Mark Grayson x Med!Reader♡ྀི
.….ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨.ـ.. .
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⛨ summary: you’re not obsessed with him. you’re not. but the world clearly is. strange articles. sneaky algorithms. and a voice in your head that won’t shut up. meanwhile, invincible’s got his own problem: he can’t find the girl who called him out like a scrub tech on a bad day.
⛨ contains: sfw. nurse carla’s mischief. media-induced annoyance. early emotional foreshadowing. reader in denial. mark being haunted by words and mystery. parallel narration. bonus scene chaos.
⛨ warnings: mild language. internet stalking (light). stubbornness. minor delusion. no real threats—just a very determined destiny.
⛨ wc: 2146
prologue, part one, part two
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: fun fact—i lost half of this chapter mid-edit because my wifi decided to flatline like a soap opera character. dramatic gasp, hospital monitor beep, the whole deal. one second i’m tweaking a paragraph, the next i’m staring at the void where 800 words used to be. i almost fought my router. bare-fisted. anyway, here it is—risen from the ashes, caffeinated, and slightly more unhinged than originally planned. enjoy my suffering.
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The universe has a sick sense of humor.
You know this. You’ve always known this.
You work twelve-hour shifts surrounded by people coughing on your scrubs and trying to die inconveniently. You’ve stitched up knife wounds caused by things described as “accidents,” told grown men they’re not, in fact, dying from a sore throat, and once had to remove a Lego from a place no Lego should ever be.
But lately, it feels personal.
There’s been a shift. A pattern. A very specific, very annoying theme threading itself through your life like the world’s most persistent pop-up ad.
It’s not love. It’s not fate.
It’s him.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
You tap your phone’s screen with more passive aggression than necessary, holding it to your ear even though you know your (only) friend won’t pick up.
Beep.
“Okay, listen—I’m not spiraling. I’m not.”
(Pause. Sip. Another pause.)
“But if one more news article, thirst edit, or random merch featuring that man—shows up in my general vicinity, I will commit a felony. Probably a creative one.”
(Beat.)
“And no—before you say it—it’s not a crush. I don’t have time for crushes. I have sleep deprivation and a spine held together by caffeine.”
(Silence.)
“He’s not even that hot.”
You hang up.
Regret it. Immediately.
And that’s when it hits you—
You’re not obsessed with him.
You’re not.
You’ve been into people before—celebrities, coworkers, a random guy who pronounced your name right on the first try—but this isn’t that. You’re not delusional. You’re tired. You have a full-time job, a chaotic sleep schedule, and at least two stress migraines scheduled for the week.
You’re not obsessed.
The entire world, on the other hand, clearly is.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
It starts with a newspaper.
A real one. Paper and ink and everything. You’re halfway through your first sip of coffee (not bad, not cursed) when you spot it, splayed open on the front counter like it tripped and fell into your line of sight.
’Invincible saves subway commuters in mid-derailment battle.’
There’s a photo. Midair. Bloodied knuckles. Hero pose. That obnoxious blue-yellow suit.
You blink at it once. Twice. The espresso tastes more bitter somehow.
“…Carla,” you call out, slowly.
A soft shuffle from the break room. “Mhm?”
You tilt your head toward the paper. “Is that yours?”
“Nope,” she chirps, far too quickly.
You squint.
Carla reappears moments later with a tea mug that says ’I am the storm’ in passive-aggressive font and absolutely does not make eye contact as she walks past you.
She hums.
The kind of hum that implies dark intentions.
You stare at the paper like it personally insulted your scrubs.
That’s strike one.
Strike two comes via TikTok. Or… Instagram Reels. Or whatever godforsaken app the algorithm has you trapped in.
You’re lying on your couch on your one night off, a warm takeout container on your lap, the lights dimmed just enough to make it feel like self-care. You open your phone to zone out. Maybe scroll through food mukbangs. A few raccoon videos. Rewatch that one clip from ’The Bear’ for the emotional damage.
Instead, the second video to pop up is a slow-motion fan edit of Invincible. Set to a remix of a 2000s ballad.
You stare at your phone in silence as the hero who bloodied his way through your afternoon is now being thirsted after by teenagers in the comments.
You swipe up fast enough to sprain something.
Then another pops up.
And another.
And—oh, good god. This one’s tagged #invincibae.
You throw your phone facedown on your stomach like it’s contagious.
You’re not angry. You’re not even annoyed.
You’re just trying to have one singular crumb of peace in this godless world, and the masked himbo you verbally body-checked in the middle of a disaster won’t stop invading your downtime.
You eventually find a rerun of ’House MD’ and watch a patient nearly die from licking envelopes, which feels more comforting than it should.
You’re not obsessed.
(But maybe you do glare at a passing bus with his face on the side. Just a little.)
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
By the end of the week, it gets worse.
You’re at the pharmacy grabbing gauze, extra gloves, and the least offensive granola bar in existence when you see the merch.
Merch.
A corner display stacked with shirts and water bottles and pins. There’s a plushie. A plushie. Of him.
You pause, granola bar halfway to your basket.
A kid next to you picks up the Invincible water bottle and turns to his mom. “Do you think he drinks from this too?”
You visibly clench your jaw.
At that exact moment, your phone dings.
You pull it out with the practiced grace of someone who lives and dies by their calendar app—only to find a suggested article on your lock screen.
’Why Invincible Might Be the Most Relatable Hero Yet!’
You could scream.
Instead, you mutter, “I patched up his concussion while inhaling drywall dust. He was seeing double and still arguing with me.”
The cashier stares at you.
You move on.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
The final straw?
A patient brings him up.
Middle of a wound check, nothing dramatic. A few stitches, topical numbing, your hands moving on autopilot. You’re explaining aftercare, bandage changes, when the patient—maybe fifteen, maybe sixteen—smiles at you and says:
“You kinda remind me of Invincible, y’know? Like, you’re calm under pressure and.. kind of badass.”
You blink.
Smile politely. “Cool.”
Inside, your soul shrivels.
You are not him.
You don’t throw punches. You don’t fly. You don’t have a theme song or fan cams or merchandise.
You have an overtime shift on Sunday and a stress knot in your shoulder that’s starting to feel like a second spine.
But the universe doesn’t care.
You’re not obsessed.
You just can’t escape.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
Mark doesn’t remember your face.
Not clearly, anyway.
The smoke had blurred the details, painted you in silhouettes and urgency. You weren’t the loudest voice in the chaos—just the sharpest. Crisp, cutting, sure of yourself in a way that made his head spin more than the actual concussion.
But your voice?
He remembers that like it’s stitched into the inside of his skull.
Low. Stern. Half-sarcastic and half-soothing. It sounded like someone who didn’t have time for bullshit, which—given the circumstances—made sense.
He was bleeding from the ribs. The city was literally burning.
Still, the memory echoes:
“Don’t say fine.”
“You’re favoring your left.”
“You shouldn’t be flying.”
Mark exhales hard, slumping deeper into the worn couch. The TV’s on but silent. Some old action movie flickers in the corner of his vision. It’s supposed to be background noise.
But nothing is loud enough to drown you out.
He doesn’t know your name.
Doesn’t know what you do, where you’re from, if you even survived the aftermath unscathed.
All he knows is that you made him feel—briefly, dangerously—human.
Not a symbol. Not a name in headlines. Just a guy who was bleeding too much and doing too little.
And he can’t stop hearing you.
“You’re zoning out again,” Debbie says from the kitchen.
Mark flinches, barely registering the sound of the fridge opening.
“Sorry. Just tired.”
Debbie hums skeptically and tosses him a cold can of soda. “You’ve said that every day this week.”
“I am tired.”
“You’re also muttering to yourself like a haunted Victorian widow. Anything I should know?”
Mark cracks the can open with unnecessary force.
He doesn’t answer right away. Just stares ahead like the wall is going to give him divine guidance.
“I met someone,” he says finally.
Debbie doesn’t react. Just leans against the counter, raising a perfectly arched brow. “Okay. And?”
“She yelled at me.”
Still silence.
“And I haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since.”
There it is.
Debbie snorts into her cup. “That’s it? That’s what’s got you acting like a sad poet?”
He shifts. “It’s not just that. She—she saw right through me. In like, five seconds. Called out every injury I hadn’t processed yet. Told me I wasn’t fine before I could even lie about it.”
“And this was… romantic?”
“No!” Mark frowns. “I don’t even know what it was. I don’t know anything about her. I couldn’t even see her face.”
“Okay, now it’s giving Victorian ghost story.”
“She saved a kid.”
Debbie blinks.
“In the middle of it all. Ran straight into debris and smoke. People tried to stop her and she looked at me like I was the liability.”
He doesn’t mention the way your hands shook but never stopped moving. Or the way you lied—beautifully, horribly—just to keep that child alive a few seconds longer.
He doesn’t mention how it made something in his chest ache.
“She sounds amazing,” Debbie says, more gently now.
“She was,” he mutters. “And now she’s just… gone.”
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
The thing is, Mark’s not usually like this.
He gets hit, he gets up. He saves people, and he moves on. Faces blur. Names fade. It’s how he copes.
But this? This isn’t fading.
It’s getting worse.
He’ll be flying over the city and see a flash of hair that looks vaguely like yours—and he’ll nearly crash into a billboard turning to check. His neck has started clicking. He’s going to need chiropractic help and therapy.
He doesn’t even know you, but he’s half-convinced he’ll know when he sees you again.
He’s waiting for it.
And that thought alone is ridiculous.
Because he doesn’t wait. Not for danger. Not for hope. Not for anyone.
Except now, apparently, for you.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
More than once, he’s hovered outside hospitals and urgent care clinics on patrol. Just a few seconds. Just in case.
He makes excuses for it, of course:
• You never know when you might be needed.
• Some med centers don’t have enough security.
• Maybe he’s being responsible.
But then he hears a nurse’s laugh and it isn’t yours.
And he flies off like a coward.
Not even a few minutes later there’s a robbery in Midtown.
Small-time. Two guys. One has a crowbar. The other trips over his shoelace trying to run.
Mark’s on it in sixty seconds flat.
It’s easy—should be, anyway—but his timing’s off. He lands too hard, shoulder twinges wrong. The guy gets one good swing in before Mark sends him flying (not too far).
It’s done in under a minute.
And still—he’s breathless. Not from the fight, but from the feeling.
The missing.
The what if you’d seen that and thought I was sloppy kind of missing.
He doesn’t say anything as he lifts the guy’s dropped phone and hands it off to the store clerk. They thank him. He nods.
Flies away.
He doesn’t go far.
Just lands on some apartment roof, crouches by the ledge, and lets his hands tangle in his hair for a minute.
The city stretches below him, loud and alive.
But all he wants to find is a blur in the chaos that isn’t there.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
Later that night, he lies in bed, eyes wide open, staring at the ceiling like it might offer closure.
It doesn’t.
It’s just drywall and shadows and everything you saw through.
His notebook lies half-open next to him—not forgotten, just untouched, like a question he doesn’t know how to answer yet.
It’s not a journal—he doesn’t do feelings that way—but sometimes, when his head’s too loud and his hands need something to do, he sketches. Nothing fancy. Just lines. Shapes. Impressions.
Tonight, it’s you.
Or, what he remembers of you. Which isn’t much.
Your face is a blur. Hair? A vague impression. Maybe dark. Maybe not. But your hands—he remembers those. Quick, steady, smudged with ash. Your posture. How you stood slightly in front of the child like a shield, chin up, like fear was something for other people.
He’s drawn the same half-profile six times now. None of them are right.
He sighs, drags a hand through his hair, and flips the page over.
Maybe he’s not trying to get it right.
Maybe he just doesn’t want to forget.
He closes his eyes.
But the voice stays with him.
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⋆ ˚。⋆ ˖⁺‧₊˚❤️🔥˚₊‧⁺˖ ⋆ ˚。⋆
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌Clinic break room. You. Tired.
You sneeze—violently.
Again.
You rub your nose with the heel of your palm, the tip of it already reddish from overuse, and a dramatic groan leaves your throat as you sink into the unforgiving plastic chair.
“This is some kind of karmic punishment,” you mutter to no one in particular. “Like, I must’ve offended a witch. Or touched something cursed.”
“Maybe you’re getting sick,” offers a random nurse from across the room.
You glare at her. “I’m immune to sickness.”
Then of course, Carla appears behind you, perfectly timed as always.
“Maybe someone’s thinking about you,” she says, casual as rain, not even glancing your way before walking off.
You blink. Deadpan.
Then sneeze again.
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taglist sign up: 𓉘here𓉝
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
Omni!Mark Grayson x Cupid!Reader➶
•♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡˚₊‧ ꒰ა 💗 ໒꒱ ‧₊˚♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡•
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❤︎ summary: after defying a divine directive and choosing mercy over order, you—a cupid built not to feel—fall from the realm and crash into a world you don’t belong to. wingless and exiled, you land on a planet bruised by war, grief, and something worse: apathy. but one figure watches your descent. he’s not a hero. not a god. just a man turned monster, carrying the weight of a planet he helped destroy. you were made to spark love. he was made to conquer. so why can’t he walk away?
❤︎ contains: sfw. celestial mythology. lonely immortals. slow-burn dynamics. post-war emotional fallout. deconstruction of love as a weapon/tool. and a wingless cupid with a cracked heart and a crooked smile.
❤︎ warnings: emotional manipulation (brief). themes of exile and identity loss. canon-typical violence references (omni-mark’s past). light blood/injury mentions. quiet existential grief. soft heartbreak. and the inconvenient ache of wanting to be wanted.
❤︎ wc: 4454
prologue, part one
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: i wanted to write something aching. something soft and sharp and too pink in all the wrong places. this is my love letter to the ones who were built to help others but never expected to be helped. to the hopeless romantics. to the heartsworn. if you’ve ever looked for your own thread and found nothing but empty space—i see you. let’s fall together.
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﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
Before time had a name, there was love.
And before love had rules, there were those who enforced them.
You were one of them.
Cupids were never born in the way humans or any other beings are.
There was no crying, no clutching warmth, no heartbeat against heartbeat. You weren’t given to anyone—because in your world, nothing is ever truly given. It’s assigned.
And you were assigned to love.
Long before your first breath—or what could even be counted as a breath—your existence was stitched together with rose-gold thread and spun into something soft.
Something radiant. Something shaped to serve.
The Realm of Threads didn’t believe in accidents. It believed in connection.
Harmony. Devotion.
These were your first lessons—woven not from stories, but from structure. From a place built not to feel love, but to uphold it.
Cupids, as humans might call them, are not gods. They are not angels. They are not the chubby, winged caricatures drawn on glossy cards each February.
They are constructs.
Beings built from emotion itself, shaped by the pulse of the universe and tasked with one divine, inescapable truth: make them fall in love.
All of them.
Every soul in every world is marked by a thread—red, golden, soft, or shining. Invisible to most. Tangible only to your kind. And where those threads exist, your kind follows.
Weaving. Binding. Mending.
You never asked why. You were taught never to ask why.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
In your realm, the sky is made of lace.
Not literal lace—but that’s what it looks like, with its rippling tapestry of lights and longing.
You drifted through it as a child, surrounded by other Cupids—silent, graceful, unwavering. They didn’t speak unless they had to. Words wasted time. Emotion was observed, not expressed.
You were the odd one out almost immediately.
You giggled when you shouldn’t have. You sang with no rhythm. You watched humans too closely, too curiously. You wondered what it felt like to be kissed—not as a target, not as a mission—but as something wanted.
The Supervisors said your strings were too tight.
They meant your emotions.
You cared too much. Thought too hard. Dreamed in colors that didn’t belong to you.
But you were a prodigy, so they didn’t clip your wings. Not then. They praised your precision, your instincts. You’d never missed a target. Not once.
But love, you would learn, is only beautiful when it behaves.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
You were trained before you ever knew what training meant.
In the Realm of Threads, there is no childhood. Not in the way humans define it. There are no lullabies, no scraped knees, no tumbling laughter in the grass. There is structure. There is schooling.
There is silence.
You were given a pod—not a room, not a bed. A pod. Sterile and softly lit, humming faintly with emotional frequency.
It pulsed with the echoes of distant connections: engagements, kisses, heartbreak, soulmates colliding on foreign soil.
It was meant to teach you. Not to feel—but to understand what feeling looks like.
Your first lessons weren’t in numbers or words. They were in observation.
Screens stretched across your wall like windows into other realms. Every second of every day, you watched humans love each other. Fumble and flourish. Make mistakes. Fix them. You learned the cadence of confession, the stillness before a first kiss, the ache of waiting by a phone that wouldn’t ring.
You took notes.
You practiced on simulations. Shadow versions of real people, constructed for training. They were emotion puppets—coded to respond, to mimic the human condition, but never feel it.
You pulled their strings like a composer, conducting the perfect crescendo of a meet-cute or a second chance.
And you were so good at it.
Even the elder Cupids, old as planetary rotations, took notice.
They called you “Silken.”
They called you “True-Handed.”
They said your instincts were woven with clarity few possessed.
But even then—you knew something was wrong.
Because love wasn’t clean. It wasn’t predictable. It wasn’t math.
You saw it in the gaps between the simulations—in the real footage, in the stolen glances and unsent letters.
Love was messy.
And you weren’t allowed to say that.
So instead, you smiled. You bowed your head. You aced your assignments. And when it was finally time to receive your bow—the instrument that would mark you as a field Cupid, ready to enter the human realm—you let them place it in your hands like a crown.
Ceremonial. Divine. Cold.
Your wings fluttered for the first time that day. Not from pride. From something else.
Restlessness.
Because you weren’t sure you wanted to be part of this system.
But you’d been shaped for it. And in the Realm of Threads, shape is everything.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
They say Cupids don’t feel the way humans do. But if that were true—why did it ache?
You never had a red string.
That was the first thing you noticed.
You saw them everywhere—thread-thin, glowing like veins of fire across the fabric of reality. Around wrists, through hearts, tied in impossible loops from continent to continent, galaxy to galaxy. Red. Gold. Silver.
Some pulsed softly. Some burned bright. Some frayed at the ends—doomed to break.
But you?
You had none.
You looked. Every year. Every cycle. Every mirror.
And there was never one waiting for you.
The instructors said it was proof of your purpose.
You were meant to love, not to be loved.
Cupids didn’t need soulmates. You were the threads—not what they tied together.
But still, when you were alone in your pod—your crown-glass screen humming with soft simulations—you sometimes wrapped a ribbon around your own finger and pretended.
Just for a moment. Just to feel what it might be like to belong to someone.
To be chosen.
To be someone’s reason.
You told no one.
Cupids weren’t supposed to pretend.
Not about that.
You always grinned too brightly. Talked too much. Got too close to the humans you helped.
You asked too many questions.
Why this couple? Why that connection? Why did heartbreak sometimes look so much like love?
You weren’t supposed to wonder. You were supposed to execute. Deliver arrows. Create outcomes. Adjust the threads.
But you liked watching after the mission was done.
You stayed longer than you should have. Saw the way people clung to one another. Fought. Forgave. Grieved. Moved on. Sometimes, even when the threads said they wouldn’t.
And worse—you started to feel happy for them.
Genuinely.
Not in the approved, detached sense of “mission accomplished,” but like… something warm bloomed in your chest just watching two people choose each other.
One day you told another Cupid—casually, as if it was no big thing—that it must feel nice to be loved like that.
She looked at you like you were malfunctioning. Reported you. Quietly.
You were summoned for evaluation.
They used soft words. Nothing cruel—just… firm.
“Attachment undermines your clarity.”
“You’ve been too immersed in lower realms.”
“Emotional mimicry is a known side effect. You’ll adjust.”
You didn’t adjust.
You just learned how to lie better.
You laughed louder. You perfected your posture. You earned the nickname Heartsworn, and everyone said it with admiration.
But you felt empty most days.
Like a thread that had never been tied.
And it gnawed at you, that emptiness—because you were built to help others find connection.
So why did it feel like you’d never have your own?
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
It happened on a world not so different from Earth.
Small. Blue. Quiet in the way only dying stars can make a planet feel.
The threads there were thin. Brittle. Nearly broken.
It needed love desperately. That’s why they sent you.
Because you never missed. Because your aim was perfect. Because you were the shining example—the “Heartsworn,” the favorite, the infallible.
And at first, it was routine.
Two beings. Two threads. One frayed at the end, knotted tight around grief. The other hesitant, flickering. Their paths crossed in a way that felt almost poetic—a shared umbrella. An open bookstore. A laugh like recognition.
You hovered above them, bow pulsing in your palm.
A clean shot. Two arrows. One for each.
But then something shifted.
The woman—your target—she looked up at the man, eyes tired but tender. And the way he looked back… like he was remembering how to breathe.
And you saw it.
She had already loved him.
It hadn’t been forced. It hadn’t been orchestrated. No divine architecture. No thread pulling them forward.
Just… choice.
Human, messy, miraculous choice.
You hesitated.
And that’s all it took.
Your bow trembled in your hands. Not from error—but from resistance.
Because for the first time—you didn’t want to interfere. You didn’t want to force it.
You wanted to let them be.
You lowered your weapon.
And then—because you were soft, and reckless, and maybe stupid in the eyes of the Supervisors—you spoke to her.
She didn’t see you. Not clearly. Just a shimmer in the corner of her eye. But you whispered anyway.
“You don’t need help. You already chose him.”
The words weren’t authorized. Your presence was meant to be undetectable. You were not allowed to alter the script.
But you did.
And for a moment—nothing happened.
Then the red thread between them sparked. Bright. Violent. Uncontrolled.
It burned itself into existence. Without your arrow. Without divine sanction.
And they kissed.
Not because you told them to.
Because they wanted to.
Your lips curled into a soft smile.
You didn’t regret it.
But the moment you returned to the Realm of Threads, you knew something was wrong.
The lights were dimmed.
The supervisors were waiting.
No lectures. No trials.
Just one sentence.
“You interfered.”
You opened your mouth to defend yourself—but the guards were already reaching for your wings.
You’d heard what it sounded like.
The sound of ripping. The way it cuts deeper than bone.
But you’d never imagined it would hurt like this.
Your knees hit the lace-floor. Your mouth stayed silent.
You didn’t scream.
Not because it didn’t hurt—but because they wanted you to.
And maybe, just maybe, you wanted to take that from them.
Dignity, you told yourself.
Dignity is all I have left.
You were told you would not be recycled. You were too “contaminated.” Too unstable. A bad example.
So instead—they exiled you.
You didn’t get to ask where.
Just a flash of cold light—
And then the sound of wind.
Falling.
Alone.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
You hit the ground hard.
Not like a leaf drifting. Not with grace. Not with poise. Not like the Cupids in the stories.
Like a comet.
A streak of light through an unfamiliar sky, dragging heat and ache in your wake.
You didn’t black out right away—but you almost wished you had.
Because the first thing you felt wasn’t the crash. Wasn’t the way your ribs seized or the way your shoulder twisted beneath your fall.
It was the space between your wings.
The hollow.
The absence.
You gasped.
Air—not laced with threadlight, not humming with frequency, just air—rushed into your lungs like punishment.
You curled onto your side, dirt grinding into the soft parts of you. Wet grass clung to your skin. The sky above was wrong—blue, yes, but so still. No shimmering frequencies. No glowing red filaments. Just clouds, soft and slow.
You were somewhere real.
Somewhere unmarked.
Somewhere alone.
It wasn’t the pain that made you want to cry.
It was the quiet.
Because back home—even when you were alone in your pod, even when no one looked at you—there was always something.
The buzz of love blooming. The echo of longing. The soft, constant pull of other people’s threads, humming just outside your senses.
But now?
Nothing.
It was gone.
You sat up slowly.
And then immediately flopped back down with a tiny, theatrical groan.
“Ouchie,” you mumbled to no one, voice breathy and soft and definitely not pained—because no, you were totally fine. Just a bit… stunned. And mildly bleeding. And definitely wingless.
But you were smiling. Kind of. Maybe.
Okay, so it trembled a little at the edges.
“I’ve had worse landings,” you said aloud—which was a lie. You’d never landed before. You’d always floated.
You tried again, slowly, every nerve screaming. Your knees trembled. Your arms buckled. You caught yourself on the soft slope of a hill, hands sinking into wildflowers and moss.
You blinked down at them.
Yellow, pink, violet. Stubbornly bright.
They looked like something out of a simulation.
They weren’t.
They were real.
Your mouth twisted.
Of course you landed in a field of flowers. Of course.
You laughed.
It came out cracked and hoarse. Almost a sob.
Because everything hurt, and everything was still spinning, and you had no idea where you were, and no one was coming for you, and—
No.
No, you weren’t going to cry. You weren’t.
Cupids didn’t cry.
Even clipped ones.
Even broken ones.
Even ones bleeding into someone else’s sky.
Still, you tried to push yourself up, wobbling on legs that hadn’t had to support you since your designation. It felt wrong. Heavy. Like gravity had teeth and it didn’t trust you. You teetered. Fell to your knees again.
And giggled.
Which also trembled a little.
“I meant to do that.”
You dusted imaginary dirt from your imaginary uniform and gave an exaggerated little curtsy to the empty air.
No one clapped. Rude.
You dragged yourself to your feet.
Shaky. Awkward. Wobbly in a way you hadn’t felt in cycles. The Realm of Threads taught you to float everywhere. Gliding was cleaner. More efficient. Less emotional.
You hadn’t really walked since childhood simulations.
The ground felt weird under your feet. Solid. Gritty.
Your bow was still intact. Miraculously. You hugged it close like a stuffed toy, curling in on yourself for a moment, letting the quiet press into your bones.
You could still feel it.
That place between your shoulders—where your wings had been. Like a ghost limb. Like something sacred had been carved out of you and left a silence behind.
You hated it.
But you kept moving.
Maybe—if you helped someone on this world—someone would come back for you. Maybe if you just kept doing your job, proved you were still useful, still good, they’d rewind the exile.
Reattach what they’d taken.
Please.
You stumbled once. Then again. Then face-planted into a patch of daisies with a grunt so undignified you groaned into the soil.
“Get it together,” you mumbled into the grass.
You pushed yourself back up. Sat on your knees for a second. Took a breath.
You didn’t know how long you wandered after that.
Minutes? Hours? You lost time in the way only the heartbroken can.
It got dark fast.
The sky burned gold, then violet, then black. Stars blinked overhead—foreign constellations, wrong patterns.
You were still limping through the field when the noise came.
A whoosh.
Sharp. Cutting. Like something splitting the air in half.
You froze.
Turned slowly.
And then—saw him.
Not a blur. A shape. Coming toward you like a storm with legs.
You only had a second to register what was coming at you: tall, fast, red and white—a storm in the shape of a man. And a scowl, carved from thunderclouds.
Flying.
He was flying.
You squinted.
Not a Cupid. Definitely not a Cupid.
A human?
No.
No, he felt… too much.
You didn’t have your thread-sight anymore, but you could still feel.
Emotions. Echoes.
He felt like gravity.
Like something that had no business coming closer—and was doing it anyway.
He landed hard. Just a few feet away.
Harder than you had. The ground splintered beneath his feet, shockwaves rippling out in a perfect ring. Dust and wildflowers burst upward like a gasp. He stood there for a beat—motionless.
And you… just stared.
Red suit. White accents. Red cape. Black goggles like midnight slicing across his face. He didn’t glow. He didn’t shine. He loomed.
His presence felt like gravity doubled—like the world bowed to his weight and dared not rise again.
You blinked at him slowly. Then offered a tiny wave.
“Hi.”
Silence.
He didn’t move.
You glanced behind you like maybe he was staring at someone else, but no—those mirrored goggles were fixed on you.
“Hiii,” you tried again, voice cheerier. “Okay, so I know this looks weird. But I promise I’m not here to hurt anyone! Unless, um. You count your planet’s gravitational field. Which did kinda kick my butt—ow.”
No reaction. His posture didn’t shift. You had a sudden, vivid mental image of being vaporized.
“I’m just passing through!” you rushed, hands up. “A… a tourist! On a very involuntary vacation!”
Still nothing.
Well, maybe not nothing—he was breathing.
Barley.
His voice, when it came, was sharp enough to slice open a planet.
“You’re not human.”
Your grin faltered for a second before rebounding, like a rubber band that’s been snapped too many times.
“Nope. Not even a little bit! But I’m very human adjacent in a lot of ways! I’ve watched a lot of rom-coms and I know how to do a proper hug—although full disclosure, I might fall over during it because of the whole… clipped wings situation.”
His jaw tightened. His eyes—hidden though they were—felt like twin drills boring into the softest parts of you.
“Why are you here?”
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Then plastered on a sheepish smile.
“That’s kind of a long story,” you admitted, voice dipping softer now. “The short version is… I got kicked out of my hom—my realm. For caring too much.”
Something flickered across his face. Brief. Gone before you could catch it.
“And now,” you continued, tone brightening again as you gestured to the wildflower field like a very proud but slightly concussed game show host, “I’m here! In… wherever here is. Honestly, it’s pretty. Good flowers. Ten out of ten. Bit of a rough welcome, but I’ve had worse.”
“You’re bleeding.”
Your hand drifted unconsciously to your back, fingertips brushing the jagged place where wings used to rise.
You shrugged. “It’s mostly cosmetic.”
He said nothing. Just stared.
You took a step forward—then immediately lost your balance and fell face-first into a patch of daisies.
There was a beat of silence. Then two. Then three.
And then—so faint you thought you imagined it—you heard the faintest exhale of breath from the man in red and white.
Not a laugh.
But maybe the ghost of one.
You rolled onto your back and grinned up at the stars.
“See?” you said, voice light. “I’m great at making first impressions.”
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
The second he saw you, he didn’t trust you.
Not because you looked dangerous. No—you didn’t. You were crumpled in a bed of wildflowers, wobbling like a broken marionette and smiling like someone had painted joy over grief and hoped no one would notice the cracks.
But that was exactly why he didn’t trust you.
People didn’t fall from the sky and grin. Not here. Not anywhere. Not anymore.
So he hovered, silent, watching you crawl upright like you didn’t know how to use your own legs. Like the planet was something foreign. Like gravity was something new.
That wasn’t normal.
He’d seen a lot of things in a lot of universes—false gods, black holes, men split into fractions of themselves—but this? A girl with stardust on her skin and nothing in her hands but a bow? That was new.
He landed hard. On purpose. Let the ground feel him.
You flinched. Not at the sound—at the silence that followed it.
And then you looked up.
Big eyes. Bare feet. Mouth bleeding at the corner, but curved like you hadn’t noticed. Or didn’t care.
And then—
“Hi.”
Like you hadn’t just fallen from orbit.
He didn’t speak.
“Hiii,” you tried again, softer. “Okay, so I know this looks weird. But I promise I’m not here to hurt anyone! Unless, um. You count your planet’s gravitational field. Which did kinda kick my butt—ow.”
Still he said nothing.
He didn’t move.
He watched.
Measured.
Assessed.
You were glowing at the edges—not visibly—but in some low, stubborn frequency. Like the kind of candle you couldn’t blow out even after you’d shattered the holder.
It irritated him.
He spoke without meaning to.
“You’re not human.”
You beamed, wounded and bright. “Nope! Not even a little bit!”
You kept talking. Rambling. Fumbling your way through some patchwork lie about tourism and rom-coms and wings—clipped, apparently.
He didn’t interrupt.
Didn’t need to.
He was looking for something. A tell. A crack.
“Why are you here?”
That stopped you.
Just a second. Barely.
But it was enough.
Your grin shrank. Eyes dipped. Voice turned soft.
“That’s kind of a long story. The short version is… I got kicked out of my hom—my realm. For caring too much.”
That flickered something inside him.
He crushed it before it could breathe.
He didn’t do soft. He didn’t do “caring.” That was the problem with the others. They hesitated. Thought. He didn’t. That’s why he survived.
So why was he still here?
Why wasn’t he flying away?
Why hadn’t he broken you in half the moment you lied?
You stepped forward. Tripped. Fell face-first into a clump of flowers like a deer learning how to walk for the first time.
He didn’t flinch, but he exhaled—just once. Quiet. Almost amused.
You rolled onto your back and smiled at the stars.
“See? I’m great at making first impressions.”
He hated how you said it.
Like it mattered.
Like someone out here was still capable of being good.
He walked toward you.
You didn’t run. You didn’t crawl away. You sat there, hands splayed out behind you, watching him like you weren’t sure if he was going to help you up or crush your skull.
Smart.
He stopped in front of you.
Tilted his head.
“I should kill you.”
Your eyes widened, but you didn’t move. “You could. You really could. But I’d prefer we didn’t start there?”
“Then give me one reason not to.”
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Looked up at him like you were weighing the clouds.
“I don’t have one.”
He stared.
You continued.
“I mean—I don’t know if I’m important. I don’t have a secret code or an army or even a sandwich right now. But…”
You reached up, touching your back—where the blood had dried, sticky and shimmering.
“But I used to be someone. I used to help people fall in love. And maybe that doesn’t matter to you—but it mattered to them.”
There was a silence.
He wasn’t sure what he expected you to say.
But it wasn’t that.
He should leave.
He should fly away and chalk you up to another anomaly.
Instead, he said:
“Can you still do it?”
You blinked. “Do what?”
“Make people love.”
Your lips curled up. Slowly. Sadly. “I don’t know.”
Another pause.
You were watching him too closely now. Like you were trying to read a string that wasn’t there.
“You’re not really from here either,” you said softly. “Are you?”
He didn’t answer.
Didn’t have to.
You already knew.
“Are you gonna hurt me?” you asked.
He looked at you, at the way your voice didn’t tremble, even though your body did.
And for once—he told the truth.
“I don’t know.”
You nodded.
“Fair.”
Then you reached up and offered your hand.
Not in fear. Not in desperation.
Just… like someone who was used to offering something and not getting it taken.
He didn’t take it.
But he didn’t crush it either.
He looked past you—at the dark hills, the useless stars, the broken silence.
After conquering this place and killing his father—he didn’t know what this planet was anymore.
Didn’t care.
But he had nowhere else to be. Not anymore.
He turned.
Walked.
And when he didn’t tell you to stay—
You followed.
Not too close.
Just… close enough.
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˗ˏˋ 𝓴𝓲𝓼𝓼 𝓶𝒆 ˎˊ˗
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Once, you were small. Once, you believed everything they told you.
Your first robe was the color of a peach blossom.
It shimmered when you turned, sleeves brushing the floor, too big for your arms and still perfect in every way. You’d never worn something so soft.
You twirled three times in front of the mirror, arms out like wings, giggling because everything felt light.
“You look very neat,” said one of the elder Cupids, gliding past with a clipboard. “Remember to keep your posture upright when you’re selected for observation.”
“I will!” you promised, standing taller.
The robe swished when you walked. You liked that. It made you feel important. Like you were finally what they said you would be—purposeful.
Part of something big.
You didn’t understand everything yet, but that didn’t matter.
You were going to be a Cupid.
And Cupids were good.
“Today,” said another instructor, voice warm and practiced, “you’ll learn about threads.”
You beamed. Sat up straighter. Listened with all your heart.
“Every being has a thread,” they explained, conjuring a floating hologram that flickered softly through the training chamber. “They wrap around us, tie us to our people. See?”
The threads shimmered—red, gold, silver, glowing like starlight.
You gasped. It was so pretty. It made your chest feel warm.
“You’ll help people find each other,” the instructor went on. “You’ll guide their steps. Fix what’s frayed. Strengthen what’s fragile.”
“I can do that!” you blurted.
A few other young Cupids turned to look at you, but you didn’t care. Your legs were swinging off the floating bench and your hands were already up.
“I wanna do the red ones,” you said proudly. “Those are the soulmate ones, right?”
The instructor smiled. So gently. Like they were talking to someone a little slow, but very sweet.
“Oh, darling,” they said. “You don’t get one.”
You blinked.
“Huh?”
“You won’t have a red thread,” they said again, same caring voice, same soft smile. “Cupids don’t get them.”
You frowned. “But… we’re people too?”
“No,” they said kindly. “You’re not.”
Another Cupid, older, came to kneel beside you. Their hair was smooth. Their smile too perfect.
“You’re something better,” they told you. “You were made for love. You don’t need to be in it.”
“But—” you started.
“We give it,” the first instructor interrupted gently. “That’s your gift.”
You hesitated.
“But doesn’t anyone ever want us back?” you asked in a small voice.
The instructor’s smile didn’t change.
“No one has ever asked that before.”
You blinked. Sat very still.
They stood again.
“Alright, little hearts,” the elder said, clapping once. “Time for simulation prep. Let’s learn how to listen when a thread hums.”
Everyone got up.
You did too.
You smiled. Because they smiled. Because everyone around you looked so sure, so peaceful, so right.
You didn’t want to be the wrong one.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
ᯓ❤︎ requested by: @lycheee-jelly
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
Mark Grayson x Med!Reader♡ྀི
….ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨.ـ…
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⛨ summary: you’re here to teach, not manage a walking concussion with charm issues. but he keeps looking at you like you hung the stars—and asking questions like you owe him answers. it’s temporary. it’s professional. it’s absolutely not personal. right?
⛨ contains: sfw. slow tension. hospital-grade sarcasm. emotional constipation. accidental pining. reader being done™. mark being so not subtle. vending machine cameos. background bureaucracy.
⛨ warnings: mild language. cecil stedman. lingering looks. golden retriever energy. mild secondhand embarrassment. one scalpel-related flirtation if you squint.
⛨ wc: 2839
prologue, part one, part two
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a/n: honorable mention to donald for surviving government-grade stress, doing 99% of the admin work and getting 0% of the appreciation. chapter three is happening. probably. don’t look at me like that.
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The hum of fluorescent lights should’ve blended into the background by now. So should the low thrum of activity—boots echoing against concrete, the shuffle of files, hushed conversations between medics and masked vigilantes. But somehow, everything still feels a little too loud.
Maybe it’s the migraine brewing behind your eyes. Maybe it’s the fact that he won’t stop staring at you.
You shift your weight, cross your arms, and resolutely pretend you don’t notice.
That Invincible is standing three feet to your left, burning a hole through the side of your head with an intensity that shouldn’t be allowed from someone who wears goggles.
You’ve been ignoring him for seven minutes and counting.
You’ve acknowledged literally everything else in this sterile, underground chaos bunker—someone called Sea Salt (you can’t be bothered to care enough to remember properly) pacing in the background, a superhero with a dislocated shoulder yelling about insurance coverage, the world’s most suspicious vending machine—but not him.
And still, he stares.
You exhale slowly. Sharply turn your head.
He flinches like you threw something at him.
“Can I help you?”
The words are flat, clipped. The tone you use when a patient insists they know better because they once watched half an episode of ’Grey’s Anatomy’.
Invincible stammers. Actually stammers, like he doesn’t know what to do now that you talked back.
Your brows lift. “You’ve been standing there like an underpaid mall cop—gaping at me like I’m the last donut at a police briefing. Do you mind?”
He fumbles for a reply. You regret asking immediately.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
A few days earlier.
You were on your fourth cup of coffee and hour three of mid-insomnia spiraling when the email came in.
A subject line so vague it practically screamed delete me.
“URGENT: National Heroic Outreach Program — Personnel Request.”
It sounded like someone stitched together LinkedIn buzzwords with a glue stick and a dream.
You almost deleted it without opening. Fingers already moving to close the laptop.
And that’s when your eye caught the numbers.
A full contract breakdown, bolded in crisp font at the bottom of the message. Enough zeroes to make your exhausted brain glitch.
You squinted. Re-read. Laughed.
Then read it again.
Field medics, trauma therapists, stabilization specialists…
Working directly alongside sanctioned heroic units. Teaching them.
Short-term. High risk. Higher pay.
You were already muttering “absolutely not” as you clicked Reply.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
And now here you are.
In the middle of a hidden operations center that smells faintly of iodine and military-grade deodorant, trying to keep your expression neutral while Invincible looks at you like you invented sunlight.
You narrow your eyes.
“Seriously man. What is your problem?”
“I don’t have a problem,” he says almost too quickly. “I just…”
Didn’t think I’d ever hear you again—he wants to say, but the words die in his throat.
You groan like a middle-aged man.
“Fine, whatever—keep your staring fetish a secret. But you’re still in my space.”
And somehow, despite the sarcasm, despite the walls you’re already rebuilding brick by brick—he smiles. Like you just handed him a sunrise.
Weirdo.
The silence stretches.
Finally—finally—he stops staring. You can feel it.
Like the sun setting. Like freedom on the breeze. You don’t know what bliss tastes like, but you’re pretty sure it’s this exact moment.
Invincible turns his head. Doesn’t say a word. For the first time in almost ten minutes, you can breathe.
The air tastes clearer. Your shoulders lower half an inch. You feel like Eren Yeager looking out at the ocean, finally glimpsing the other side of the fence—finally, the taste of freedom.
You close your eyes, let your arms fall just a bit looser, and begin to reach for that fragile, sacred—
“So… what’s your name?”
You shut your eyes tighter. Channel the serenity of that dog meme you saw once—some old lab basking in the light like he’s ascended to a higher plane. That’s you now. Resigned to whatever curse has chosen to follow you. Accepting the inevitable.
“…Hello?” he tries again.
You breathe in. Deep. Steady. And swallow a curse.
“It’s not important,” you finally say, voice flat.
He blinks.
“Uh—it kinda is? We’re working together, technically. It’s basic team-building. Knowing names builds trust. It’s psychologically proven—like in war movies or HR seminars. I feel like not knowing your name makes it hard to build rapport. Or connection. Or, you know, that dramatic tension where I save your life and you cry over me in slow motion.”
He’s rambling now.
You open one eye. He’s serious. Or, worse—he thinks he’s funny.
You tune him out.
Just completely power down. Close your eyes again, channel the dog meme—serene, resigned, ascended. Accepting your fate as a woman destined to be cornered by a golden retriever in a super suit.
But of course—of course—luck hates you.
Footsteps echo behind you. Measured. Heavy. Government-issued.
Invincible’s voice finally stops.
You open your eyes slowly, carefully.
Cecil Stedman stands a few feet away, looking like someone who’s been awake for forty-seven hours and hates it less than he hates incompetence.
He looks at the hero. Then at you. He exhales like he regrets every decision that’s led to this moment.
“Invincible,” Cecil says, deadpan. “It’s not your job to harass new personnel.”
You smile. A flicker of victory warms your chest.
But it’s short-lived.
“And you—” Cecil turns to you, voice sharp and gravel as he states your full name and last name, “…stop ignoring people when they’re trying to learn from you.”
Invincible’s head snaps up.
Your smile dies on impact.
“…yes, sir.”
You hate him now. Fully. With your entire soul. You will refer to this man as Sea Salt until the day you retire, but only behind his back (you have bills to pay).
Cecil nods. Done with this interaction.
“You’re both assigned to Medical Rotation C for the next three hours. Report to briefings on time, don’t destroy anything, and for the love of god—try not to bleed on each other.”
He turns and walks away like he didn’t just detonate a small emotional warhead and bounce.
You blink slowly.
The superhero grins. Way too close to you.
Invincible repeats your name. Softly. Like he’s trying it on. Like he’s going to wrap it around a sentence any second just to hear it out loud again.
You don’t look at him.
You stare at a crack in the ground and plot how to fake your own death.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
This is fine. Totally fine. No one has died yet.
Except maybe him. Internally. Repeatedly.
You’ve been working together for exactly twenty-three minutes and some change, and Mark is dangerously close to pulling a muscle from glancing at you too often.
It’s not subtle. He knows that. He’s just hoping you haven’t noticed yet.
Mark Grayson—Invincible, world-class puncher of bad guys and part-time public disaster—is on assignment. Medical rotation. One-on-one.
With you.
You haven’t said more than three words since you got here.
Okay—technically, it was four if you counted “Don’t touch that,” which he did. Emotionally. Spiritually. Like a prayer.
He glances sideways. Again. That’s… what? The fifteenth time?
You’re focused. Like laser-cut precision focused. You haven’t looked at him once since the briefing ended, and that alone is doing something catastrophic to his brain chemistry. Your sleeves are rolled up, fingers moving quickly as you sort through supplies and assess whatever half-broken med bay gear they shoved into this basement. And he—
Technically, he’s supposed to be learning. Technically.
He commits the angle of your jaw to memory. He might need to sketch it later. For science.
A cart wheel squeaks. He jumps.
Smooth. Reeeal smooth Mark.
Mark’s dropped the same tool twice. He’s reorganized the same three items five different ways. And when you leaned over earlier—just for a second—he forgot how to breathe.
He thinks he said something to you. Maybe. You didn’t respond.
You probably didn’t even hear him.
Which is fair. You’re working. This is work. He should be working too.
Instead, he’s cataloging every tiny thing about you like it’s the last time he’ll get to. The little crease between your brows when you concentrate. The way you tilt your head when you read a label. The way your lips move slightly when you mutter to yourself. It’s ridiculous. He knows it’s ridiculous. But it’s also—
He nearly knocks over a tray of syringes and freezes like a man in a minefield.
You just say, “Don’t,” without even looking up.
That’s it. One word. And he listens.
Like his soul has been stapled to your command.
He exhales slowly. Starts organizing gauze packets like they’re puzzle pieces and not the only thing keeping him from going absolutely feral with nervous energy.
You’re right there. You’re right there. And not in the middle of some catastrophic collapse or stopping someone’s bleeding from a stress wound. Just—here. Breathing the same recycled air. Wearing scrubs like they’re armor. Not looking at him.
Mark resists the urge to break something—anything—just to make you look at him.
He peeks again.
Yeah. Still perfect.
“Invincible.”
He startles.
You don’t even look at him. Just gesture vaguely at the scalpel in his hand. “That’s upside down.”
“…Right,” he mutters, flipping it. “Just testing you.”
“You failed.”
You don’t say it with heat. Not quite. But not nicely either.
He clears his throat and tries again, forcing himself to focus on literally anything that isn’t the fact that you’re within touching distance. That you smell like antiseptic and cheap gum. That you’re here, and for some reason—still kind of talking to him.
He wants to say something normal. Something clever. But everything that comes to mind sounds like it belongs in a YA novel or a fever dream.
Instead, he peeks at you again.
You don’t notice. Or maybe you do.
But you don’t look back.
And still—he grins.
Because this? Being close enough to reach, even if you never turn around?
It’s more than he thought he’d ever get.
It’s not enough.
Mark lied.
All that pretending—organizing, fixing, standing next to you for three and a half hours like it didn’t matter—like breathing the same air wasn’t scrambling his brain chemistry?
He thought it would be enough. Just this. Just being near you.
But now you’re packing up.
And suddenly, it’s not.
You toss a roll of gauze into your bag like it keyed your car in a past life. Peel off your gloves with the grace of someone absolutely done with today.
The neckline of your scrubs shifts when you move, collarbone catching the light, and he has to look away.
You’re leaving.
You’re actually leaving.
He thought he’d be okay with it. He’s not.
You stretch your neck like it’s stiff, roll your shoulders with a sigh, and Mark swears it’s the most captivating thing he’s ever seen.
Which is insane. It’s a shoulder roll.
But you’re doing it. And it’s happening five feet from him. And he doesn’t know when—or if—he’ll see you like this again.
Normal. Off guard. Not covered in ash and dust.
You zip your bag shut.
And that’s when panic hits him.
It spikes in his chest like a bad punch—jarring and immediate and almost embarrassing. Because if you walk out now, that’s it. You’ll vanish again. And he’ll be stuck wondering if he imagined all of this. You. The way you said his hero name like it was a dare.
His fingers twitch at his side.
He has no idea what he’s going to say.
He just knows he needs to say something before you’re gone.
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
You clear your throat. Loud enough to be polite. Dismissive enough to make a point.
“I’m done here.”
He blinks. “Oh. Yeah. Right.”
You wait for him to move. He doesn’t.
You arch a brow. “Door’s behind you.”
Invincible stares at you like you’ve just committed a federal crime. “You’re—leaving?”
You frown. “Yes? That’s what normal people do when the job is finished.”
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Frowns.
“I just—” The hero shifts, eyes darting anywhere but your face. “I figured we’d—maybe—uh, debrief?”
You blink.
He looks panicked now. “Not like a real debrief! I meant like… decompress? Debrief-light? Low-stakes post-mission rapport-building?”
You pause. Then snort. You can’t help it. It slips out before you can stop it.
He looks like he just won the lottery.
You sigh, slinging your bag over your shoulder. “If this is your way of asking to walk me out—”
“Yes.”
“…I didn’t finish.”
“Still yes.”
You stare.
He fidgets. “Is that okay?”
You hesitate for a breath. Then roll your eyes. “Fine. But if you get weird again, I’m tasering you.”
Invincible grins. “I’ve survived worse.”
٨ـﮩﮩ٨ﮩ_ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ෴ﮩ____
A few days later.
You look like shit.
Not in a poetic way. Not in a cool, morally-gray antiheroine way. Just in the deeply human, overworked, underpaid, sore-back, I-haven’t-slept-since-Tuesday kind of way.
The ER lights buzz too loud. The coffee machine’s broken again. There’s a spot on your scrubs that might be blood or ink or maybe just your will to live leaking out.
It’s a Tuesday. Maybe.
You’re half-asleep at the nurses’ station when Carla walks up with a folder. She chews her gum like it’s keeping her tethered to this plane of existence.
“Room 9’s yours.”
You blink up at her. “Seriously?”
Carla shrugs. “Guy’s already in there. Looks like he could pay off my student loans in one go, but what do I know. File’s clean. Probably just here to flirt or die. Those are the only two kinds we get.”
You sigh. Take the clipboard. Totally miss Carla’s knowing expression and lazily stroll down the hallway.
Your pen’s already clicking as you push through the long corridor, shoulder nudging the door open without thinking.
You flip through the back pages first—vitals, allergy list, something about minor lacerations. The usual.
The door clicks shut behind you as you scan the first page for the name.
“Mark Grayson…” you murmur, before finally looking up.
He’s already watching you.
Smile crooked. Sheepish. And oddly familiar.
You blink. Shake your head. Tap your pen once against the clipboard.
“…What can I do for you today?”
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
⋆ ˚。⋆ ˖⁺‧₊˚❤️🔥˚₊‧⁺˖ ⋆ ˚。⋆
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
Before the bunker. Before the clipboard. Just burnt coffee and bad timing.
The room smells of government-grade stress and poor decisions. Fluorescents hum overhead. Somewhere outside the door, someone’s arguing with a vending machine again.
Cecil Stedman doesn’t look up from the file in his hands.
Donald stands nearby, half-glancing over his shoulder like he’s expecting someone to call out his name and ruin his night any second now.
“I don’t need someone who wants to save the world,” Cecil mutters, flipping a page. “I need someone who knows how to keep it breathing long enough to do that.”
Donald doesn’t answer at first. Scrolls through his tablet with the dead-eyed speed of a man two cups past his caffeine limit.
Cecil drops the folder on the table.
“Her.”
Donald glances down. Sees your name. Frowns.
“She’s not exactly—uh, team-oriented.”
“Good.” Cecil leans back in his chair. “We don’t need another idealist who thinks CPR is optional. We need someone who’ll tell a cape to stop cauterizing wounds with laser vision.”
Donald shifts. “She’s got a record of pushing back on authority.”
“Yeah. So do I.” He picks up the file again, thumbs through it like he’s reading between the lines. “Field trauma specialist. Surgical certs. Five years ER, three years private contract, and one particularly colorful incident involving Invincible.”
Donald raises a brow. “You want her for the hero-medical crossover?”
“Yeah. Not full-time. Just this once.” He thumbs through the file again.
”She’s not exactly a fan of the spandex crowd.” Donald reminds him.
“Which is why she’s perfect.” Cecil taps the edge of the folder. “She doesn’t worship them. She knows how they break. And better—how to keep them from bleeding out on asphalt.”
Donald crosses his arms. “You really think she’ll say yes?”
Cecil shrugs. “Send the contract. Let the pay do the talking. If that doesn’t work… remind her how many heroes think gauze solves internal bleeding.”
A beat passes. Donald exhales slowly.
“We’re asking her to train them. Teach them medical response. Basics. Field aid without powers.”
“Exactly,” Cecil mutters, eyes back on the file. “We’ve got too many weapons and not enough medics. Time we taught the kids how to stop the bleeding before they cause it.”
“And you think she’ll go for it?”
“Temporary contract,” Cecil repeats simply. “Send the numbers. Dangle the autonomy. No long-term commitment, no spandex worship, just her and a bunch of capes learning how not to be idiots for a few hours.”
Donald nods once and turns to leave.
Cecil stays where he is, flipping back to the front of the file.
A photo clipped to the corner. Dark circles under your eyes. Expression flat. Hands gloved, steady.
Unimpressed with the world and clearly not afraid to let it know.
He smiles, just barely.
“Let’s hope she doesn’t kill anyone.”
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
ongoing TAGLIST: @pickledsoda @f3r4lfr0gg3r @bakugouswh0r3 @katkirishima @delusionalalien @bellelamoon @monaekelis @feminii @sketchlove @lilacoaks @cathuggnbear
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taglist sign up: 𓉘here𓉝
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
I love Afterglow so much! But would you care to indulge my curiosity? Do you imagine reader to be slightly older than Mark? I imagine to be in her mid- to early twenties bc of her expansive career in the medical field, though I'm only going by the impression that she only started working after graduating; unless she's been working for some time already? Idk how careers work ajkdshfldf
Mark Grayson x Med!Reader♡ྀི
…..ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ…..
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
AHHH first of all—thank you so much for the love on ”Afterglow”!! This is such a fun ask, and I’m honestly so happy someone’s curious enough about something to dive into it with me.
You’re feeding my writer ego. I hope you’re proud of yourself.
So! Let’s talk canon real quick (I’m letting out my inner nerd rn):
In the comics, Mark starts out at 17 years old, but he ages pretty fast—and by the midpoint (around where ”Afterglow” would be happening, give or take), he’s roughly 19–20 , depending on how closely you track the arcs.
He’s been through it (emotionally unwell, physically worse), and is already working full-time with Cecil, so we’re definitely not dealing with “freshman bio class” energy anymore.
The man is seasoned. In trauma.
If we were going by the animated series, though—it’s a little fuzzier.
Season two makes it clear he’s just recently turned 18, so if you’re seeing ”Afterglow” through a show-only lens, Reader might come off as a bit older. But that’s kind of the fun of it, right?
Different interpretations work depending on what canon you’re leaning into. Especially since she’s employed, competent, and not trying to flirt while holding a scalpel backwards.
(Unlike a certain someone in goggles.)
Also! In ”Afterglow”, Mark is still wearing that iconic yellow-blue disaster suit, which firmly locks the timeline into late Season 2-ish // early Season 3 vibes if we were following the showverse.
As for Reader? Yes—I do personally imagine her to be a bit older. Not by decades or anything, but enough to feel the difference. Maybe 21–23ish, depending on how chaotic and accelerated you want her backstory to be.
Either she’s a prodigy who skipped grades and sprinted into the trauma field, or she’s just a few years older with a no-nonsense attitude and a résumé that could legally intimidate a superhero.
She’s sharp, capable, and absolutely not here to babysit—which just makes Mark being utterly down bad for her even funnier.
Regardless, I love the dynamic of “older, exhausted professional woman” × “younger, slightly feral man with devotion issues.”
BUT! While ”Afterglow” is loosely grounded in comic canon (especially in tone and timeline), it’s very much doing its own thing.
The plot, pacing, and character dynamics all live in their own little sandbox. Nothing’s rigid. It’s vibes first, logic second. As it should be.
Hope that answers the curiosity!! And seriously—thank you again for caring about this chaotic little universe enough to ask.
I’m legally required to write more now.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: okay—not a new chapter (pause for dramatic disappointment), but if you’ve ever sat there wondering where exactly “afterglow” falls in the timeline or how old anyone even is while mark is out here catching feelings mid-shift… this one’s for you. huge shoutout to the anon who asked and accidentally unleashed my inner lore geek.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌ongoing TAGLIST: @pickledsoda @f3r4lfr0gg3r @bakugouswh0r3 @katkirishima @delusionalalien @bellelamoon @monaekelis @feminii @sketchlove @lilacoaks @cathuggnbear @forgotten-moon94 @lalana1703 @smikitty @barbare2 @sleepyzzz3 @sunspl0tionjuice
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taglist sign up: 𓉘here𓉝
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
☠︎︎𓊆ྀིbecause apparently I needed one more hobby𓊇ྀི☠︎︎
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
∘₊✧─── ⛧°. ⋆༺⚠︎༻⋆. °⛧ ───✧₊∘
⤹˚˖ 𓉸ྀི୭⋆˚࿔༄.°
⚬ you can call me Ghost
⤹˚˖ 𓉸ྀི୭⋆˚࿔༄.°
⚬ she/her ⌇ 18 ⌇ INTP
⤹˚˖ 𓉸ྀི୭⋆˚࿔༄.°
⚬ writing, drawing, crying over depressing music, and consuming media like it’s an Olympic sport
⤹˚˖ 𓉸ྀི୭⋆˚࿔༄.°
⚬ writer of both mlw and wlw content
﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘⫘⫘⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆⫘⫘⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ requests? open! (can’t promise speed but I can promise effort)
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ I’ll write anything: one-shots, drabbles, headcanons, full long fics—you name it!
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ strictly „x reader” only—if you ask for too much physical description, I’ll vanish into the void (this space is for everyone)
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ some works may include yandere behavior, violence, or NSFW—you’re responsible for what you read!
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ taglist? open! …for ”Afterglow” currently
✎ᝰ.ᐟ
⤷ multifandom—anime, cartoons, TV, games, comics, movies, shows, real life—if I don’t know it yet, give me 24 hours and a playlist (no fandom is safe)
﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘⫘⫘⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆⫘⫘⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾
𓊆ྀིmore coming soon .ᐟ.ᐟ 𓊇ྀི
𓉘probably when I should be doing literally anything else𓉝
the characters aren’t mine (shocking, i know), and the reader is meant to be you—whoever you are. but everything else? the writing, the effort, the hours of procrastination turned productivity? that’s all me. i bled actual brain cells for this. PLEASE don’t copy, plagiarize, translate, steal, or post without asking. be chill—i’m literally just trying to have fun here.
.𖥔 ݁ ˖☾ ゚。⋆ INVINCIBLE:
⟢ „Always You” (Mark Grayson x Childhood Friend!Reader)
⟢ ”Corruption Complete” (Mark Grayson x Brainrot Girlfriend!Reader—feat. Oliver & Debbie Grayson)
⟢ ”Afterglow” (Mark Grayson x Med!Reader—Multi Part)
⟢ ”Too Far Gone” (Mark Grayson x Brainrot Girlfriend!Reader—Part 2 of „Corruption Complete”)
⟢ “Marked” (Veil!Mark Grayson x Trouble!Reader)
⟢ ”Hearts Don’t Miss” (Omni!Mark Grayson x Cupid!Reader—Multi Part)
﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘⫘⫘⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆⫘⫘⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾⫘﴿﴾
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
Mark Grayson x Brainrot Girlfriend!Readerᶻ 𝗓 𐰁 .ᐟ
𓊆ྀིfeat. Oliver & Debbie Grayson𓊇ྀི
˗ˏˋ 𓉘 Part 2 — ”Too Far Gone” 𓉝 ˎˊ˗
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
🦖 summary: mark’s trying to enjoy a quiet night at home. too bad his girlfriend has just discovered a new hyperfixation—and now oliver’s in on it. debbie joins next. mark’s officially outnumbered.
🦖 contains: sfw. modern brainrot. fandom jokes. long-suffering boyfriend!Mark. brainrot!reader. tiktok trends. group roasting. oliver is a smug little shit. debbie is thriving. mark just wants peace. comedic fluff, banter, affectionate roasting, domestic vibes. silly chaos.
🦖 wc: 722
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: i wrote this instead of doing literally anything productive. it started as a joke and now it’s got lore. enjoy my descent. also, yes—i know, the title is 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓴𝔂.
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﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
It started innocently enough.
You were sprawled on the couch, eyes glued to your phone, tears streaming down your face as you watched an AI-generated TikTok video.
“Mark—Mark, look!” You shoved your phone in his face. It almost smacked him in the nose, but it’s fine. He’s literally [Title Card].
Moving on.
He squinted at the screen. “Is that… a cat in a firefighter uniform?”
“Yes! It’s so tragic and inspiring. The kitten was rescued from a fire, grew up to become a firefighter, and then died heroically saving a child. And—listen to this—it reunited with its grandma in the afterlife.”
Mark raised an eyebrow. “You cried over an AI-generated cat video?”
“It’s not just a video, Mark. It’s art.”
➽─────────❥
The descent into chaos was swift.
A few days later, Oliver burst into the living room (nearly crashing into a wall), eyes wide with excitement.
“Have you seen the ‘Ballerina Cappuccina’ trend?!” he blurted, practically vibrating.
You gasped, sitting up. “Yes! The one with the cappuccino-headed ballerina pirouetting into the void?”
Oliver nodded vigorously. “It’s peak brainrot.”
Mark groaned from the kitchen. “Not you too, Oliver.”
“It’s a cultural movement, Mark.” Oliver said, deadpan.
Not even ten minutes later, real chaos began…..Debbie’s curiosity was piqued.
She entered the kitchen, holding her phone while pursing her lips.
“Kids, what’s this ‘Bombardino Crocodilo’ thing?”
You and Oliver made eye contact, then—without speaking—played the audio simultaneously: “FORZA BOMBA!”
Debbie blinked. Then looked at Mark—who didn’t even look up, just slumped lower against the cabinets like the universe was personally attacking him.
“Well, that’s… something.”
➽─────────❥
A quiet evening turned into a bonding session.
With Mark and Oliver out training because let’s be real—that boy needs some serious teaching, you and Debbie settled on the couch. She sipped her wine, a mischievous glint in her eye like she’s about to drop a bomb.
“You know,” Debbie says casually, “Nolan once gave me a whole tree instead of flowers.”
You blink, taking your eyes off the TV. “Like… an actual tree?”
“He said, and I quote, ‘Why bring a branch when I can bring the whole organism?’”
“I kept it,” she says. “Still in the backyard. Useless man, but decent taste in flora.”
You clutch your heart. “That’s the bar. If Mark doesn’t deliver a redwood to my house within 72 hours, we’re over.”
As if summoned Mark walks back into the house with snacks and an expression of pure betrayal. “I brought you chips.”
“Does the chip bag photosynthesize?” you ask sweetly.
➽─────────❥
The ‘Pass the Phone’ challenge ensued.
Feeling strangely inspired (which should’ve been a red flag), you declared: “Let’s do the ‘Pass the Phone’ challenge!”
Everyone agreed way too quickly.
You started the recording. “I’m passing the phone to someone who still doesn’t understand TikTok.”
Mark raised a brow, sighed like a man defeated, and took the phone. “I’m passing the phone to someone who’s been on TikTok for five minutes and already has a fan club.”
He passed it to Oliver.
The purple boy—who was just happy to be here—beamed straight up at the phone screen. “I’m passing the phone to someone who once received a tree as a romantic gesture!”
He hands it to Debbie, who only laughs.
“Guilty as charged.”
➽─────────❥
╒════════════════𝜗𝜚
ACTUAL QUOTES FROM THE EVENING:
➥ „I swear to god if you post that TikTok—”
➥ „Too late. It’s already at 40k views. You’re famous now, tragedy boy.”
➥ „You said you wouldn’t bring up Amber! And—why are people simping over my MUM!”
➥ „Because she’s a baddie, Mark.”
ꪆৎ════════════════╛
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
•∘˙○˚.⋆ ˚。⋆ ୨🐊୧⋆ ˚。⋆ ∘˙○˚.•
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
Mark stood in the doorway, arms crossed, watching his mom and little brother conspire with you over delusional fan theories and imaginary men.
“…I want in,” he said.
Everyone froze.
You blinked. “Wait, what?”
“I’m tired of fighting it. I need to understand the brainrot. Teach me your ways.”
Oliver threw his arms in the air. “HE’S CONVERTING.”
Debbie raised her wineglass. “To the dark side.”
You grinned, scooting over and patting the space beside you. “Welcome to hell, babe. First lesson—rank these fictional men based on how they would treat you.”
Mark sighed. “I already regret this.”
“You will,” you promised. “Now take this blanket. We’re about to watch a seven-part edit of Tim Cheese killing John Pork.”
“…and no, you can’t ask questions.”
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌ With Love, @alive-gh0st
Omni!Mark Grayson x Cupid!Reader➶
•♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡˚₊‧ ꒰ა 💗 ໒꒱ ‧₊˚♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡•
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❤︎ summary: you wake up in an unfamiliar place—threadless, wingless, and wildly out of place in a world that forgot how to feel. the man who caught you (or spared you, or maybe neither) offers no comfort. only silence. and rules you don’t understand. but you’re built for love—even stripped of your status, even with your wings torn away—and despite everything, you hum. he watches. you talk. something shifts. and for once, the silence isn’t empty.
❤︎ contains: sfw. soft sci-fi. celestial grief. morally questionable men with capes. lonely mythologies. divine exile. cupid!reader. omni!mark. omni!invincible. slow-burn dynamics. sharp dialogue. soft power plays. emotional tension. thread metaphors. awkward domesticity. a glittery, homesick cupid in a strange house. and one emotionally repressed war criminal trying not to care.
❤︎ warnings: post-exile trauma. references to canonical war/genocide (vague). injury care. survivor’s guilt. isolation. identity confusion. mild body horror (wing loss). emotional withholding. unspoken grief. and the bone-deep ache of trying to be wanted when you were made only to serve.
❤︎ wc: 4868
prologue, part one
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: i’m honestly so beyond touched by the response to this fic about a wingless cupid and a cosmic war criminal. the love it’s gotten?? unreal. my whole thread-glued heart is just… full. you’ve made this story feel less like a fall and more like a landing. thank you for every comment, like, and reblog—i’m storing them in a pink sparkly jar labeled “emotional fuel.” let’s keep tugging the string—chapter one starts now.
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﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
You wake up face-down in luxury.
Specifically: half-smushed into a couch that feels engineered for spine alignment, interstellar meditation, or a villain’s downtime—not comfort.
Definitely not comfort.
The texture is weirdly sleek—velvet-synthetic.
Expensive.
The kind of couch that exists just to say “I’m expensive”—not to be sat on. Which, of course, you are.
…Badly.
You’re tangled in a heavy blanket that definitely wasn’t there before, limbs twisted like a limp marionette. Every joint aches. Your back screams.
You blink, eyes crusty. Then blink again.
It’s quiet. Too quiet.
No ambient hum of threads. No divine frequency. No lace-sky breathing stories into the tips of your wings—
Oh.
Right.
No wings.
Just… nothing.
You inhale shakily, trying not to flinch at the echo of absence where they used to be.
That phantom pull still flickers beneath your skin, like your whole body expects to move differently and can’t understand why it doesn’t.
You sit up slowly, the blanket tangled around your knees slipping off with a whisper-soft sigh.
It’s heavy and warm and smells like something between ozone, steel, and—
Oh.
Him.
“Okay,” you murmur, voice raspy. “Either I survived, or I’m in a very bougie version of limbo.”
Your limbs ache. Everything aches. You’re bruised in places that aren’t even supposed to bruise. Your wings? Still gone. Still phantom. Still wrong.
And the worst part?
The air feels… hollow.
No threads.
No connections.
No one’s longing.
You’re utterly alone—again.
You shuffle upright and glance around, trying not to wobble.
The room is sleek, high-tech in a sterile, vaguely militaristic way. Walls smooth and silver-dark, faintly glowing interface panels here and there.
It’s clean. Cold. Lit with soft panels that glow a sterile blue.
A strange crystalline screen suspended midair flickers with symbols you don’t recognize.
There’s a table that sits low in the center of the room—glass, probably. It looks solid, but you eye it like it might judge you.
You’re not in a prison—not quite.
But you’re not safe either.
Still—your voice comes out bright. Croaky, but bright.
“Well, at least it’s not hell.”
You wobble to your feet and immediately trip over the corner of the blanket.
Stumble, flail, barely catch yourself on what might be a countertop… or a weapons locker. Hard to say.
You don’t recognize a single object in the space.
That doesn’t stop you from touching everything.
A metallic orb hums when you poke it.
Another panel flashes red. You press it again. It turns off.
“Definitely not a prison,” you say, chewing your lip. “Probably. Hopefully. …Possibly a villain’s lair. But like… a tasteful one?”
Your legs push you toward a shelf and there’s an object shaped like a tall, elegant hourglass—except filled with something that glows faintly purple.
Naturally, you poke it.
It purrs.
You yelp.
“H-hello?! Sorry! I didn’t mean—!”
Your voice slowly fades into silence.
You pick up something else. It’s smooth. Cylindrical. Heavy for its size.
“Hmm. Mug? Weapon? Mug and weapon? A murder mug? It feels like a murder mug,” you mumble, turning it over.
“Do they drink blood tea here?”
Then—something beeps. Very softly.
Your whole body tenses.
And then you feel it.
The weight of presence.
Not a string. Not love.
Gravity.
And danger.
You turn—and there he is.
The red-caped man from the field—towering in the doorway like a bad decision carved out of stone and anger.
He’s standing there.
Silent. Immense.
In red and white and black, all sharp lines and steady breath. His cape falls behind him like a curtain of blood. The goggles don’t show his eyes—but you feel the glare through them.
His jaw is set. His arms are crossed. His black goggles glint even in the low light. He doesn’t speak right away. He doesn’t have to.
You go solid, still holding the probable mug-weapon.
Ah right—you can’t forget.
It’s still the guy who caught you. Or… confronted you. Or nearly vaporized you last night in a field of daisies.
You give a sheepish smile.
“Hi. Morning. Or, uh, whatever time it is on this… aggressively minimalist version of Earth!”
He tilts his head once. His voice is flat.
Unreadable.
“Don’t touch that.”
You freeze. “This? Oh, no, I wasn’t—I mean, I did. Technically. But only spiritually.”
He doesn’t respond.
You blink. Look at the object. Look back at him. Grin. “Okay. Cool. I won’t. Totally understand boundaries. Big believer in consent.”
He doesn’t react.
You clear your throat. Set the item down. Slowly.
“Although, in my defense, your whole interior design aesthetic is kinda yelling ‘please investigate me.’ So really, it’s—”
“Don’t touch anything,” he cuts in, firmer.
You offer him a sheepish thumbs-up. “Got it. Loud and scary clear.”
And then—because your instincts are garbage and you were literally created to poke things—you touch something else. A little blinking panel near the door.
His eyes narrow.
You drop your hand like it burned you. “Sorry!! Reflex! Very bad reflex!”
He stares.
You stare back, then give a very small, very awkward wave.
Another long pause.
He sighs—just barely. Turns away without a word and disappears down the hall.
You watch him go, blinking.
“…He seems nice.”
You sit back down with a wince, then mutter, “I should definitely touch more stuff.”
You do.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
It starts with silence.
Again.
But this time it’s not lonely silence—it’s awkward. Heavy. The kind that settles between two people who don’t know if they’re enemies, housemates, or a cosmic glitch in each other’s timelines.
You linger in the hallway.
Still sore. Still threadless. Still dressed like someone who got kicked out of Heaven and landed in a tech-noir villain’s den.
And still—despite every instinct screaming don’t—you follow him.
Of course you do.
Like a sparkly little space unwanted houseguest with opinions that has zero survival instincts and a tragic affection for ominous men in capes.
He doesn’t say you can’t follow him.
He just walks briskly through his own home—long hallways, seamless doors, touch-panel everything—while you trail behind, barefoot and blinking like a freshly-kicked cherub.
He ignores you.
You ignore his ignoring.
“That’s a cool cape,” you say conversationally, trying to keep up with his strides. “Is it, like, sentimental? Symbolic? Villain-chic? Oh—wait, are you emotionally attached to it?”
No answer.
You lean forward slightly, squinting. “Do you… wear it to bed?”
Still nothing.
You hum thoughtfully. “Is it fused to your soul? Is it detachable? Do you have different ones for different moods—like, casual cape, angry cape, emotional repression cape?”
He doesn’t respond.
You try again. “Can I touch it?”
He stops.
Just like that—halts mid-stride.
You freeze behind him, nearly bumping into his back. And blink up at him.
He turns his head slightly, the cape flaring just enough to ripple past your fingertips.
“Don’t.”
One word. No bite, no growl—just a warning. Like a storm saying this isn’t rain yet, but it could be.
You raise your hands slowly. “Right. Sorry. Cape off-limits. Got it. You’re very committed to the brand.”
He walks again.
You sigh—more dramatic than necessary—but keep following.
“What about the goggles?” you ask. “Do you sleep in those too? Are they like… mood-activated? They’re very intimidating. Very Darth-Vader-meets-heartbreak. No offense.”
He says nothing.
“Okay, so you’re clearly not a big talker,” you mutter. “That’s fine. I talk enough for two. Or ten.”
So you keep going, babbling just to fill the space.
Another hallway. Another panel. Another stretch of angular, too-clean walls and whisper-quiet footsteps.
It’s like walking through a museum designed by someone who’s never smiled—even once.
And somehow—somehow—you still manage to fill the silence.
“You know, in some dimensions, silence is considered a mating ritual,” you offer cheerfully.
He pauses.
You blink. “Wait, not that I’m saying this is that. I mean—it’s not, right? Unless it is—which, um, please clarify. Because if it is, I should probably brush my hair.”
He keeps walking.
You huff, trailing further behind now. Not because you’re tired—well, okay, maybe a little—but mostly because his energy is doing that don’t-get-close thing again.
“Where are we going?” you ask.
He doesn’t respond. Again.
You glance at one of the panels you pass. It blinks red as you near it.
Curious, you step closer.
He doesn’t stop you this time—but you hear it in his voice. That shift. That thread of something darker.
“You’re not allowed outside.”
You freeze. “What?”
“That panel’s locked. Security override in place.”
You blink, confused. “So I can’t leave?”
A beat.
“No.”
Your stomach twists.
You laugh. Light. Thin. “Oh. So I am in a prison.”
“It’s not a prison,” he says flatly.
You raise an eyebrow. “You just said I can’t leave.”
“It’s for your safety.”
“Isn’t that what all supervillains say?”
He turns around then—just slightly—and for the first time, you think maybe he’s trying not to say something. His jaw tightens. Not with anger. Not exactly.
With thought.
You don’t press. Not this time.
Instead, you look out the nearest window—tinted, probably bulletproof, overlooking a skyline that feels wrong. Choked. Smoky and sharp at the edges.
It’s beautiful in the way a burnt cathedral might be. And it feels lonely.
You press your hand to the glass.
Whisper-soft.
“I don’t belong here,” you murmur. Not to him. Not really to yourself, either.
Just… to the glass.
To the world beyond it.
He doesn’t answer.
But he watches you.
And that’s enough to make your heart thud somewhere in the hollowness of your chest.
You exhale. Curl your fingers into a mock-heart on the window.
“You should really consider getting some plants,” you say softly. “This place is screaming ‘emotionally constipated bachelor pad.’”
His reflection doesn’t flinch.
You sigh and turn away.
“I’m gonna go talk to the weird murder mug again.”
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
Later—hours, maybe—you find yourself planted at the far end of what might be the dining area.
Or the command center. It’s hard to tell.
The table looks like it could initiate a planetary strike if you breathe on it wrong.
He sits across from you.
Still.
Still suited. Still silent.
He hasn’t taken the mask off. You haven’t seen his eyes.
But he gave you a name.
Not a real one, probably. But something.
“Invincible,” he said flatly when you asked, finally cracking under the sheer power of your pestering and your best please I’m charming let me know what to call you face.
You didn’t believe him at first.
“Seriously? That’s what you go by?”
He didn’t answer.
Just turned away and muttered something under his breath that sounded suspiciously like you’re worse than the other one.
Still—you took it. Grinned. Clutched it like it meant something.
“Okay, Invincible. Cool name. Bit dramatic. But I can work with that.”
He hasn’t asked for your name in return.
You gave it anyway.
Not your designation. Not the code the Realm used.
Just what you used to call yourself, back when you believed in tenderness.
He didn’t comment on it.
He just sat like he is now—spine too straight, hands steepled on the table, as if pretending not to regret every life choice that led to you invading his vaguely dystopian bachelor pad.
You kick your feet under the table.
He says nothing.
So you talk.
Because of course you do.
“Okay, so—fun story,” you begin brightly, draping your arms across the back of your seat. “Once, I accidentally matched a soulweaver with a carnivorous star-being. Didn’t realize their threads were laced with paradox elements. Their honeymoon destroyed a moon.”
You pause.
Grin.
“But they’re still together! Super toxic. Super cute. Kind of horrifying… I’m rooting for them.”
Nothing.
You glance at him.
He’s not looking at you—but his fingers tap once. Barely audible. A twitch in the rhythm.
You keep going.
“I once worked a case where the connection was so knotted it took seven cycles, two reincarnations, and one cosmic dog to unravel it. Not a metaphor. There was literally a dog. He was a thread guide. Very fluffy.”
Still nothing.
But you notice the shift.
The way his chin angles, almost imperceptibly.
Like he’s listening without wanting to. Like he’s filing away every word and pretending he’s not.
You lean forward. Prop your chin on your hand.
“Have you ever loved anyone?” you ask, soft. Just curious.
Invincible freezes.
Just for a second.
Then moves again—barely. Shrugs one shoulder. “Not relevant.”
“Oh, it’s totally relevant,” you say with a mock gasp. “It’s my entire job.”
“You don’t have a job,” he mutters.
“Excuse you,” you sniff. “I am temporarily unemployed. There’s a difference.”
He sighs—again, just barely. But it’s the kind that says if I fly into the sun right now, will she keep talking?
You smile, a little too brightly.
“It’s just—you’re fascinating,” you say, earnest now.
“You move like someone who’s always preparing for war. But there’s something in your hands. Like… you used to hold gentler things.”
He doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t react.
But his knuckles tighten—just slightly.
You catch it.
You don’t comment on it.
Instead, you hum softly, off-tune and aimless. Just enough to fill the space between your sentences.
“I used to hum like this when I was scared,” you say, staring at the ceiling. “Back when I thought being good meant being useful.”
A long beat.
Then—
“You’re not scared now?” he asks, voice flat.
You glance at him.
Smile.
“Terrified.”
And you mean it.
But it’s soft.
Like a confession wrapped in pink thread and handed over with shaking fingers.
Invincible doesn’t answer.
But he doesn’t leave.
And that’s something.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
You’re sitting on the edge of the couch—the weird one that thinks it’s better than you—biting the inside of your cheek.
“I can do it myself,” you say.
Immediately lie.
“I’m very good at medical stuff. Definitely qualified. Certified in three realms, actually.”
Invincible doesn’t look convinced.
You don’t blame him.
Your last attempt at bandaging involved decorative knotting and something that suspiciously resembled a shoelace.
“You’re going to make it worse,” he says flatly.
You huff. “You say that like it’s a certainty.”
“It is.”
He crosses the room without waiting for permission, gloved hands already unsnapping some hidden compartment in the wall.
A panel folds out.
Inside: a compact but precise set of medical supplies.
Of course he has medical supplies.
Of course they’re alphabetized.
Of course the antiseptic glows ominously.
You fidget.
“I don’t like that bottle,” you murmur. “It’s judging me.”
He doesn’t respond. Just sets it down on the nearby table with quiet precision.
You swallow.
The silence stretches.
It’s heavier now. Less awkward. More… inevitable.
You wrap your arms around your knees, voice quieter.
“You don’t have to do this.”
“I know.”
And still—he gestures.
“Turn around.”
Your pulse stumbles. You hesitate.
But then—you do.
Slowly.
You turn your back to him.
Pull the too-big shirt they gave you (his? something spare from the war room? it smells faintly of leather and ozone) off one shoulder. Then the other. Then lift the hem just enough for him to see.
It hurts.
Not just the movement—but the exposure.
It’s not romantic.
Because there’s nothing romantic about torn skin or lost wings.
Invincible doesn’t say anything. Not at first.
But you hear the pause.
The smallest catch in his breath.
Then—his gloved fingers at the edge of the old wrapping. Careful. Methodical.
The first touch makes you flinch.
He stops immediately.
Waits.
Doesn’t apologize—he never apologizes—but he doesn’t push either.
You exhale.
“I’m okay,” you whisper. “Keep going.”
The bandages peel away slowly.
You wince.
Not because of the pain—but because you know what it must look like.
The bruising.
The way the skin puckers where the feathers once grew.
The scars trying to form over something that should have never been taken.
Invincible works in silence.
You hum.
It’s soft. Tuneless. The kind of sound you make when you don’t know what else to fill the quiet with.
“I used to help patch people up,” you say absently, voice thin. “Mostly broken hearts, but once I had to reattach a wing to a grief-angel. That was messy. Lots of glitter and wailing.”
Still, he says nothing.
But his hands move gently.
Like he’s trying not to break what’s already broken.
The antiseptic stings. You hiss.
He pauses.
You press your forehead to your knees.
“I’m okay,” you lie again.
A beat passes.
Then another.
Then—
“You’re not.”
You go still.
The words aren’t cruel. Not biting. Just… factual. Like a truth dropped onto the floor and left there.
You don’t reply.
But the humming dies in your throat.
His fingers return. Smoother now. Gliding over the worst of it. Wrapping clean gauze like it means something. Like there’s care in the motion, even if he doesn’t name it.
You close your eyes.
For a moment—you pretend it doesn’t hurt.
You pretend you’re not threadless and wrecked.
You pretend someone is holding you in a way that won’t leave more marks.
And he—this man with no real name, with a face hidden behind silence and sharpness—keeps wrapping your wounds like someone who doesn’t know why he hasn’t stopped yet.
When Invincible finishes, you don’t move right away.
Neither does he.
The air holds the shape of something unsaid.
And for the first time since you fell—
You don’t feel entirely alone.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
It starts with guilt.
Not big, thunderous guilt—the kind that screams or scars.
No, this is softer. Quieter.
The kind that curls under your ribs and pokes at you when it gets too silent.
The kind that sounds like: Invincible hasn’t killed me yet. I should… do something?
You’ve been here for… two sunrises now? Three?
Time is slippery here. Threadless days always are.
But one thing’s clear: for all his sharp edges and scowls, your new… roommate? captor? interdimensional roommate with possible emotional constipation?—he’s been letting you stay.
In his space. On his furniture. Breathing his air.
Rent-free.
The least you could do is say thank you.
So you decide to clean.
Which is dumb. Because you have no idea how any of this tech works.
But that doesn’t stop you.
You start small—folding the blanket you’ve been cocooning in. You even add a little flair.
Tug the corners into soft heart-shaped knots. Totally impractical. Definitely aesthetic.
You set it in the middle of the couch like a peace offering. Or a warning.
You hum to yourself as you tidy.
Not that there’s much to tidy—everything here is spotless, sterile, like a military catalog page come to life.
Still, you try.
Straighten a few panels. Dust off some gleaming surface with the edge of your sleeve.
Eventually, you find what might be a kitchen. Or a weapons bay disguised as a kitchen. Hard to say.
It has counters. It has drawers. One of them contains what you think are utensils. One of them contains a small orb that buzzes and tries to eat your finger.
You close that one. Quickly.
Cooking it is.
You find something vaguely bread-adjacent in a sealed container.
Something that might be butter. Something that definitely isn’t sugar but looks suspiciously like cosmic sand.
You try anyway.
You find heat. A panel that flares red when you touch it.
“Perfect,” you whisper. “Totally safe. I am definitely qualified for this.”
You burn the first attempt. Instantly. Black smoke hisses upward like a judgment.
You try again.
You nearly set the panel on fire.
You keep going.
Eventually, you manage to create… something!
Not good. Not edible. But warm and round-ish and not on fire.
You plate it. Add a flower from the weird glowing vase thing on the counter for presentation. Step back. Admire it.
It’s hideous.
But you made it.
So you carry it out carefully—just as the door hisses open.
And there he is.
Cape flowing. Expression unreadable.
Invincible freezes in the doorway, black goggles flicking from your smoke-streaked face to the kitchen behind you—now full of suspicious smells and one still-smoking dish.
You hold out the plate.
“I made a thank-you loaf,” you say brightly. “It’s mostly… not poison!”
He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t blink. Just stares.
Then—
“Did you override my weapons lock?”
You blink. “What?”
He steps past you, into the kitchen. Taps a barely-visible panel near the wall. A soft click echoes.
Then a compartment slides open to reveal: missiles.
Actual missiles.
“Oh,” you say. “That explains the ticking.”
Invincible turns around slowly.
You grin, sheepish. “In my defense, your cabinet labeling system is deeply confusing.”
He doesn’t yell.
Which is somehow worse.
He just gives you the look.
That disappointed, stone-jawed, exhausted-by-your-whole-existence look.
Your grin falters.
“…I’ll go sit down.”
You do.
And you sulk.
You curl up in the corner of the couch and re-fold the blanket. Then re-fold it again.
You mutter something about interdimensional roommates being impossible to please.
You don’t even notice when he walks back in.
Not at first.
You only notice the pause.
The soft shift of air.
You glance up.
He’s standing at the edge of the room, holding something.
The blanket.
You must’ve left it in the kitchen, half-heartedly abandoned on a counter.
Invincible doesn’t say anything.
But he doesn’t throw it away either.
He folds it once. Carefully.
Sets it back on the couch.
Exactly where it was.
Knots and all.
You don’t say anything.
But your chest feels warmer.
He leaves again.
You smile to yourself.
Next time, you’ll try the cosmic rice.
(Probably a bad idea. But you’re nothing if not persistent.)
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
Mark tells himself you’re just a problem he hasn’t solved yet.
That’s all.
Another anomaly dropped into his territory—another celestial error.
Something to monitor. To contain. Not to engage with.
Definitely not to understand.
He repeats this in his head more than once.
But he still notices things.
You hum when it’s too quiet.
Not on purpose.
Not like you’re trying to fill the space with meaning.
It’s unconscious—barely there. Just a low, tuneless sound you loop under your breath like you’re afraid silence might swallow you if you let it linger too long.
He hears it through the walls sometimes.
Not enough to be irritating. Just enough to be… present.
You clutch your weapon in your sleep.
Not always.
But most nights, when the lights dim and you think he’s stopped watching.
The bow—the one you won’t explain—is usually curled tight against your chest, one hand resting lightly on the grip.
Protective. Familiar.
Like it’s the only thing left that still feels like home.
You move in your sleep too. Restless. Whimpers low, barely audible.
Once, he found you curled into the narrowest corner of the couch like you were trying to disappear inside yourself.
The blanket had fallen. You hadn’t bothered to pick it up.
He hadn’t either.
But he covered you with a new one before leaving.
You never mentioned it.
You walk wrong.
It’s not… bad. Just different.
Like someone still getting used to gravity.
You don’t always trust your footing—sometimes you skip a step, sometimes you hesitate before a turn, like you expect the ground to shift under your feet.
You never ask for help.
But when something startles you—when you nearly drop something, or a panel glitches too loud, or the power flickers just a little too long—your hand twitches toward him before you even realize it.
Like a reflex. Like an instinct you haven’t unlearned.
Like you think he might catch you.
You talk too much.
About nothing. About everything.
Stories that make no sense—about thread-realms and starlight weddings and love gods who punch each other for fun.
Mark doesn’t believe half of it.
But he listens.
Every word.
Worse, he remembers them.
You describe things with your hands—like you can’t just say what you mean, you have to shape it.
Fingers dancing through the air, painting emotion he doesn’t know how to name.
When you laugh, your shoulders always rise first.
When you lie, you bite the inside of your cheek.
You sing off-key. Barely know it.
And you always pause—just for a second—before you smile.
That’s the one that gets him.
The hesitation.
Like you’re weighing whether it’s worth it.
Whether this moment deserves it.
Whether he does.
Mark doesn’t understand you.
And that should be easy.
It’s always been easy, not understanding people. Easier to flatten them. File them into categories: threat, resource, dead.
But you don’t stay in the box.
Don’t follow the rules.
You should be scared of him—he knows you are—but you don’t flinch when he walks past. You make eye contact. You wave. You hum.
You grin.
And he…
He notices.
Even when he doesn’t want to.
Especially then.
So he tells himself it’s strategy.
Just observation.
Just a glitch with glitter in your hair and too many stories in your throat.
That’s all.
That’s all.
But when he walks past the living room, and sees you curled asleep with your bow across your chest and your hands still half-reached toward something that isn’t there—
Mark slows.
Doesn’t stop.
But he slows.
And tells himself again—you’re just a problem.
Not a person.
Not someone.
Not his.
Not yet, not never.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
The apartment is unusually quiet.
Ever since you got here—there’s always something humming softly in the air. Mark doesn’t notice the silence at first.
He’s used to that. Prefers it.
But this is different.
It’s a small sound that finally breaks him out of his thoughts.
Soft. Barely there.
At first, Mark thinks the sound is static.
Just another nighttime glitch—a flicker in the power grid, maybe. A disturbance in the perimeter sensors.
Something small. Something easy.
But then he hears it again.
Soft. Fragile. Not mechanical.
Human.
He moves before thinking.
Quiet steps down the hallway. Past the control room. Around the corner where the lights are still dimmed to sleep-mode. His hand hovers over the doorframe.
You’re still asleep.
Sort of.
Your body’s curled inward on the couch—smaller than usual, shoulders tight, hands clenched in the blanket. Not the bow this time. Just the blanket.
But your face—
Your face is wet.
Tears carve tracks down your cheeks in silence.
Your lips move, but there’s no sound. Your breath catches on each inhale like it doesn’t know how to settle in your chest.
You don’t sob. Don’t cry out.
You just tremble.
Mark doesn’t move.
He should. He knows he should. Turn away. Walk off. Let you have your grief like you always have—alone, unspeaking, full of bright little lies and off-key humming.
But you’re not humming now.
You’re breaking.
And he—
He watches.
Not with judgment.
Not even with curiosity.
Just… quietly.
Like something in him knows this is sacred. Or familiar. Or both.
He takes a breath. Slow. Controlled.
Then turns away long enough to return with a glass of water.
He sets it down on the table near you. Doesn’t speak. Doesn’t touch you.
Doesn’t ask.
When he glances back—
You’re still asleep.
But your hand moves. Barely.
Reaches toward the glass.
Or maybe toward something else.
Mark doesn’t stay to see if you find it.
But as he walks away, the sound of your breath steadying follows him.
Not whole.
Not healed.
But enough.
And for reasons he doesn’t name—
That’s worse than a scream.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
˗ˏˋ 𝓴𝓲𝓼𝓼 𝓶𝒆 ˎˊ˗
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You’re sitting cross-legged on the floor of the living room.
Surrounded by scraps of thread you found in one of the deep storage drawers Invincible didn’t think you’d find.
(He was wrong.)
One’s gold.
One’s red.
One’s a tangled mess of fraying blue that might actually be a shoelace.
You’re holding them all up like evidence.
Invincible’s standing over you. Arms crossed. Eyebrow raised. Entire posture radiating why are you like this.
You grin up at him.
“Okay,” you begin, voice bright, “so this one represents soul-tied destinies—deep, ancient, violently passionate.” You wiggle the red one.
“This one is light-thread—super soft, fluttery, usually forms during meet-cutes or emotionally charged hand-touching.” The gold.
You hold up the blue.
“This one is chaos. I don’t know where it came from. Possibly cursed. Could be your vibe.”
He squints. “Are you seriously playing with string right now?”
“It’s not playing,” you gasp. “It’s education. I’m trying to teach you how threads work.”
“I don’t care how threads work.”
“You should! Not that you have one—rude—but if you did, yours would definitely be fire-forged, probably double-knotted, tangled six times over, emotionally scorched and fraying at the edges—oh, and extremely defensive.”
He blinks.
Then—“What does that even mean.”
You pause. Smile softly.
“It means you’re very repressed, babe.”
A beat.
He doesn’t respond. Just stares at you like you’ve grown another head. (Honestly, that would explain a lot, probably.)
You shrug. Flick the red string toward him. It hits his chest.
Invincible doesn’t catch it.
“Here. Pretend that’s your thread.”
“I’m not pretending anything.”
“God, you’re no fun.”
He turns to leave.
You call after him, “You’d definitely be a reluctant soulmate.”
He freezes in the doorway.
Very quietly, without turning around, he says.
“There’s no such thing.”
You smile to yourself. Pick up the gold thread again. Loop it gently around your fingers.
“Not yet,” you murmur. “But they don’t always start that way.”
He doesn’t respond.
But he doesn’t walk away either.
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ᯓ❤︎ requested by: @lycheee-jelly
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
Mark Grayson x Med!Reader♡ྀི
…..ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ….
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⋆ ˚。⋆ ˖⁺‧₊˚❤️🔥˚₊‧⁺˖ ⋆ ˚。⋆
TAGLIST for ”Afterglow”—y’know, so no one misses a chapter drop or surprise lore reveal.
If that’s something you’d be into, drop a COMMENT or SCREAM into my inbox—submit your sins (gently).
I’ll summon you into the chaos! (but actually comment—not just like guys—I won’t include you in the taglist if you only like. i need the notification to stand out in the chaos that’s called my phone).
Be warned: I’ve never done one of these before, so this will be powered by vibes, trial and error, and a notes spreadsheet I’ll misplace within a week.
Let me know, lovers of chaos!
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ongoing taglist: @pickledsoda @f3r4lfr0gg3r @bakugouswh0r3 @katkirishima @delusionalalien @bellelamoon @monaekelis @feminii @sketchlove @lilacoaks @cathuggnbear @forgotten-moon94 @lalana1703 @smikitty @barbare2 @sleepyzzz3 @sunspl0tionjuice @maki-ki @angelbelles @scarletdfox
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
Mark Grayson x Med!Reader♡ྀི
….ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨ـ♡ﮩ٨ـﮩﮩ٨.ـ... ﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
⛨ summary: you were in a surprisingly good mood, which should’ve been the first red flag. your coworkers weren’t being annoying, the coffee machine was actually working, and not a single patient had tried to self-diagnose off WebMD yet. the universe clearly saw that and went “hmm, too peaceful.” because hours later, the clinic was rubble, a child was almost lost, and you met invincible for the first time. and of course—you yelled at him.
⛨ contains: sfw. local clinic setting. first meeting with invincible. medical professional!reader. civilian chaos. reader being a bad bitch. immediate tension and banter. subtle foreshadowing of their future dynamic. fire/explosion sequence. hands-on first aid moments. mark being surprised-reader-ain’t-scared. small emotional undercurrent under sarcasm.
⛨ warnings: brief injury description (scrapes, blood). explosion/fire trauma. smoke inhalation. nurse carla. mild trauma response (panic, adrenaline). implied danger to a child (rescued safely). some profanity.
⛨ wc: 1093
prologue, part one, part two
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: reader has a license, a savior complex, and zero chill. mark shows up for five minutes and gets emotionally wrecked. enjoy the chaos.
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It’s a quiet Tuesday. The kind of quiet that should’ve tipped you off. The kind of quiet that doesn’t last.
Your shift starts at 8:00 AM sharp, and somehow, you’re early. The sun’s out, the sky’s obnoxiously blue, and someone brought donuts to the clinic—for no reason.
You even got your favorite one—the last one—which felt like a small miracle… until you realized the coffee was good.
Not just drinkable. Good. Fresh. Hot. Non-bitter. Suspicious.
You’d joked with Nurse Carla that the universe was trying to butter you up.
“You just wait,” she said, stirring her tea like some all-knowing, scrub-wearing oracle. “It’s always the good days that get you.”
You’d laughed.
Now you’re pretty sure she hexed you.
The clinic hums with calm, the low rhythm of patients being called back and phones ringing occasionally at the front desk. In room three, you patch up a skateboard accident. Room five brings in an elderly man who insists his blood pressure is fine—even as the cuff nearly bursts. You remain patient, calm, even friendly—somehow.
You’re not usually this chipper.
Maybe it’s the sunlight. Maybe it’s the donut.
Either way, you don’t realize you’re waiting for the other shoe to drop—
Until it does.
Loud. Violent. Apocalyptic.
The explosion shakes the floor beneath your feet.
It’s not real at first. Just a sound—an echoing blast that shatters windows and hurls you out of your good mood like a ragdoll. You slam your coffee on the counter (RIP—it was actually decent) and bolt toward the door before anyone can stop you.
Smoke is already curling above the skyline. Across the street, a building is on fire—its middle floors cracked open like a broken jaw. Glass rains down. People scream.
You don’t hesitate. You just move.
“Call 911!” you shout over your shoulder as your feet hit the pavement. Your heart kicks into overdrive. The calm is gone.
The illusion shattered.
“Evacuate the lobby!”
You don’t wait for acknowledgment. Your feet are already pounding pavement, shoes slipping slightly on the sidewalk as your mind flips into crisis mode.
You’re already halfway in before your brain catches up.
A woman collapses near the curb—shock. You steady her, get her seated, check her breathing. Alive.
You keep moving.
A teen stumbles out of the smoke, blood on his jeans. You direct him to sit, tear open your kit.
Tourniquet. Gauze. Stabilize. Move.
You don’t even notice when your stethoscope vanishes off your shoulders—just that your hands are moving and your brain’s already triaging in real time.
And then you see her.
A little girl—no older than nine—trapped beneath a chunk of concrete by the crosswalk. Her arm’s twisted at a bad angle. Blood smears her cheek. She’s trying to cry but doesn’t have the energy for more than a breathy whimper.
Before your brain can even catch up, your legs are already sprinting.
Someone grabs your arm—an older man with watery eyes and a voice wobbling from terror. “Don’t!” he begs. “That’s suicide! You’ll die trying to—”
“Move,” you snap, not bothering to look back. “Or piss yourself somewhere else.”
You don’t wait for a reply.
Your knees hit pavement. You’re beside the girl before the guy can finish a follow-up plea, hands already assessing her pulse, breath, injuries. You try to lift the debris. Nothing. It doesn’t budge. Your arms shake, muscles strain, lungs burning from smoke.
You try again.
Still nothing.
Panic rises sharp in your throat. The little girl’s eyes flutter—too pale, too quiet.
“Stay with me,” you whisper. “Hey. Look at me, alright? You’re gonna be okay.”
You lie. But your voice is steady.
For a horrible moment, you actually think this is it. That you’re about to die here, buried with this kid—and no one will know why you didn’t wait for backup.
The wind shifts.
Fast. Sharp. A blur of motion and force that sends your hair whipping around your face.
And then the weight’s gone.
You jerk backward, pull the girl free, and curl around her automatically—heart hammering like a drumline. You blink through the smoke and ash.
That’s when you see him.
Invincible.
In the flesh. Blue and yellow suit smeared with ash and blood, goggles cracked at one side. Kneeling beside you like some kind of comic book punchline—if comic books ever showed their heroes looking that tired.
“She’s okay,” you breathe, adjusting the girl in your arms, “but you’re not.”
He blinks like you just insulted him in four languages. “I’m—”
“Don’t say fine.” You eye him critically. “You’re favoring your left. Blood. Concussion-level pupils. You probably shouldn’t be standing, let alone flying.”
“…Are you a doctor?”
“Closer to nurse practitioner. Also not blind.”
You stand, legs shaky but functional. He watches you like he’s never been spoken to like that in his life.
“You should go,” you add, motioning to the kid in your arms. “She needs a hospital. Fast.”
He hesitates.
You frown. “What?”
“…Nothing. Just—” He gestures vaguely at you. “You’re calm.”
You actually snort. “You mean I didn’t cry and fangirl? Tragic.”
“That’s not—”
“I’m not scared of you,” you say, quieter now. “If anything, you’re just another bleeding idiot who didn’t let someone check him out before playing hero.”
You’ve seen enough broken ribs and bad priorities to know most capes aren’t invincible where it counts.
His mouth opens. Closes. Still stunned.
You sigh and hand him the girl, a little softer now. ”Take her. That’s the only reason I’m not yelling more.”
He nods, carefully taking the child into his arms like she’s glass. Gives you one last look—
And he’s gone.
Wind howls. The air cracks.
And you’re left standing there, covered in soot and adrenaline, alone in the wreckage.
You don’t know he’ll remember your voice. The glare. The cracked joke.
But he will.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
⋆ ˚。⋆ ˖⁺‧₊˚❤️🔥˚₊‧⁺˖ ⋆ ˚。⋆
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌Somewhere, sometime after…
Nurse Carla sits in her living room, lit by the flicker of a dusty lamp and the glow of a muted rerun. A cat—large, black, and terrifyingly still—curls in her lap like it’s plotting something.
His name is Lucifer. You know this because she whispers it like a prayer when chattering about him.
She sips her tea. Doesn’t flinch when thunder cracks outside, even though it hasn’t rained in weeks.
On the table beside her: a newspaper folded open to an article about the explosion. A blurry shot of Invincible in flight.
Carla hums. Calm. Unbothered. All-knowing.
She sets the teacup down with a soft clink, leans back in her chair, and strokes Lucifer’s head.
“I told her,” she murmurs, half to herself, half to the void. “Never trust a Tuesday.”
She smiles.
Lucifer purrs.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: nurse carla is two steps from world domination. the cat knows things. be aware.
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taglist sign up: 𓉘here𓉝
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌ With Love, @alive-gh0st
-ˋˏ❀𖤣𖥧𖡼⊱✿⊰𖡼𖥧𖤣❀ˎˊ-
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
❀ summary: you showed up uninvited, made his dad question all his life (and facial hair) choices, and never left. now you’re older, hotter, still annoying—and mark? very much in love. congrats.
❀ contains: sfw. childhood friends to lovers. slow-burn vibes. emotionally repressed!reader. soft!mark. reader has a difficult home life. light trauma but make it casual. fluff, banter and comedic tension. mark grayson being stupid-in-love.
❀ wc: 1899
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: first time posting just to feed y’all some mark grayson fluff.
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You don’t remember exactly how you ended up in the Graysons’ house that first day.
You’d only just moved in next door, and your mom was already yelling about boxes. The man she was with—this week’s guy—smelled like beer, sweat, and no patience.
So you left.
Well… not really, but something along those lines.
You wandered down the sidewalk barefoot, dragging your backpack behind you, until you spotted a house that looked safe. Lived-in. Rich. You rang the doorbell like it owed you something.
Debbie Grayson opened the door, took one look at your face, and smiled. “Hi there, sweetheart. You okay?”
You didn’t answer. Just walked right past her like you belonged there.
Mark was on the floor with a comic book. He looked up, mouth half-open.
You pointed at his dad. “Is that mustache glued on, or is it a punishment?”
Nolan nearly dropped his coffee. Debbie choked on a laugh. Mark blinked, unsure whether to be offended or amazed.
You were five.
By the end of the day, you were sitting cross-legged on their carpet, eating cookies like you’d always been there. You told Nolan he “sounded like a guy on TV,” which earned another chuckle from Debbie and a long sigh from the man.
By the end of the week, you were staying over so often Debbie started keeping a toothbrush for you.
By the end of the month, you were helping Mark build Lego towers in his room—then immediately yelling at Nolan for knocking them over “on purpose.”
(He did. He 100% did. Nolan Grayson, Earth’s strongest man, had personal beef with a five-year-old and no shame about it.)
And before long, Mark couldn’t remember a life where you weren’t in it.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
Being around you was chaos wrapped in kindness.
You’d stick your tongue out at Mark and Nolan the second Debbie turned her back, then curl into her side during movie nights like you were her own kid.
You terrified Nolan with the things you said—adult questions in a child’s voice, bold and unfiltered. Like asking, “If you flew into space too fast, would your brain explode?” Or, more memorably: “Do aliens poop?”
“Enough,” Nolan muttered one night after your fifth question. “You’re worse than a Pentagon interrogation.”
“But I’m cuter,” you argued, and Debbie nodded like that settled the matter.
You were nine when you figured out Omni-Man’s identity.
You’d been watching the news over cereal, Mark beside you, both in matching Grayson hand-me-downs.
With squinted eyes at the screen, you groaned in disbelief. “Seriously? That’s your dad’s disguise? I can recognize that ugly mustache from space.”
Mark froze with his spoon halfway to his mouth. “Wait, what?”
“Dude, it’s so obvious.”
You didn’t even flinch when Nolan walked in seconds later, fully suited up but holding his slippers like it was the most normal thing in the world.
“Morning,” you said sweetly. “Nice cape.”
Nolan grunted and turned on the coffee maker without a comment.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
Debbie adored you. Nolan, surprisingly, respected you—maybe because you always challenged him without fear. And Mark? Mark had someone who understood him without even trying.
Your home life, though, was never something you talked about.
It wasn’t bad, not technically, but it didn’t feel like a home. The yelling never stopped. The guys came and went. You learned early not to ask questions, and that silence was safer.
So you stopped asking.
But one night—when you were eleven—you showed up at Mark’s window with bruises on your arms and dirt on your knees. You didn’t say anything. Just climbed inside and curled up next to him on the bed.
He didn’t say anything either.
He just pulled the blanket over you and let you fall asleep to the sound of his heartbeat.
After that, the Graysons stopped asking if you were coming over. It was just assumed.
That’s how it always was.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
By middle school, the two of you were inseparable. You walked to class together, bickered over who got to name the group projects, and ganged up on anyone who tried to mess with either of you.
One day, in the cafeteria, some eighth grader bumped into you hard enough to knock your tray.
“Watch it,” he sneered, clearly expecting you to back off.
You looked him dead in the eyes while tilting your head innocently. “Try that again and I’ll make sure you’re crapping Jell-O for a week.”
The kid blinked.
Mark stepped in beside you. “She means that in a… non-lethal way.”
“Do I?” you asked.
Mark turned to you, deadpan. “Can you not threaten to rearrange someone’s insides with pudding in front of the lunch monitors?”
You gave him a shrug. “No promises.”
People thought you’d grow apart in high school. That Mark would change. That you would change.
But you never gave him the chance to drift. You clung—stubbornly, fiercely—like you knew if you let go, something in you would unravel. And Mark never wanted to be anywhere else anyway.
High school didn’t change you much. If anything, you just got bolder.
Mark got taller. You got sharper. People asked if you were dating. You both said no.
But neither of you looked too convinced when you did.
You still wore his hoodies. He still shared his fries with you without asking. You stole his blankets. He carried an extra charger in his bag just in case you forgot yours.
He never forgot your birthday. You never missed a single one of his baseball games.
It wasn’t just friendship. Not really.
Not with the way you rolled your eyes at affection from anyone else but melted instantly when Mark laid his head on your shoulder.
Not when you’d fight with him one minute and be curled up against him the next, hoodie sleeves too long, fingers grazing his under the blanket.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
Mark watched you far more than he should’ve.
He noticed the way your laugh cracked just a little when you were too tired.
The way you hugged too hard, like you were making sure someone stayed.
The way you’d stand between him and anyone who dared to mouth off—like you were the one with superpowers.
He didn’t need to know the exact moment he fell in love with you. For him—it was always there, he just hadn’t been smart enough to understand.
Maybe it was that one day when you were watching cartoons on the floor, and Mark was pretending not to stare at you. You turned to him, grinning, and said something dumb like, “You’d probably get beat up in a real fight.”
But your eyes were soft.
He smiled back, and thought, God, it’s always been you.
But he never told you. Not really.
Because every time he almost did, you’d turn away. Or laugh. Or call him something close enough to a slur and throw popcorn at his face.
Maybe that was your armor. Or maybe it was his fear.
Either way, the words never made it out.
So he held onto them in silence. Carried them like bruises from a fight—but these ones never quite healed. Let them bleed out slowly over the years through lingering glances, soft touches, and unspoken understanding.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
You were sixteen when he nearly told you.
It was late. You’d been watching horror movies with you curled up against him, almost half-asleep.
“Hey,” he whispered.
“Mm?”
“You know I—I really—uh, care about you, right?”
You cracked one eye open. “Mark, if this is your weird way of trying to tell me you love me, just do it.”
His breath hitched.
You snorted. “Relax. You’re too chicken to actually say it.”
“Am not.”
”Then say it.”
He paused.
You reached over, poked his cheek, and mumbled, “Didn’t think so.”
And then you fell asleep with your head on his shoulder, blissfully unaware of how badly his heart was racing.
-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈
Even now, sitting in his room, you’re stretched across his bed with a random comic forgotten beside you, legs tangled in his blanket like you own the place.
(Because you kind of do—not that he’d give you the satisfaction of knowing that.)
Mark watches you from his desk chair, ’Seance Dog’ comic in hand, but he’s not reading a word.
“You’re staring again,” you mutter from his bed, cheek half-squished against his pillow, voice muffled and judgmental.
“I am not,” Mark lies—incredibly unconvincingly.
You glance over with one brow raised. “You always stare when you’re thinking something gross.”
“It’s not gross!”
“So it is something.”
“…Maybe.”
You sit up, stretching your arms overhead with a dramatic yawn. “If you’re about to tell me you’ve been in love with me since we were, like, eight, just say it. Don’t do the weird broody stare like you’re in some CW drama.”
Mark blinks. “I mean… okay, not since eight. But maybe since… twelve?”
You blink at him.
Then before he can overthink like always—you let out a long, theatrical sigh and flop back dramatically again. “Ugh. Finally.”
Mark startles. “Wait, what?”
“You heard me.” You shoot him a lopsided grin. “Do you know how annoying it is being the only one aware of the mutual pining in this room? I’ve been carrying this ship on my BACK.”
Mark’s mouth opens. Closes. “Wait—you like me?”
“I’m literally lying in your bed, wearing your hoodie, and insulting you in front of your anime figurines. What do you think?”
“…Okay, that’s fair.”
You pause. Then smirk. “So… now what?”
Mark thinks for a second, then shrugs. “I mean, I could kiss you, but I’m 99% sure you’d just roast me for it.”
You hum. “Depends. Are you going to do that thing where you hesitate awkwardly and make a weird-ass face?”
Mark throws a pillow at you.
You cackle, catching it midair. “I’m kidding, dumbass. Come here.”
And when he does—grinning like a total idiot, heart thudding like he’s about to leap off a building for the first time—you tug him forward by the collar of his hoodie and kiss him first.
It’s warm, a little clumsy, way too long overdue.
And when you pull back, breathless and smug, grinning against his mouth—whispering, “Took you long enough, Grayson.”
Mark laughs, his cheeks tinted pink.
His fingers are still in your hair.
And for the first time in years, his heart feels lighter than air.
Because he’s always been watching you.
But now, finally—you’re looking back at him the same way.
-ˋˏ❀𖤣𖥧𖡼⊱✿⊰𖡼𖥧𖤣❀ˎˊ-
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
Later, as you both lay tangled in blankets and shared warmth, Mark breaks the silence.
“…Do you think my dad knew?”
The question lingers in the air, and your mind drifts back to the old days—the easier ones—before your eyes open.
You blink up at the ceiling. “That you’re in love with me? Yeah. He always knew.”
Mark groans. “Debbie probably has a betting pool going.”
“She does,” you say without hesitation. “Amber’s in on it too. I think William’s the bookie.”
Mark gapes at you. “Are you serious?”
You grin, smug. “Dead serious. I’m pretty sure I just made someone twenty bucks.”
Mark buries his face in the pillow. “God.”
Patting his back, mock-comfortingly, you snort under your breath. “Don’t worry. You’re still the last one to find out.”
“…That doesn’t make me feel better.”
“It wasn’t supposed to.”
And somewhere in the house, Debbie smiles to herself in the kitchen, sipping her wine like she didn’t just win her own bet.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
”You're not dead, but not alive either. You're just a ghost with a beating heart.” ⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘⫘writing my soul out like it’ll hit Mars’ Brightest, with ‘Beautiful Breakdown’ playing on loop (if you get the reference… KISS ME)
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