough.
When the nurse moves away to tinker with the IV bag, Simonâs hand on his thigh twitches, and he subtly beckons two fingers at you.Â
Itâs all you need.
You beeline your way through passing doctors and nurses alike, until you come to stand in front of him, long legs dangling off the gurney. Heâs subtly parted them for you, but Johnny has noticed it and heâs sporting a smarmy grin because of it.
You decide he can have it for today.Â
Jaw clenched, you swallow before you speak. âGave us a scare, yeah?âÂ
He doesnât answer, because his eyes are locked to the thin white bandages taped to your brow. His focus shifts to your cheekbone, then, and the mauve shade itâs taken after the bombs went off out of the blue.
âQuite the shiner you got.â He drawls.
His voice is raspier from disuse, almost a croak. It makes your heart soar and your spine shiver, because it feels like years since heâs gone radio silent.Â
You gesture vaguely at it, a slight shrug of your shoulder as you try to hide how tight your throat has gone at the realization that heâs alive and kicking, and not an unnamed corpse under some rubble.
âYeah,â you reply, âShrapnelsâuh, something hit me when those things went off. Just a bruise.â
A sentence heâs heard more times than he cares to count, but he seems unfazed by it this time around. Maybe the relief of being safe has finally set his priorities straight.
You smile wearily, uncharacteristically quiet even as you try to make light of it. âReckon purpleâs my colour, eh?â
He nudges an admonishing foot to your knee. You lose your balance for a moment and blink back at him with a frown.
âReckon it ainât.â He grunts with a pointed look, as if you said something unbelievably stupid. But then his voice softens. âBut itâs hard for things to look bad on ya, eh?âÂ
His eyes are crinkled at the corners. Simon smiles through them at you. âStill, thaâ bruise ain't it, if ya ask me.â
You huff.
âFlatterer.â
âThought weâd established flattery worked jusâ fine with ya, mh?âÂ
You choke on a laugh, running the back of your fingers to your lips.
âYeah, yeah.â You clear your throat, trying to dissipate the warmth in your cheeks. "Got it."
If you two werenât so lost in this conversation, you wouldnât have missed the baffled look Johnny was giving you both, talking like he wasnât there to witness it all.Â
But now Simon looks at you with such an intensity that Johnnyâs behavior falls into the background.
There is no discovering Simon Riley, today; heâs taken the toll of discovering you, because while youâve always cared and heâs always known, your eyes are telling him that thereâs something heâs yet to find.
Or perhaps heâs found it already, ages back, when you called his name in his sheets, when you bit a promise on his fingers, when he coloured your skin with his ownâkisses and sweat and grease.
When you left, and he inevitably driftedâa demagnetized compass that couldnât find its north again, and you were just as adrift.
Good luck, youâd said. And fucking hell heâs needed plenty of itâfound it too, it seems, since heâs back where heâs safe. Where heâs home.
âYou alrighâ, yeah?â You ask, causing his mind to flounder back to earth.
His throat bobs.
Simon nods stiffly but doesnât speak.Â
Johnny sighs heavily and takes the burden from his shoulder instead.Â
âAye, heâs a big lad, hen.â He rumbles from your side, and you turn your body to him to give him your attentionâwide-eyed like youâd forgotten he was there at all.Â
Johnny snorts.
He starts to ramble on, and you listen intently to how they found Simon crawling blindly towards them, as he and Kyle ran in his direction.
Simonâs eyes, however, are on you.Â
And so are his fingers.Â
Leaning forward, he rests his elbows on his knees and starts tracing subtle patterns on the back of your thigh.Â
A tickle that would normally make your knees jerk, but you push through and stay stillâbecause what if he stops, then. What if he believes you donât want him to touch you, after almost a week with no clue about his well-being.
God forbid he pulls away.Â
God forbid he thinks you donât want his hands all over once again, and from this day on.
As Johnny tries to fit some light in the dusk of your eyes, Simon discretely hooks one of his fingers in the pocket of your fatigues and doesnât let goâholding onto you as much as you are to him. In fact, one of your hands lands on his knuckles, thumb rubbing soothing circles on the inside of his wrist.
âDoc said you can go rest in your room for tonight,â Kyleâs voice pitches in. âJust come back tomorrow for a checkup.â
Johnny beams at that. The world weighing on your shoulders suddenly lifts an inch, and you manage to take a breath.Â
âNo injuries, then?â You ask, turning between Simonâs parted legs.Â
His forefinger stays hooked at the hem of your pocket even when you do.
âNope.â Kyle smiles. âA concussion, maybe, since heâs not being chattyâoh, wait.â
Simon grunts. âPiss off.â
Itâs only when he's done with the IV bag that youâre finally helping him carry his things to his quarters.Â
Johnny and Kyle donât bat an eye when you offer to take the lead, and you stop wondering whether theyâre aware of your and Simonâs thing the moment Johnny gives you a glaringly obvious wink.
Simon tries to hide a limp as you walk through the hallway, and youâd love to keep his stupid pride intact for his sake, but yours has gone and drowned in the shitter the moment you broke down into sobs in front of Price.Â
So, you donât see why his canât be a little bruised too, tonight.
You hook your arm around his waist, mindful of those eventual bruised ribs you heard the doctor talk about with Kyle. Simon only looks down at you but doesnât put up a fightâinstead, he leans into you and unexpectedly accepts your help.
When he hands you his key, you try to fit it in the keyhole and fail a few times, until you force your hand to stop shaking and the lock clicks. You two stumble inside, as the heavy door closes with a loud thud.Â
His backpack is dropped carelessly, key on the floor next to it.
âEasy, there.â You whisper, noticing how he almost tumbles onto the mattress.Â
A deep, drawn-out sigh escapes him as his whole body deflates now that heâs sitting somewhere comfortable.
You crouch in front of him.Â
No words are exchanged as your fingers work with the straps of his vest on each side. Simon carefully lifts his arms to help you help him, and itâs the first time in years of camaraderie in which heâs actually cooperating.Â
Vest on the floor. Gloves off. His tac belt is carelessly tossed behind you, as you unlace his boots with his eyes burning holes down at you.
âYou need a shower,â you mumble as you slide one boot off his foot. âAnd then Iâll check those bruises myself, see if I can help somehow.â
Simon is deadly silent.Â
Or maybe itâs you who canât quite catch any sound, as the blood rushes in your ears, your heart a violent drum.
âGonna take a look at your leg too.â You go on, relentless, as your voice cracks unbidden. âItâs probably just a sprained ankle, but itâs better to maââ
His hand cups your jaw, then, stopping your endless ramble.Â
You stain the cracked skin of his palm with tears you didnât know were falling. Simon holds your face until you find it in yourself to look up at him.Â
He peers down at you through the eyehole of the balaclava, ripped and singed in various spots as a testament to his survival.
He presses a thumb against the corner of your mouth, forcing it into a plastic smile. But those teardrops are still regrettably streaking your cheeks, your lips still trembling in a fruitless attempt to keep quiet.
His other hand comes to grab your bicep to help you up.Â
Youâre on shaky legs, probably worse than the stagger he had when walking down the hallways. You come to a stand right between his thighs nonetheless, pressing your palms on his shoulders for balance.
Simon doesnât speak as he looks up at youâdoesnât have the strength to do it, nor does he know what to say when you look so vulnerably lost.Â
He uses actions, instead.Â
Languidly, he slides the balaclava off his head, showing the cuts on his skin that match the rips on his mask. His forehead is ruddy and chapped, flaky skin peels off the bridge of his nose right where it gets redder and inflamed. His lips look thinner and pale, like he hasnât had a good gulp of water in a while.
Your brows pinch and you instinctively lean forward until your noses brush.Â
Simon takes a generous look at you, taking note of all the things left unsaid that are so clearly etched into the fine lines of your face.Â
He nods softly, like he knows you need him to give you the green light.
And so, you kiss him right then, not wasting a moment longer. You both donât bother to pretend to build up the tension when the rubber band has obviously already snapped. He parts his mouth for you and tilts his head until you can only breathe him in.
You taste the salt of your own tears, and his acetone breath of days spent without having a bite. You reckon yours isnât much differentâfear and hunger your only companions in his absence. Similar desperation in his hands running up your spine, in the panting of his breath, clogging your lungs already filled with a cocktail of dread and reliefâpoisonous, yet so comforting.
His arms are sore, muscles taut, but he uses them anyway to wrap around your thighs, bringing you in.Â
But itâs then that you stop: when your knees dig into the mattress on each side of his hipsâyour hands softly pressed to his chest to push him away.Â
His eyes land on your lips, already swollen and glossy after heâs kissed them to bits. He watches them move when you speak, entranced, as tears trail into the corners of your mouth.
You think heâs a bit lost in that moment, possibly not entirely listening to what youâre saying, yet that doesnât stop you from rambling like time is running out.
âYou have to shower and rest; we canât be doing this now.â Youâre stumbling over your words. âWhat if you got a broken rib that might puncture your lung, I gotta be careful.â
He blinks, snapping out of his head. Brows tight in a frown, he lifts his arm and grabs the nape of your neck, pulling you in.
âNo, you gotta come 'ere.â
Your lips crash onto his.Â
The salt of your tears stings your tongues, dancing together just because your mouth is already open, busy mumbling something under your breath.
âSimon,â youâre saying, but not in the way he likes. âListenââ
He stops. Sighs like the world has been dropped on his shoulders, breath heavy in your mouth.
His eyes shut close, lips to lips ready to ravage yet both stand still and anticipating. His fingers flex at the back of your neck, others dimple the fat of your thigh through your trousers.Â
Anxiety has your stomach in a clutch, and you fear he knows because he can read you like a book, easy as anything, like heâs taken notes through your pages firsthand.
When Simon gazes back at you, his eyes are close enough for you to distinguish the bloodshot whites, the enlarged pupils eating at the chestnut irises. You donât look at his lips, but you feel with yours how he tentatively opens his mouth a few times, as if he wants to say something but thinks back on it every time.
Until he speaks.
âPlease.âÂ
You want to give in. Have him show you heâs still alive in the only way he knows: with the touch of his hands, the flawless glide of his body with yours.
But youâre relentless, and you mimic himâif not even more desperately. âPlease.â
He sighs, completely disarmed.
Both his hands come to cradle your jaw, then. He starts tracing a path with his lipsâkisses so tender you can barely feel them, landing blindly on your cheeks.
âJust a few days out there, justââ he murmurs, voice low and breathy. âFuckinâ sweltered all day, then soon as the sun fucked offâcold as a witchâs tit.â
He breathes a hoarse chuckle, such a weak one that instead of stealing a smile it pulls and knots at your heartstrings.
You gulp. Itâs fruitless, thereâs something lodged in your throat so thick you abandon any effort to identify it. Fear peaks, however. Cold as the harshest of winters.
You stay silent. You listen. No questions asked, no interjections of any kind. A dance youâve learned over time, from past mistakes you promised to never make again.
âBeen through worse, yâknow?â he mutters to your skin, words interrupted only by his own kisses on your cheeks. âMuch bloody worseâan' this? This was nothinâ. Part an' parcel of the job, love, bound to happen sooner or later.â
He pulls back, his gaze meeting yours as though he could show you what heâs endured, like snapshots unfolding in a reel of film.
Your fingers lace through his hair, and specks of sand and grime settle under your fingernails as you scratch his scalp. Slowly, you lean in, and press a kiss to his forehead.
Simon imperceptibly softens against you, like his body wants to but his head wonât allow him. The muscles in his shoulder are taut but the ones in his neck are loose and flaccid, head bowed to your lips.
âBut fuckââ he breathes. âNever been so bloody scared.â
When he takes his hands away from your face to wrap his arms around your waist, you know better than to moveâas if the ghost of his fingers still lingers at your jaw.Â
He holds you closer. Fists your shirt between his fingers until itâs pulled tight around your middle.Â
Seconds pass, in which you do nothing but wait with bated breath for him to elaborate further.
âBut not fâ me.â He sighs. âDonât care if I live or die, yeah?â
Itâs not a surprising statement. It doesnât leave you as floored as it shouldâve.Â
Itâs one youâve internalized so long ago, even before you two engaged with this nonsense of a thing that only ended up hurting you both.
When you first got to know him, it fell upon you not slowly like a setting sun, but more so like a comet crossing the skyâquick and sharp. Burnt itself into your bones, in the crevices of your heart: that in front of you was a man who didnât care for his life. A ticking time bomb bound to blow up.
And this knowledge properly slapped you when he went MIA.Â
A handful of days of nausea and shaking limbs.
Days in which you bit your nails until they bled, refusing to mourn a dead body you couldnât see. Â
âYou listeninâ?â He asks hoarsely.
Gingerly, you nod. Your lips brush his forehead. Theyâre wet. Tears are falling again, salt as needles puncturing the cracks of your lips.Â
âYou get it, yeah?â He murmurs, and this time itâs him who guides your eyes back to his. Theyâre dark and heavy with sorrow and, for once, not chained shut.
Days in which you didnât know where he wasâif he was at all.Â
His eyes search for yours. Palms to your cheeks like youâre made of glass and might shatter if he holds you too tight.
âYou get it?â He asks again, low and breathless.
Days in which he didnât know where you wereâif you were at all, too.
âI do,â you croak.
There's a sense of grounding, thenâtectonic plaques settling back after the earthquake. The needle of your compass locks back into place, finally pointing Northâno longer caught in an erratic spin.
And itâs so quiet after that.Â
Two words that hang in the air and cut the tension in half, until it finally dissipates when he brushes the hair off your forehead.
Simon holds your eyes for a moment more before he brings your lips to his own.Â
He kisses you slowly like he doesnât know the way you like it, like heâs doing it for the first time.Â
And maybe, he is.
That night, Simon doesnât fuck you.Â
Heâs naked, just out of the shower you helped him take. He sits at the edge of the bed, fists curled around the blanket haphazardly thrown over it, towel crumpled at his feet.Â
His skin is damp, glistening under the low lightsâgentle highlight of scars youâve traced, and newer ones. The knotted lines and the inflamed cuts. The pale stretches of skin interrupted by speckled purples, greens, yellowsâentire galaxies blooming on his shoulder, on his ribs, on his abdomen and on his thighs.
If that isnât enough to make your knees buckle, enough to make your heart crack, itâs his request that does it.
âStay,â he croaks.
Thatâs just how he says it, blunt as everâgritted through his teeth, still coarse in the attempt at tenderness. Trying to fit in a role heâs never thought heâd get the chance to play; where he's not a killer, only a man.
That night, Simon doesnât fuck you, no.
Simon holds you to his side, deaf to your protests when he guides you to lean your cheek to his heartâall the be carefulâs stumbling out of your lips tossed out the window by the very man they were meant for.
Still, he brushes your hair, fingers gently lacing through it. His hand faintly tremblesâdiscomfort in the unfamiliar, you think.Â
However, even in their uncertainty, the gestureâs enough to make you fall asleep, lulled by the warmth of his body tucked under the duvet with you. Pine needles of his body wash, vestiges of tobacco, antiseptic you smeared on his cutsâthe strange familiarity of it, the comfort you hope he's found too.
And maybe youâre dreaming. Maybe itâs the delirium â the adrenaline crash, the hunger, the sleepless nights. Or maybe itâs just the overwhelming relief of having him here, real and warm, alive with blood that still runs.
You feel it rumble in his chest first, before it properly travels to your ears.
A curse. Drawn out, rouged with tender resignation, with honeyed surrender. A beautifully dreadful feeling, conveniently compacted into a single, wretched word.Â
Wet lips touch your forehead. They brush left and right but never press in a proper kiss.
âYou get it, uh?â
A sigh, then. Or a hoarse chuckle, maybeâyouâre not sure. Warm breath grazes your forehead, tickles your scalp until shivers tiptoe gently down your spine and you unconsciously huddle closer.
Simon only holds you more thoroughly.
âCan't fuckin' believe it,â he whispers.Â
There's something feather-light in his voice that betrays a hint of careful aweâjarring, misplaced, especially after days scraping by on the very edge of life.
Something akin to hope.
A lot from a man who insists he doesn't care if he lives or dies.
Still, Simon doesnât bother to conceal itâperhaps because he thinks you're long asleep, perhaps because he doesn't care about hiding at all, not anymore. It curls into his vowels, bleeds golden into his tongue clicking at each t.
âYeah,â he breathes. Kisses your forehead. âNow I get it too.â
A small thing that needs to be said is that according to Homer Odysseus left Telemachus a "newborn" (or at least so Menelaus says in the Odyssey). Interestingly is hard to tell how long Odysseus and Penelope have been married before they had Telemachus because the time line is not cut and clear.
It seems like their marriage took place during the oath of Tyndareus period when Odysseus was at Sparta as a suitor to Helen. From the Oath till Helen's infidelity or abduction or forced seduction by Aphrodite we see there were around 10 years of difference (quite frankly according to some accounts Helen mentions she was 20 years in Troy). That means that he and Penelope were potentially married at least a decade (which makes sense given that he made a wedding bed for her from scratch making it seem that their palace was also being rebuilt at that time)
But if Telemachus was newborn or almost newborn (like let's say about 1 year old tops) that means that Odysseus and Penelope were childless for almost a decade. Either that means they were having some issues aka Odysseus running errands in the kingdom or that they were trying very hard to have children and somehow they couldn't
Do you imagine what this means?
Odysseus potentially had to leave behind a son he wished for for almost a decade full and not to mention that Palamedes nearly killed him, that very son that he potentially tried so hard for and wished for so much!
Hell no wonder he names himself "Father of Telemachus" and quite frankly one can understand why he would hold a grudge against Palamedes (be it Higenius you follow where he frames him or be it Pausanias who says he drowned him) one can imagine why his brain would snap like that! If this hypothesis is correct that is.