seiya234:

He remembered
nothing. Not how he got here, not his past, not even his name.

All that he knew was the now, and
the forest.

(There was a nagging feeling that
he had been doing a lot of thematic wandering in forests lately, but that
wasn’t important so he ignored it.)

He felt lightheaded, not as if he
was going to pass out, but like some great weight he had grown accustomed to wearing
had suddenly been removed. In his chest there was an occasional flare of fiery
pain, but as soon as he noticed it, it was gone again. His feet were bare and
the ground was rough, but he didn’t mind. They were definitely taking him
Somewhere, he could feel it as he slipped in between trees and shrubs, a path
known only to a deep part of him. What for and why he had no idea.

But the woods were lovely, dark and
deep. He felt a peace here he knew (how?) that he hadn’t felt as intensely for
a long time.

The trees themselves were rather
interesting; He had a feeling that the types of trees he kept walking by
weren’t supposed to grow in the same forest together. There were the short,
scrubby trees that were either bursting with tiny yellow flowers or long seed
pods that littered the forest floor and constantly crunched under his feet.
Trees with stiff branches that stuck straight out and bristled with millions of
tiny needle like leaves. And finally there were the trees that almost looked
like they were melting; long and limber branches that drooped off the trunk,
tips kissing the ground.

The wind whistling through the
trees sometimes sounded like laughter and sometimes like crying but mostly just
like wind.

He frowned. Was this supposed to be
teaching him some lesson or deliver a Grand and Terrible Truth at the end? That
kind of thing generally only happened to his br-

To his…. his….

It didn’t matter. And the woods
were lovely, dark and deep.

Also really good smelling.

Keep reading

Alcor, Souls, and The Future

butterfliesandtheireffect:

AO3He stared at the tape, and tapped it. “What is this?”

“It’s an ancient video recording. Only 50 dollars.”
Alcor stared at it. On one hand, he had way too much junk in his hat. (When was the last time he emptied it out again…?)
On the other hand, however, he didn’t really have much to lose.
He reached in his shirt, and grabbed out his infinite wallet, giving him a hundred dollar bill. “Keep the change.”
The guy simply shrugged, and took it. “Thanks dude.”
“No problem.“


Alcor blipped over to the house, in the middle of a episode of ‘Acquaintances’– One of The Flock’s favorite sit-coms.
“Hey guys, mind if I borrow the TV?” He asked.
The Flock – specifically Missy, Not Our Future, Devil’s Child, Curses, and Bananas, – groaned. Some dully accepted Alcor’s request, others whined.
“B̺̹̣̺͇̟u̙͉͞t̸̖̭̭ w͏ͅe͕͎̳̫͠ ̻̭j͔͚͞u̳̙s̺̟̠͇t̴̘͙ g̘o͇̲̺t̟͠ ͎̞̰̙͍͈̟ṯ̱̖ͅo̳̬͔̗͎̲̞ ̝̪̥̱t͇͍͈h̡̪̦̘̹̱̰e̝͕̘͇̞͈͉ ̢̳̜͚g̨͈o͍̪̪͡o̡d̘̮̭̬ ͖̖̕ͅp̷̪̩̼̞̝̞a̧̞̱̜r̡͉̫̦̮͖̦̤t̙̼͕̝!̤̬” Sauron complained.

“Guys, you can literally watch this anytime you want. I can turn this on at the exact moment you left it.”
The Flock mumbled, upset, but they knew Alcor was right. The balls of fluff and emotions slowly trickled out the door, until only a few dreams were left, namely Star, Incandescence, and Quiet.
“We’ll watch it with you.” Incandescence said.
Alcor got up, and slipped the tape in, and it clicked, flickering on. Bright colors flooded the screen. Alcor’s eyes widened, and he stopped breathing as grinning characters and pastel colors filled the TV. and a star leaped across the screen, words in cursive labelling the show.
“Mizar The Magnificent.”

Keep reading

Melinda and the Gnomes 3/?

ourmizarthegleeful:

Hi
everyone here’s the  long awaited chapter three, be sure to send me
your feedback, I’d love to hear how I can improve my writing! Like I
promised people, next I’ll be posting a short  fic about our favorite
little cinnamon bun, Toby.

Melinda and Jake spent every day
playing in the national park after that, despite his initial shyness
Jake seemed to warm up to her quickly and was soon even coming over
to Cassie’s house whenever it rained. Dipper for his part made
himself scarce whenever the young Gnome was around.  Melinda even
spent every evening for a week weaving him a hat made of red light,
putting so much time and effort into it that it would last at least
two years, Jake especially liked the pattern of yellow stars that he
needed to borrow a magnifying glass to find. Far too soon however the
summer began to draw to a close and Melinda had to prepare for the
new school year.

The two lay glumly  beneath their
favorite tall tree as they contemplated spending all the long boring
school days apart, they’d been putting this conversation for as long
as they could but now it was finally to talk.

“I d-d-don’t want to be home
schooled if you w-w-won’t be there.” Jake said, bursting into
tears.

“I don’t want to go to school
either,” sighed Melinda. “Everything is so serious there, and
they all edge away whenever I start a new weaving project. Even the
kids with Mage parents say its freaky. You know, even a test would be
more fun if you were there with me. She sat up suddenly with a grin
on her face, “I’ve got it! You’ll just start coming to my school.”

“I c-can’t do that!”

“Why not? My school already has
three Werewolves, a dozen Pixies, one Troll, a Dryad, and a boy who I
think might be a shape shifted Chinese Dragon. A gnome or two
wouldn’t be out of place. And didn’t you tell me that the Gnome who
home schools the kids in your band had to get certified, and didn’t
you say that your my age, so we’d even be in the same class.”

Jake opened and closed his mouth a
couple of times, “but I told my band tends to keep to itself,” he
said weakly.” No adult would ever let one of us go to a human
school.”

“Has anybody ever asked?”

“Well, no…”

“Come one, Melinda said, “We’ll
ask your mom right now.” The exited girl pulled her best friend to
his feet, jumped to her own and practically ran to the gnome village
with Jake trailing uncertainly behind her.

…………………………………………………

As it turned out, Jakes
mother was quite exited about the idea, she liked Melinda and the
only reason why the band home schooled its kids was because that was
what they had always done.  She did have to ask the queen but the
queen had been looking for an opportunity to get her people more
involved with the human world, so this was perfect. As all this
happend Jakes face slowly went from worry, to a wide, if timid,
smile.

Jakes mother Luanne sat
down with Cassie and the two of them  made all the arrangements that
needed to be made, Melinda did have one concern of her own however.
That night she tiptoed down the hall to the room where her brother
lived when he wasn’t in the mindscape, but he wasn’t there.

“Probably off being a
dork with that Sousaphone of his,” she muttered, before pulling
away the round rug in the middle of the room to reveal his personal
summoning circle that he’d carved into the floorboards. Melinda took
one of the sparkly pins off the vest that she always wore and stabbed
her left index finger and let a few drops of blood fall onto the
circle.

As the first drop of blood
fell onto the circle, smoke began billowing up from the ground
quickly forming into the shape of Alcor. He was floating casually on
his side, with one hand on chin. “Do you need something kid, I was
at the movies with Lucy Ann.”

‘Oh
thats right,’ thought Melinda, its the last thursday of the month.
“Sorry brobro I forgot, I’ll make this fast so you can go back. You
know, my friend Jake?”

“Yeah?”

“He’s not being home
schooled anymore! We  realized if we went to school togather we could
have more fun. So could you pretty please make sure we’re in all the
same classes this year?”

Dipper smiled thoughtfully,
“You know how this works kid, I need some kind of deal first”

“How about  all my
desserts and any Ice Cream and candy mom buys me for the next two
months.”

Alcors Demonic instincts
nudged to get more, to demand a human sacrifice, but he held out a
hand wreathed in blue fire.

D̓ͨ̎̎́ȇ̲̝͍̤̐ͨ͌̋ä̱̫̼͉͕̼͎ͣ̑̉̇ͨ͠l̷̼̺̦͚ͬͮ!

The two shook hands and
Alcor grinned unnaturally wide showing all of his shark like teeth.
“It will be done by tomorrow, in the mean time I need get back to
Lucy Ann, the movie was just getting to the good part. By the way, I
could have done it for a single months worth.”

Melinda stuck out her
tongue, “Go back to your immortal bro, Aldork, and make sure to
tell her hi for me.

“Thanks sis, I will.”
With that Alcor disapeared with a flash of gold and black light.”

“Show off,” Melinda
yawned. It was time for bed.  

HC: There’s a Mizar that’s the son of a candy-store owner. His first question to Dipdop when he learns the person around his age that constantly comes to the candy store is actually Alcor is: “How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie pop?” He says he’ll give Dipper a candy that Mizar gets to choose in return for the answer. He gives him the nasty gum they stick inside Tootsie pops, after licking the pop the precise number of times Dipper told him. Dipper is thoroughly pissed

this is a good headcanon until you got to ‘nasty gum’ because I beg your pardon the gum they put in Tootsie Pops (along with actual Tootsie Rolls) is amazing because it accumulates candy bits in it and it’s good so in conclusion GOOD DAY SIR.

Handyman

astridianmayfly:

I’M BACK TAU LET’S GET THIS SHOW ON THE ROAD!!

1. The Comedian

“Dipper! We have much to discuss!”

Soos smiled as he watched Dipper fade into the circle nonchalantly. Fluffy brown hair and a wilting suit greeted Soos and his childlike greeting. Tired (powerful, golden) eyes stared at him from inside the circle. “Hey, Soos.”

“So Mr. Pines told me that you and Mabel are comin’ up Gravity Falls this weekend! Are you excited?”

Something froze in Dipper’s face. But as soon as the expression came, it was replaced with a forced smile. “Yeah, Mabel’s really excited to be coming to school here. She’s got a lot of friends in her grade.”

Soos, to his enduring credit, did not question the unusual circumstances of the twins moving towns and schools in the middle of high school. Or the fact that Dipper only talked about Mabel’s prospects. He knew that the discussion about the process of the move to the Falls had been riddled with the awkwardness of Mark and Anna’s lack of understanding of this new world they lived in. “Cool! So anyway-”

Dipper cut him off mid-sentence. “I’d love to stay and chat, but I can’t be here for long unless we make a-” his mouth puckered- “deal.”

“Oh yeah, almost forgot.” Soos grabbed a couple bags of chips out from a stash he had under the counter. He tossed them at Dipper in the circle. “How much time?”

Dipper stared at the bags and made an executive decision. “I’d say something like 45 minutes.”

(If it weren’t Soos, the chips would be worth way less. But. The Family Exception was still intact, and Soos was as good as a Pines.)

“I actually need some help from you, dood.”

Dipper smiled. “What this time?”

Soos gave Dipper a faux serious face. “It’s really serious, dood.”

“Oh yeah?”

“Wanna go under the porch and stick money into the cracks and see Stan’s reaction?”

“Was that even a question? Also, I’m putting a bucket of ice water above the door. It’s always good to be prepared.”

“I’ve heard mayonnaise is better.”

“Don’t push it, old man.”

2. The Electrician

Splintering but soft cedar wood adorned the carved door of Soos’ second home, a rickety old weather vane creaking softly as the luminous suns of other galaxies beamed into focus. It was a breezy midnight, emerald evergreens rustling unsurely as the wind roped and snatched at the pine trees decorating the remote shack. He wasn’t positive why Stan had asked him to come to the house, but he said it was something about an electricity error. Soos observed this to be true, the usual golden glow of the lantern in the front of the house was absent from view.

A precocious gale grabbed at Soos’ skin, goosebumps rising to greet the eerie morning. With the change of wind Soos was reminded of just how cold autumns in Oregon were. He reached to knock a third time (having misplaced the pair of keys Mr. Pines gave him) when the door abruptly swung open. With his weight placed in the balls of his feet, Soos nearly fell over by the surprise of his handhold removed. After readjusting his balance, Soos took one look at Mr. Pines at the front door and had to do a double take.

Stan looked like a wreck; his shirt untucked,  buttons undone, and tie untied around his neck. His burgundy fez was practically defying gravity at the corner of his scalp. Soos supposed the only thing holding it up was the friction of unruly, greasy hair. He looked more wrinkly than he should, even for an older man, and his mouth was downturned into an unrelenting frown. His brow was furrowed and his posture bent with the labor of hardship.

He looked like a father.

With an arm bent casually on the frame, Mr. Pines scratched his head and greeted Soos bluntly: “Hey Soos. Electricity’s off.”

Soos pointed up at the forlorn lantern. “I noticed.”

“I’ll help you fix it, but could you get a move on? I was in the middle of something,” Stan said gruffly, ushering Soos into the house.

Soos had a suspicion that Stan wasn’t the one in the house who cared if the electricity was back on or not. But he complied.

“Sure thing, Mr. Pines.”

Soos meandered into the house, a hard feat; with six cardboard boxes stacked up at the entrance. “Don’t mind those, it’s just the kids’ stuff.” Stan mumbled something under his breath that sounded like, “I told them that people were gonna have a hard time getting in, but did they listen? “Noooo Grunkle Stan, we don’t wanna….”

Soos had almost forgot Dipper and Mabel were at the house, and had arrived three days prior. He was fixing a floorboard upstairs when the twins got to the Shack (their new home), and only saw a flash of Mabel’s sweater before she disappeared into her room and closed the door. She chattered for a bit, to who he assumed was Dipper, and then exited the room when Mr. Pines yelled to them down for dinner. She shrieked “Coming!” and was about to plummet down the stairs until Soos called out to her across the hallway.

“Sup, dood?” He said with open arms.

Naturally, Mabel came barreling towards his embrace at the speed of light. “Ohmigosh Soos! I missed you so much!”

Soos laughed. “We’re like, roommates now! ‘Cept Stan only lets me sleep in the break room on Saturdays. Something about ‘being an adult now’ and ‘just get married already…’”

Mabel snorted and jokingly punched his arm. “Soos, you are just too funny! How’s Melody?”

He beamed. “She’s doing great! Hey there, Dipper!”

Soos directed his question to the left of Mabel, praying that he was standing (floating) there. He always did this after the incident that racked the world the summer of 2012, and had left Dipper invisible and slightly demonic. Soos believed that he was there, not only because he had utmost faith in Mabel, but also due to the fact that Dipper had a presence. After that fateful event during the summer, during the couple days where the town was convinced Dipper had died, he would often feel the hairs on the back of his necks stand up randomly. Upon checking the thermostat, he one time watched the temperature drop by a couple degrees and then shoot back up again. Soos, at the time, had passed off these events as unrelated and insignificant occurrences. But in hindsight, he was almost sure an intangible Dipper was hovering past him, screaming for recognition.

Mabel smiled. “Dipper says he’s doing okie-dokie.”

Soos was about to say something else to Dipper, when he was interrupted by Mabel conversing with the air. “Dipper, there’s no way I’m repeating th- Can you stop interrupting me? Thanks. What? Oh yeah, I’ll tell him.” Mabel shifted her gaze back to Soos. “Dipper says that he’ll tell you where your missing screwdriver is if you give him a piece of candy.”

Soos grinned. “Sure thing dood! I’ve been looking for that all day.” Soos grabbed a skittles packet out of his pocket. He tossed it to Mabel, who handed it to thin air. Soos tried not to gape as the packet disappeared out of the air, but internally he shrugged and thought to himself: Honestly? I’ve seen weirder.

Soos was shaken out of his memory by the whine of floorboards coming from the upstairs. Stan grumbled.

Soos peered up at the peeling ceiling. “What woke them up?”

Stan gave Soos a frighteningly soulful gaze. “They’ve been awake the whole night, apparently. I woke up to every single lightbulb in the house breaking.”

“How did that happen?”

Stan didn’t answer his question. “I’m going to grab some spare light bulbs in the basement.” He typed in the code to the vending machine and ventured downstairs.

The house went quiet for a moment, and Soos heard whispers from the top of the stairs. He only caught snippets of what assumed was the twins talking.

“Dipper…”

“All my fault…”

“It’s not a big deal….a goober…”

“…..is Mabel.”

“No one cares…. Soos will fix it…. Stan called…”

He only heard something else, something that could only be described as a sniffle. The house tremored with the sob, and settled down until nothing more remained.

The house plunged into darkness, and Soos was left to stare at the glass on the floor. It glimmered like the eyes of a crying child.

Soos went to the front hall closet and grabbed the broom. Broken parts had no place in his home.

3. The Contortionist

Soos was in his break room, and the walls were screaming.

They thrummed in and out, ebbing and flowing. Soos had tried the door when the earthquake-like effects had begun, but his efforts were useless. It didn’t seem to be locked, almost like the actual door was glued to the frame. He felt the wood, hoping to force it open, and yelped when a piece of it splintered off and jammed itself into his finger. From under the door, an incredibly bright light shone.

And there was screaming. Anguished screaming.

All of a sudden, the walls were pressing in.

His heart in his throat, he could only do so much as whimper as the walls caved in-

-He woke in cold sweat.

Justadreamjustadreamjustadreamjustadream

Soos didn’t think he was going to sleep in the break room anymore. It didn’t really seem like a game, suddenly.

He returned to sleeping, however, and found that the rest of his dreams that night were padded with fluff and grass.

And strange-looking sheep, for some reason.

4. The Thrill Seeker

Mabel was sad.

Some days the sun was shining, and some days it rained. But when it was too hot to bear in the dead of summer, it suddenly became fun when she declared to race around the house to see who could find the fans fastest, and then it wasn’t so bad anymore. In the middle of winter, the miserably frigid air indicated a game to see who could make the most snowballs, and you would feel yourself warm from the inside. With Mabel, the blah stratus clouds of a lazy Sunday became sugar-spun silver and thunder the burp of a god. The world could be raining around them, and Mabel would play games to see who could catch a souvenir of their broken sky. They said love was a weakness, but her positivity ignited everyone into action against the evil.

The sharpest knife was her sadness, and it clawed at Soos’ heartstrings. “What’s got you down? Talk to Soos. According to Wendy, I’m like, a genius at this kind of thing.”

Mabel sighed. “It’s not a big deal! It’s just, well… you know those annoying bird-faeries?” Soos nodded solemnly. “I left the window open for them, because I saw a small colony of poor little ones struggling to make a nest.”

Soos closed his eyes profoundly. “Mabel, you are a saint.”

Mabel smiled sadly. “Yeah, yeah. Well anyways, they took my knitting needles, which was fine, I didn’t really need that pair anyways. I had a better pair, pink bedazzled ones! And then they took those to make their nests, which was a little disappointing, but I could always make another glitter pair, so I didn’t really mind. But today I woke up and twenty of my best sweaters were-” She sniffed- “stolen! I thought Dipper or Stan might’ve moved them or pranked me or something, but when I walked outside today the dumb birds had a mansion- nest!!”

“It’s ok to be sad, Mabel! I know how hard you worked on those.”

Mabel sighed. “And it wasn’t even that that made me sad. I had some gifts in there for holidays and upcoming birthdays and stuff. I know I’m being selfish to be so upset about something so silly, but,” she paused. “I really, really liked those sweaters. They were really authentic, you know?”

Soos let out a deep sigh. “I know how the ruining of hard work can be discouraging. It is important to remember that the value is in like, experience and stuff.”

Mabel gaped. “You’re so wise, Soos!”

Soos was on a roll. “One time I went to the store, and I put the interesting divider in my pile. But the lady working there just glared at me and put it besides my stuff. She does the same thing every single time! It would make such a cool sword. I’m on a conquest to buy it, and nothing will stand in my way!” He punched a fist in the air.

Mabel stood with a determined gaze and grabbed Soos’ shirt collar. “Do you want that super cool sword thing?”

Soos looked Mabel in the eye. “More than anything else in the world.”

Mabel punched her fist in the air. “To the GROCERY STORE!!”

***

They came rushing in later, disheveled and sweating. Mabel had a squirrel in her hair and Soos’ shirt was ripped. But the heroes prevailed; Soos was clutching three or so of the dividers. Mabel slammed the door behind her. Through heavy breaths, she unenthusiastically high fived Soos and walked sluggishly towards the living room. The hard labor of their quest warranted rest, hence Mabel then tossing her sapped limbs onto the ragged couch.

They heard the unmistakable voice of Deputy Durland cawing from outside. “You can run, but you can’t hide!” A bell jingled outside to combat the unmistakable sound of sirens growing louder and louder. Mabel opened the door, screamed, “The only thing you cops hide from is your feelings!” And promptly proceeded to slam the door into the faces of the expectant police people.

Dipper floated in. “Mab- what the hell.” He was about to do the meme-esque-back-out-slowly-this-trecherous-situation-does-not-involve-me retreat when Mabel interjected with a show-and-tell attitude. “Hey Dipper! Wanna see what we stole?”

Dipper stared at her with narrowed eyes. “Stealing is illegal, Mabel.”

“Well, duh! But it was for the greater good. Look what we got!” Mabel ripped the dividers and stuck them in front of his face.

“Agh Mabel, get th-those out of my face.” Dipper pushed the things away from himself. Mabel glanced towards the door. “We should lock that.”

“They can’t search the house without a warrant.” Dipper said, deadpan.

Mabel raised an eyebrow. “I’m not sure that Durland actually knows how to read, let alone is actually aware of fancy-schmancy amendments.”

“Well anyways, why did you need those? I could’ve gotten them for you.” Dipper squinted. “Are those the dividers they use in grocery stores?”

“Yes, they are. And we decided to get them because it’s the journey that matters, not the destination.”

Mabel high-fived Soos while he put his hands to his face. “Mabel. So profound!”

Dipper rolled his eyes. “Mabel’s not the profound one, Ralph Waldo Em-”

“Blah blah blah, sorry Dipper,  I don’t speak nerd! But we have an extra sword thing if you want it.” She held the third one out for him to see.

“Come on dood, Mabel and I were gonna duel with them!” Soos gave Dipper an expectant expression.

Dipper tried to condescendingly raise an eyebrow, but failed miserably. Mabel noticed and snorted, before breaking down in peals of laughter. She punched Soos’ arm. “You better spoof up your video editing, we’re gonna need to make a compilation of this. Or better yet, a gag reel to that catchy voice-cracking remix you have buried somewhere.”

Soos cocked his head. “Why, exactly?”

Mabel (expertly) wiggled her eyebrows. “Blackmail.”

Dipper (clearly) did not like to be made fun of. To spite his sibling, he exalted an, “En gardé!” He snatched one of their swords out of Mabel’s hands and floated away with his pilfered weapon.

Mabel put her weapon at the ready, and handed hers to Soos. “No fair! You have the advantage! I’m calling foul on that, mister! Put your feet on the floor and hands in the air!”

Soos chased after them, armed with his divider. “Surrender our property!”

(When Stan came in later after talking with the cops, he made them relinquish their weapons. As he walked away, he was heard grumbling, “If you guys are going to steal, at least steal something useful.”)

5. The Laughing Machine

Soos woke up to the smell of blood, a distinctly iron tang. The walls of the break room had actually not closed in, but Soos still felt his chest tighten at the thought of being in the break room for a second longer. He frenetically jiggled the handle, hoping it wasn’t locked. To his relief, the door creaked open and he burst outside-

-only to find a scene straight out of a horror game.

Every light was flickering, and blood was on the walls at the consistency of Christmas decorations. Soos proceeded with extreme caution. “Doods?”

And then suddenly, a scream.

Soos ran.

Stan and Mabel sat next to a small (boyish) shadow of ebony sitting on the floor, (pouring and splashing and pulsing and screaming). Mabel was deadly calm, a somber stare issued in the tremoring phantom’s direction. She held his (Dipper’s, it had to be Dipper’s) hand in a tight grip, while Mr. Pines sat in a weary stool pulled up next to the pair of them. He was hunched, rubbing his temples in exhaustion. Soos didn’t mistake Stan for being unaware; his eyes had the same determined and serious weight as Mabel’s. And as for the demon(the child)?

His eyes were dead. That was the only possible way to describe those open, scarred orbs, unblinking with complete and utter terror. Occasionally, he would close his eyelids, as if attempting escape, attempting sleep, trying and clawing out of a prison of mental torture.

Poison gold poured out of his eyes, tributaries of teary angst and martyrdom;  he quivered and caved in on himself. The noise, the thousands of bees carving chalk-laden forks onto plates, bawling with the weight of an eternal, immortal burden. Wailing, screaming, yelling, shouting for an ally, a friend, a savior

(a handyman.)

The eyes snapped up. Golden. Predatory. Saddened. Decayed. And they were searching Soos’ being, his soul, and he was as exposed as a dissected frog on a lab table.

A voice echoed off the walls. The doom of power and the demon had a verdict.

I̬̣ ͔̟̜͖̕s͇̞̫̹̜̻a̙̱w͍̱̺ ̸̠̪y͍̝̤͔ͅò̮͈u ̠̼̺̲̝d̤͎͔͕i̻̞͖e̮̯̠, the demon (Dipper) said.

Soos scratched his head.

“Ok, so that’s cool and all, but like how does it happen? Is it like, gruesome? Or wait, please don’t tell me that it’s by eating too many burritos. I don’t want to prove Abuelita right! I really don’t want to suffocate, I seriously hope that isn’t it! Do I die a hero? That would be total badass. Do I-”

He stopped talking. Mabel, Stan, and Dipper all stared at him. Dipper’s eyes were lighter, and suddenly, the shadows the room was wreathed in disappeared. Dipper opened his mouth to breathe, and Soos feared for the worst.

The reaction threw him for a loop.

Dipper was laughing.

“Oh man, Soos, that was one hell of an exorcism.”

seiya234:

“I just-how can you be sure Mabel?”

“Because I am,” Mabel told him for what must have been the
five hundredth time. Maybe five hundred and one; she was beginning to lose
count between the endless rounds of having to pee and getting blood drawn for
tests and doctor’s appointments and trying to get the nursery ready and-

“But you don’t know that Mabel, you don’t know what I’ve
done-“

“I think I do Dipper,” and oh no, her voice sounded kind of
mean there, but as much as she loved her twin and wanted to be there for him
and support him, Mabel just needed him to not
for five minutes.

Five minutes.

Five minutes to breathe and also figure out how she was
going to get off this stupid gosh darn couch because she needed to pee again
but the couch was so low to the ground and she was so big now.

“You don’t know me
though, you don’t know what I’m actually capable
of, how can you even trust me with the kids-“

One of the said future blessings and apple of her eyes
kicked her in the bladder and oh god a little tiny bit of pee just came out on
the couch and Dipper was taking another deep breath to complain and-

“Dipper. I love you. I trust you. I always will, no matter
how many times you want to come to me and complain about how bad you are
without actually doing anything to stop being bad.”

Dipper’s face dropped. 

“Mabel… that’s not fair.
You know…. You know.”

She nodded. “I do, but now you’re actually listening to me
instead of letting my voice go in one ear and out of the other like a big old
goober.”

Her brother opened his mouth to interject, then he actually
thought before talking once (not fair Mabel, you have that same problem) and
closed it, to let her go on.

“I love and trust you Dipper and that’s one reason why I
will never worry about you around the babies, but you know what the biggest
reason is? My love and trust isn’t enough for you.”

Mabel absently put a hand on her stomach, patting it to
settle the babies down inside. She was so, so very tired.

“What is more important to you though is that I keep
thinking and telling you that you’re a good person. Me believing you’re a good
person matters more to you than anything else in the world. And more than me
trusting you as a person, I trust most that you don’t want to fuck that up,
since I’m the only reason that you think that you’re a little bit of a good
person. You tell yourself that every time something bad happens; I’ve noticed.”

(she kept count when she was younger and they were in high
school, but she stopped really quickly; it would have hurt them and for what?)

Dipper looked like he was about to cry and she needed to
make him feel better but today she didn’t feel like it.

Today she didn’t want to.

Today he was going to have to deal.

“I-“

Mabel shook her head. 

“Dipper, I love you, but can you just. Go away? For a bit?
Find someone else to talk to about all of this; I don’t think I can be the only
person you lean on any more.”

His hand reached out and grabbed hers, gave it a squeeze
with nails carefully blunted.

 “I.. okay. Okay. I’ll try.”

Maybe she should have given him some encouraging words to
leave him with as he blipped away, but here and now, all she wanted to do was
have a little cry and eat some Cheezits, and figure out getting up off the
couch.

She had had to figure out so much about her and Dipper, about helping Dipper, on her own. 

Maybe it was time for Dipper to start helping with that. 

Pseudomnesia 4/8, Part 2

soulsinshadow:

Story link

In which a scavenger hunt (minus the clues) begins and the Mystery Cult expands its membership. Elsewhen, elsewhere, Mabel fights a warlock and Dipper makes his first deal with Henry. Whistling figures prominently.

Part 4 (Part 2) of this trainwreck.

I’m a good three weeks late this time around, but I’m gonna say it anyway. Happy birthday, TAU! Maybe one of these days I will finish unwrapping your present.

“Just tear it off!” someone shouts.

“I like to save the paper,” I say, carefully peeling off another corner.