Watchmen Kink Meme 4: The Fab, Fantastic Four

Jan 08, 2010 10:56

Rules of the meme:

1. Anonymously post a pairing and prompt you would like to see written. Since this is a kink meme, there is supposted to be a kink involved, but normal well-written prompts should work just as well.

2. Anonymous will respond to your post and write it for you! Art and such is also acceptable/awesome. Multiple people may respond to ( Read more... )

kink meme, watchmen

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Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22b/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 04:46:24 UTC
One hot Saturday morning Dan lies to his father (something he generally tries to avoid at all costs), claiming his homework is done and hurrying out the front door before he can be questioned further. He is in fact falling behind, not badly but enough that he feels guilty, especially since he doesn’t even know where he’s going, only that he needs to get out of the house. Only for awhile, he promises himself, then he’ll come back and spend the rest of the day working.

He walks around the block once, debating. The treehouse would only be depressing, and he’s not interested in going to Eddie’s. The answer comes to him in a blinding flash of the obvious, and he digs around in his pockets, coming up with enough change for the bus ride to Hollis’. It‘s close enough to walk, but he curls up in the back seat, leaning against the window, and lets his mind drift back to the previous summer when Walter had showed them the entire city through bus windows.

Hollis greets him at the door, just as if he had been expecting him, hands him a root beer and watches him settle in on the couch. He can tell almost immediately that something is wrong, Dan’s face giving away more than the boy knows. Whatever’s bothering him, he doesn’t say anything about it, though he does mutter, looking away, when Hollis asks about school. He doesn’t say a word, just raises his eyebrows and lets his mouth fall into a hard line, at which Dan flushes and becomes very interested in a spot on the carpet.

Hollis softens quickly. He can’t be mad at Dan, not really. He’s a good kid, and clearly his own guilt is enough to push him back onto the right track. A little mild disappointment can’t hurt, though. He relents, making Dan promise he won’t stay long and will do his homework the moment he gets home.

Unpleasantness dealt with, he asks about the Watchmen, whose activities he keeps up on via Dan and Eddie. He honestly enjoys the tales of their adventures. It reminds him simultaneously of his own childhood and of following a particularly good story in serial form, with the added bonus of having it told with a child’s enthusiasm (he figures Eddie counts too, considering he gets just as excited about the stories as Dan does). When his young companion is mum on this subject as well, he begins to feel he has an idea of what’s going on.

“You’re awfully quiet today, Danny,” he says, not wanting to pry but hoping Dan will choose to fill him in. When he only shrugs, nursing his soda, Hollis voices his thoughts. “You know I always like hearing what you kids are up to. Reminds me of my days in the Minutemen.”

Dan seems to perk up slightly at that, so he continues. “Did I ever tell you about the time Silk Spectre and I took down Moloch?” Dan shakes his head, and Hollis smiles. He’s pretty sure he has, actually, but Dan is always eager to hear stories of the old Minutemen game, so he launches into it again. He goes on for awhile, that story blending into the next until he’s telling about one of their missions as a group.

“Hollis?” Dan interrupts, looking thoughtful. “You said the Silhouette -- uh, Ursula… She stopped playing with you guys?”

Bingo. They’re getting closer to the reason for Dan’s melancholy mood, and while he’s not exactly eager to tell the whole story, he figures the boy is old enough to know the truth, almost feels as if he deserves to know.

“Well,” he says slowly, considering, “not exactly. Ursula… We always had this idea she was different from the rest of us, somehow. No one really cared, at least not at first, but it was there. We were getting a little older, almost into high school. Sally and Larry were starting to…feel each other out, I suppose, though they didn’t officially start dating until awhile later.” He pauses, not quite sure how to approach this. “Danny, do you know what a lesbian is?”

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Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22c/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 04:47:34 UTC
Dan nods, wide-eyed. He knows about sex, from health class at school and a couple of very tense conversations with his father, and he knows, theoretically, that men can have it with men and women with women, though the idea sort of baffles him. The occasional peeks he’s managed at magazines hidden behind black cardboard signs at the liquor store where he sometimes spends his allowance on candy bars and Cokes have done little to enlighten him, though they have piqued a shameful sort of interest.

“Well,” Hollis says, “about that time, Ursula told us she thought she might be a lesbian. It took a lot for her to do it, too. These things weren’t as accepted back then, you know. They’re still not, but back then… Well. We were her best friends, and she confided in us.”

Dan nods in fascination. “What happened?”

“We didn’t quite know what to make of it at first. It came as a shock, but…I think for the most part, we took it in stride. I can’t speak for anyone else, but it never made a bit of difference to me. She was our friend; that was all that mattered. The only one who ever seemed really bothered was Larry.”

“Why?” Dan says, mind churning. He tries to imagine how he would feel if one of his friends made such a confession, and can’t see that he would care much either.

“I can’t say for sure, but… Larry always had a bit of a jealous streak. I don’t think he liked the idea of Ursula being around Sally.”

Dan’s brow furrows. “But Sally’s not… I mean, she wasn’t…uh, gay.”

Hollis gives him a sad smile. “I never said it made sense. But it wasn’t long before he was talking about her behind her back, making…disparaging remarks, to put it nicely. Pretty soon he had some of the others going along with it. I don’t think any of us particularly agreed with him, but Sally was smitten with him by that point and probably would have gone along with just about anything he wanted. As for the rest of us, well, I can’t quite explain it, but it’s easy to be influence by your friends at that age. I’m embarrassed to admit I went along with it myself. In the end, we just sort of drifted apart. We never fought, never told her she couldn’t be our friend, but we ostracized her in subtle ways, I’m sure, and eventually it got to where we didn’t talk to her at all.”

Dan remembers what he had thought the very first time Hollis mentioned Ursula. “I can’t even imagine not being friends with Laurie or Adrian or Walter.”

“I would have said the same thing at your age,” Hollis agrees. “To tell you the truth, I can still barely believe we did that. And this may sound silly, but to this day, I regret it. She was our friend, Dan. We should have stood by her.”

Dan nods, chewing hard on his lower lip. He has more than ever to think about, but a part of him already feels lighter, as if the answer to their current problems is somewhere in his mind, and he needs only wait for it to come to the surface. “I should probably get home and start on that homework, huh?”

“I think that’s a good idea, Danny,” Hollis says, smiling. It wasn’t a pleasant story for him to tell, but he’s pretty sure it was a worthwhile one. He walks Dan to the bus stop and waits with him until he climbs on board, their conversation flowing a little easier. Then he heads home and digs a battered phone book out of a drawer, flipping through to the Zs. Dan may well have figured out something important today, but perhaps he’s not the only one who has.

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Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22d/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 04:48:55 UTC
Dan does head straight home and gets through several worksheets and a portion of his history project before he allows his mind to return to what Hollis had told him. He doodles idly in his notebook a bit, telling himself he’s taking a short break, but as the lines on the paper begin to solidify into an image, he finds himself with a sudden idea, and within minutes he’s pulling his sneakers back on and telling his father he needs to go to the store and get a poster board for a project. It’s true, but when his dad offers to drive him, he declines, instead walking the few blocks to the stationery store. He picks up the board, then lingers in the art-supply aisle. He’s spent a fair amount of time here, wishing he could have practically all of the items, though he’s not really enough of an artist to warrant the cost. Today, though, he selects a small pad of paper, running his fingers over the first sheet. It’s thick and smooth, much nicer that the notebook or copy paper he usually draws on. He picks up a set of markers as well, the cheapest ones on the rack but still many levels above his Crayolas. It costs him nearly all the allowance he has saved up, but he hands over the money with a smile on his face.

It takes him a few days of working in between school and homework (which he works hard to catch up on, driven on by the lethal combination of Hollis’ disappointment, his dad’s certain ire at a bad report card, and the nagging voice in his own head), days in which Walter is as distant and surly as ever, which, while it still bothers him, makes him feel slightly less hopeless than it has been. In the end, he’s fairly pleased with the result.

There’s only a couple weeks left of school, and the feeling in Dan and Walter’s sixth-period class is one of restless anticipation. Everyone flies when the final bell rings, especially Walter, and Dan hurries after him. “Hey,” he says, panting ever so slightly as he catches Walter’s arm, “wait up.”

“Have to catch my bus, Daniel.”

“Just…wait. There’ll be another bus.” He doesn’t want to delay his friend getting home, but… “Please.”

Walter stops with a small huff of a sigh, looking at him warily. “What is it?”

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Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22e/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 04:49:35 UTC
Dan’s been rehearsing what to say in his head for days, hasn’t yet come up with anything he likes, and now forgets all of it, so he takes a breath and just blurts out what comes to mind. “I know…we know you have a lot to deal with and you can’t be around as much and it’s okay and… You’re my best friend and we’re always gonna be friends. No matter what. You know that, right?”

Eyes downcast, Walter mutters, “I know that.” His tone is strangely soft, though, and Dan thinks it may be the first time in weeks, if not months, he’s heard him speak without sounding somewhere between wooden and annoyed.

“Okay,” he says, feeling his face heat. “I… I just wanted to make sure. I don’t know what I’d do if we weren’t friends anymore. And…I made you this.“ Opening his backpack, he carefully pulls out a single sheet of paper. “Made” might be a bit of a stretch, but he couldn’t figure out how to actually build it, so instead he’s made the drawing as detailed and intricate as he possibly could, practicing with the artists’ markers until he’d gotten the shading down perfectly. “It’s a grappling gun. I thought Rorschach could use it. And. Uh. Stuff.” The stream of words dries up and he hands over the paper.

Walter stares at it for several long moments while Dan shifts his weight from foot to foot, suddenly feeling completely ridiculous. It’s stupid and he doesn’t know what he was thinking, giving Walter a stupid drawing like it’s something worthwhile and --

“Thank you, Daniel,” Walter says, looking up at him, surprise in his eyes, emotion in his voice, and Dan blushes hotter despite his relief that his friend seems to genuinely like it. “Should be…very useful, yes.”

Dan grins tentatively. “Okay,” he says, feeling awkward but suddenly very happy. “Uh, sorry if I made you miss your bus.”

“It’s all right,” Walter says, smiling back at him softly, and it’s a wonderful sight. “Will be another bus.”

“Okay. Um. See you tomorrow, then?”

“Tomorrow,” Walter agrees, and they part ways.

The next day, there is a lengthy notebook entry detailing Rorschach’s latest leads, involving a sequence where the grappling gun Nite Owl built for him proves indispensable.

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Re: Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22e/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 05:51:37 UTC
I think this fic has magical deaging properties, because I just responded like my twelve-year-old self would to the grappling gun bit: a shrill, girly squeal. This jerks my emotions in the best of ways, anon! Thank you!

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Re: Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22e/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 06:33:10 UTC
Yay! I'm so glad you like it. :) This chapter was...kind of intense to write. XD

Thank you for the lovely comment. :)

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Re: Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22e/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 06:39:28 UTC
I'm glad to see that their LARPing days aren't over yet! And I feel weird because the thought of teenage Sally and Larry dating actually makes me 'daww' somehow. :<

And also: BAWWWW, URSULA!! Seriously, Hollis, you need to call her up and ask her how she's doing or something! :<

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Rambling comment is rambling. anonymous February 25 2010, 06:49:26 UTC
...okay, gotta admit there's not much "d'awww" related to Sally and Larry in this fic. What can I say, I just don't like the guy. :/ Someone else should totally write something with them that is sweet, though. I'm all for giving minor characters some love...even the ones I don't personally care for. XD

There will, however, be a bit more Ursula coming up, sooner than you might think (hell, sooner than I even thought)... :D

Glad you like it, anon, thanks for the comment! :)

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Re: Rambling comment is rambling. anonymous February 25 2010, 07:21:09 UTC
yeah, that's why I said I felt weird about it. I think it's just because they were happy together at some point in their lives, in comparison to the horrible mess they are now. It's not that I like Sally/Larry or anything, ew! XD

And eee! :DDDDD

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Re: Growing Up Is Not An Absence Of Dreaming (22e/75) anonymous February 25 2010, 23:53:34 UTC
So. Fucking. Cute. I can't wait to see Ursula come into the story!

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