Heros And Villains - Tumblr Posts
“Wait—you’re the bridge troll?”
The little girl fiddled with the ends of her dress, lace curling over her fingers. Her hair fell in perfect ringlets, tied with a pretty bow. The darkness turned her hair to the deepest of blacks.
She smiled, all innocence.
“Yes. I could be something more scary, if that would help?”
Seraphina blinked.
“What?”
The smile took on an edge sharper than blades. Seraphina was afraid she might reveal a second row of teeth—she hated fae, especially the ones with too many teeth to count.
“I can be anything,” the little girl stated simply, and then she rose, twisting, bones cracking, until a cloud of darkness encompassed the bridge. When she spoke again, her voice echoed with the promise of pain and the sound of thousands pleading for help. “Is this form better?”
Seraphina choked on her own tongue, spine twinging as she grabbed for her dagger.
“No, no it was fine—“
“Or maybe,” came a voice she had long since laid to rest, “you’d prefer this?”
And then the bridge troll was wearing the face of her dead lover. Seraphina forgot to breathe for a moment, caught on the edge of tears. It was a blister that hurt, it was sticking your hand into the fire, it was breaking all your ribs. Seeing that face—even if the expression was all wrong, like spelling someone’s name with a different letter—hurt.
If Seraphina couldn’t feel her own breathing, she’d assume she was dead.
“Take off their face,” she said after a long moment, and the bridge troll obliged.
“Better?” The little girl said, and Seraphina nodded mutely. “Now, for prices. Most people give up one of their favorite memories, or maybe the voice of a loved one—“
“How much,” Seraphina began, clearing her throat. She eyes the coursing river below. “How much would all of the memories of a loved one be worth.”
The little girl paused, mouth open.
“I’m sorry?”
“How much would it be worth. How many passages across the bridge would all of my memories about someone be worth.”
The little girl blinked, then drew herself up, as if she had surprised even herself in her lack of calm.
“It would pay off years worth of passages.”
Seraphina nodded.
Below, the river thrummed with empty promises.
She had loved them, and they had died. They were supposed to both make it out. And now, here Seraphina was, alone but for a bridge toll, on a bridge in the middle of nowhere.
Well. Not nowhere. She was in that place her lover had always wanted to go.
She figured maybe if she went, her lover would feel it, wherever their soul was.
Now, though, her love simply felt like an arrow between her ribs.
“I’ll pay it.”
The little girl paused again.
“You don’t mean that.”
“I do. Take it. Pay off as much as you can so nobody who passes through needs to worry.”
The little girl fell silent. If she had any emotions, Seraphina hoped she would understand the enormity of the sacrifice.
Really, though, it was just a selfish need for the pain to stop.
“Alright,” the little girl said. “Give me your hand.”
Seraphina obliged. Her hand was warm in a way she hadn’t expected, and soft.
“Whose face are you wearing?” Seraphina whispered.
“Whose soul are you releasing,” the girl said back.
Seraphina looked once more at the river.
“The love of my life.”
As soon as she said it, as soon as she thought of his face, it was snatched from her mind.
No pain.
Just a neatly cut hole where something should be.
In front of her, a little girl held her hand.
She frowned, puzzled. She rubbed her eyes.
“What are you—“ when she opened them, she blinked again. The most handsome man she had ever seen was holding her hand, smiling roguishly.
“You took a bit of a fall. Are you feeling okay?” His voice sounded like home, and his face looked like it, like warm summer breezes and laughter at the hearth. For a second, something throbbed in side of her, a quiet I remember, before it whisped away.
“Yeah,” she said when she realized she had simply been staring at his face. “Yeah, sorry, i’m fine.”
His smile broadened.
“My name is Edrian, by the way.”
She blinked once more.
“Seraphina.”
The edges of his smile softened.
‘Seraphina’ he mouthed, as if testing it out.
“Can I buy you something to eat?”
Her hand was still in his. For some reason, she didn’t want to let go.
She studied his face, and was filled with such love, such longing, that she almost choked.
She felt like she had loved him for years.
“Sure.”
Edrian squeezed her hand, gently, then murmured her name once more, tugging her gently into town.
Behind them, the bridge was abandoned, and tucked between their clasped hands and traded memories, stolen love bloomed.
“Do you really think that she would want this? Lu—“
The villain cut them off with a sharp hand to their chest.
They heaved a breathe, eyes gleaming and shoulders just on the edge of shaking.
“Don’t say her name. You don’t get to say her name.”
The hero’s mouth went dry.
“She was my sister too, you know,” they said quietly.
It was the wrong thing to say.
The villain grabbed the front of their jacket and hauled them against the wall, gritting their teeth as angry tears flushed their eyes.
“And yet you killed her anyways.”
The hero spluttered.
“I would never have hurt her, you know that—“
“You let her die.”
The hero fell silent.
The villain dropped them as if they could no longer bear to touch the hero, could no longer bear to touch their youngest sibling.
“You drew her into all your chosen one bullshit, and then when she needed you, you weren’t there.”
Anger, hot and heavy like a summers day,
sprung to life in the hero’s gut.
The villain regarded them, then shook their head in disgust. “Selfish.”
“I was taking care of your henchman,” the hero spat, and the villain stopped dead.
It took them three tries, in all their elegance and poise, to get the word out.
“What.”
The hero took a shuddering step, hand outreached, so angry and so lonely.
“I was taking care of the henchman you set loose in the lower quadrant. She said she could handle it—I thought it was you. I thought she would find you at the other end of the SOS call, and you would be gentle.”
The villain’s face went oh so pale.
“You thought—“
“I thought it was you,” the hero confirmed, voice shaking. “If I had known it was Nightshade—if I had known, I never would have let her go.”
The villain opened their mouth, but had nothing to say. Car alarms blared in the distance.
The villain gestured with their head.
“Aren’t you supposed to get that.”
The hero shrugged.
“Yeah.”
Neither of them moved.
“We ruined this family, didn’t we?” The villain looked like they were trying very hard not to cry. “Always trying to one up each other, always trying to be the prettiest star. Burned so bright we burned everyone around us.”
“Until there was no one left to burn for,” the hero said softly.
Somehow, they had sunk onto the ground of the damp alley.
The hero wasn’t sure who reached first, but then they were tangled in each others arms, sobbing violently, snot dripping onto each others shirts.
“I’m sorry,” the hero retched. “I didn’t mean it.”
The villain loosed a shuddering breath.
“It’s okay. We’re okay.”
The hero only clutched them tighter, because this was their family, the last of their bloodline besides themself.
The villain pressed an apology into their back with trembling hands.
I’m sorry, they murmured together, until it was no longer two words but something akin to a keen.
Lucy, I’m sorry.
When their tears had dried along with the pavement, and the emergency vehicles had once more begun to sing, they had stood there awkwardly, for one moment, as if memorizing each others faces, before they hurtled into the city, opposite directions.
They never spoke of it again.
But the villain stopped trying to kill them.
So there was that.
As another request, maybe the villain and hero are fighting , and the villain notices that the hero reacts suspiciously numb to his attacks. And when he taunts him about it, the hero sisimply says something to the effect of being used to it. And the villain is suspicious by the tone so he follow the hero and find out he’s abused by family . Cue villain saving the hero, comforting him and showering him with the love he never got
The villain should have known something was wrong the first time he hit the hero, and he simply braced, pain flickering along the muscles of his jaw, before hitting back. Face blank, a mask stronger than concrete. As if pain played no part, and it was just the give and return of kinetic energy, and nothing more.
He should have known when he said something so cruel it felt like graveyard dirt upon his tongue, and the hero merely stuttered for half a second, everything within him freezing, before he continued like nothing had happened. Nothing cruel in return, nothing biting in his face. Just–complete nothing.
“You never flinch,” the villain said, and it wasn’t a sudden realization, but it was close. Again, that momentary pause, like the hero had been grabbed and stopped by some otherworldly being on a molecular level. It allowed the villain to catch the next hit the hero threw at them.
“What?”
The hero, to his credit, didn’t sound upset, and in this line of work the villain was especially good at noticing the tiny pieces of that kind of thing. He just sounded confused, maybe.
“When I hit you. You don’t flinch,” the villain clarified. The hero just stared at them.
“You only really flinch if you aren’t used to it,” the hero said finally.
“Used to it?”
“You heard me,” the hero replied, and this time, there was irritation behind his words.
The villain tossed the hero’s fist down, and the hero stumbled back.
“And you didn’t answer my question.”
“I wasn’t aware there was one.”
“Are you intentionally being annoying, or is it just natural for you?”
The hero’s breath shuddered.
“Sorry.”
“Sorry–you–I don’t want an apology,” the villain sputtered. This conversation felt above his pay grade; and he wasn't entirely sure why, either, which irked him, itching under his skin.
“So–” the hero snapped his jaw shut around the rest of the word, and it looked like he was doing everything in his power to stop himself from finishing it.
Before the villain could prod further–about the flinching, or any other confusing aspect of it–the hero blew out a breath, and said, “I’m done here.”
The villain blinked.
“You can’t just decide when a fight is over.”
“Watch me,” the hero said, but his voice didn’t have the heat that usually went along with that phrase.
“You’re a hero, isn’t this kind of your entire job? Finishing fights, not walking away from them?”
“I said, I’m done,” the hero snarled, and it was the first hint of emotion he had shown the entire day, explosive and aimed entirely at the villain. The villain was taken aback for a moment.
The hero turned and left before the villain could even think of a response. He didn’t look over his shoulder.
Of course, the villain followed him home.
The fact that he had been able to at all was something to be worried about.
He watched as the hero entered, shutting the door behind him. Heard the sound of his bag hitting the floor, his jacket being hung up. Normal, quiet little things. Shuffling through the kitchen, making a cup of tea. A quiet conversation with his mother.
The villain was about to leave when he heard the slap.
He was through the door before he realized he was moving, leaving the handle to slam into the wall.
He caught the barest edge of a conversation as he rounded the corner–a curse word, then a vile sort of thing that was somehow worse than anything the villain had managed to say in his entire life–and slotted himself neatly between the hero and his mother.
The villain caught her wrist before it could touch any part of the hero. His grip was too tight to be anything but painful.
The hero’s mother gaped at them.
A bruise was beginning to bloom across the hero’s cheek.
The hero was shaking, slightly, face tense and drawn as he stared at the villain. Like the villain was the unnerving thing in this situation, and the hand his mother still had raised was the normality.
A rage, raw and unfathomable, ravenous within him, descending down so deep into the white hot of fury that it passed anything that had a name, uncurled itself along his bones.
“Touch him again,” the villain seethed, voice shaking with all that feral untamed mess within himself, “and you lose the hand.”
“Villain,” the hero said quietly, and the villain had never heard him so meek.
How long did it take for a person to learn that kind of quiet?
“Villain, leave it.”
The villain didn’t release the hero’s mother’s–no. The woman in front of him wasn’t a mother. She was something twisted, and broken, and cruel, upper lip curled with displeasure. Not that the villain was within her kitchen; but that he had stopped her from hitting her child.
The villain wanted nothing more than to vomit on her spotless white tiles.
Maybe in another life she would have been the kind of person the hero, with his kind heart, would have saved before it got to this point.
Maybe in another life the villain would have let the hero try.
But that was not this life.
And there was a bruise blooming on his hero’s cheek.
“You have no right–”
“Did I not make myself clear?” He said, and it was black and poisonous in the air.
The woman in front of him swallowed, and for the first time, fear flickered across her face.
Good.
“Villain,” the hero said, voice strangled, and the villain turned to look at him.
“She’s hurt you before,” the villain said, and it wasn’t a question. The hero looked at him wide-eyed, and he wondered how many times the hero had walked into a fight with him with pre-existing injuries. Injuries he would pretend later that the villain had given him.
The hero swallowed, hard.
“Yes,” he whispered, and that was all the villain needed. He turned back around.
“The only reason you are alive right now is because I think killing you would upset him,” he informed her, and he watched her face pale. “That, and getting blood out of shoes is a bitch. Isn’t it, hero? See, you wouldn’t know. Nobody’s ever made you bleed, I’d wager, because if they had, you would understand it isn’t the kind of thing you do to someone you love.”
He grinned, feral.
“You’re going to leave,” he continued. “Matter of fact, you’re going to vanish. And you’re going to do it so well that if he wants, he’ll never have to think of you again. The only way you’ll ever see him again will be because he wants it to happen, do you understand me? If you don’t, we’ll make you vanish my way.”
The hero made a choked noise behind him. “I don’t think you’ll like that very much,” the villain confided in a whisper.
He wasn’t sure the woman in front of him was breathing.
“Hero,” he said after a long minute. He was going to leave bruises on her wrist. She was shaking, and it soothed some of the yawning rage within him. “Pack a bag.”
The hero vanished into the halls of the house.
The villain didn’t say anything, just stared at the woman in front of him, as if he looked long enough he would be able to see the rotten core inside of her that had made her this way. Turned her into something violent. Or perhaps, the thing that had been inside her since birth, broken and seething. Inevitable.
He didn’t like to believe people could be born evil.
He would make an exception.
The hero appeared back behind him as silent as a wraith, far faster than the villain had expected, duffel bag in one hand.
He wondered how long the hero had had a bag tucked away, packed and ready to run if it got too bad.
He wondered what the hero considered ‘bad enough’ and his jaw clenched hard enough he could hear the bones creak.
“That all you need?”
The hero nodded, mutely, and the villain finally dropped the woman’s hand. She pulled back, hissing as she rubbed her arm, but she had the sense to not glare at the villain.
He tipped his head towards the door.
“Let’s go,” he said, as gently as he had ever heard himself.
The hero followed him out, and they didn’t say anything until the villain’s apartment door locked behind the both of them.
The villain blew out a shuddering breath.
The hero looked like he wasn’t entirely there, eyes glassy.
“Hero,” he said softly, and the hero’s gaze snapped to his face. He stopped himself from reaching for him, a helpless effort to do something, to fix it. “Can I touch you?”
He made sure it didn’t sound like a demand, because if the hero said no, the villain would die before crossing that line, no matter how much it stung. A moment later, to his relief, the hero gave a jerky nod.
He moved slowly, a gentle palm on the hero’s jaw to tip it up, inspecting the bruise with pursed lips. He brushed away the tear that slipped down the hero’s cheek with his thumb, and left it there.
“It could be worse,” the hero offered quietly.
“The fact that it exists at all is worse enough,” the villain murmured, tipping the hero’s head back down. “I’m so sorry.”
The hero blinked, brow furrowing. “For what?”
The villain shrugged one shoulder. “That it happened. That it has been happening. That I didn’t notice.”
“I’m good at hiding it,” the hero said, like it was supposed to make the villain feel better.
“You shouldn’t have had to learn how to do that at all,” the villain said, and the hero’s lip wobbled.
The hero wavered slightly, like he didn’t know what to do with himself. He carried himself like the entirety of his body was an open wound, every second spent breathing a second spent in agony.
The villain couldn’t pretend he knew what this felt like, but he could do his best to soothe it as much as possible.
“Come here,” he said softly, and the hero melted into him, shaking as he tried to cry quietly and failed. He tucked the hero against his chest, and hand coming to curl into the hero’s hair as he let out a desperate keening noise.
He rested his chin on the top of the hero’s head. “It’s going to be okay,” he whispered. “It’s not right now, but it will be, I promise. Even if it takes a while.”
The hero shuddered against him, then nodded, just once.
It wasn’t okay, but it would be.
The villain had promised.
And he never broke a promise.
Prompt 9
”Listen, I know we have had out differences in the past but I think if we worked together-“
“I would rather die than work with you. Oh, and those ‘differences’ you just mentioned are the fact that I round up my villains in a civilised manner and drop them in jail while you just straight out kill yours!”
Hero1 groaned and rubbed their forehead as yet another migraine kept up on them. “Well this is a different type of villain, that neither of us is use to dealing with so will you just fucking help me!”