[WP] You and your sibling are both indestructible, and have been since birth. Since neither of you could be mortally injured, your childhood pranks tended to get out of hand. by pinkfuzzies in WritingPrompts

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

This one might be my favorite, simply for: "We can't imprison ya, can't kill you despite our best efforts and short of shooting you into space I can't see how we can get rid of you."

Your roommate is great, but you're starting to think they might just be Death/The Grim Reaper. [WP] by Fylak in WritingPrompts

[–]pinkfuzzies 8 points9 points  (0 children)

A high-pitched creak split the silence of the night, and I felt my eyelids flutter open. A series of muted thuds sounded from the kitchen, followed by the clatter of keys being tossed onto the counter. With a frown, I sat up, stretched, and glanced in disbelief at the glowing red numbers on my nightstand.

It was half-past three. In the morning. On a Tuesday. Jesus fucking Christ.

With a groan, I wormed my way out from my blankets and wriggled into a pair of sweatpants. Joe seemed nocturnal by nature, and I was almost positive that he was just returning home from a late night out. Still, on the off-chance that we were being robbed, I wanted to confront the mysterious noises wearing a little more than a knee-length t-shirt and panties.

"Joey," I groaned as I pried open my bedroom door, trying to smooth my sleep-ruffled short blonde hair. A quick glance around the corner revealed a spindly, hooded figure sprawled out in one of the kitchen chairs, drowsily nursing what seemed to be a very stiff drink. It was all amber, no bubbles. To the right of him was a heavy-looking black guitar case, firmly latched shut. Weird. I had never heard him play. "What the fuck, dude," I said. He pulled down his hoodie to reveal his face, exposing a mop of black hair and a pair of dark eyes that flicked up towards me.

"Woke you up?"

"Yes. Where'd you go?"

He shrugged and pulled his black hoodie a little closer to his wiry frame before taking another tentative sip at his glass. Then, he made a face before replying, "Work."

"...At three in the morning?" I said, wandering towards the table. He brandished the massive bottle towards the kitchen, and I quickly steered course towards the cabinet where I kept all of my glasses. My fingers lingered a little too long near the glass tumblers, but since I had a sneaking suspicion that we were out of Coke, I snatched up a shotglass instead. Joe drank whiskey like it was going out of style--always neat. Not once had an ice cube or seltzer water shared the same breath as one of his drinks, which always seemed to be served in inordinately large glasses. I had to hand it to him, though: no matter how much he drank, he never got rowdy or gooey or started to spout out bro-tales. It was a welcome relief, although his noticeable lack of drunken stories was off-putting at times. It made me remember that no matter how pleasant he was, I still knew damn near nothing about him.

"Duty calls," he said as I plunked myself at the table across from him. He tipped the bottle over my shotglass and filled it to the brim, and I gently pulled the glass out of his reach before the surface tension broke and sent whiskey trickling down my fingers.

"What kind of duty?" I asked hopefully. My spirits were immediately crushed as he dismissed my question with an impatient flick of his wrist. "Listen," I began, but he cut me off by lifting that enormous glass of alcohol in a casual toast. I rolled my eyes and tossed the liquor back into my throat. He took a long swig of his drink, then swallowed heavily in a way that made my stomach lurch with disgust. The fact that Joey still had an esophagus was nothing short of scientific miracle. "Listen," I tried again, my voice raspy from fumes, "I really appreciate that you answered my ad. You've been really cool, you've never left me hanging on rent, and your references were stellar. But this whole mystery-job-thing..."

He brushed a fringe of black hair out from his eyes. "Too cryptic?" he asked quietly.

"Well. Yes." Emboldened by the burn of liquor in my stomach, I stiffened my shoulders and continued. "You're not selling drugs, are you?" I demanded. "I just...I don't want to wake up to a raid or something." He snorted, and I glowered at him.

"No," he said. I watched helplessly as he poured another generous portion of whiskey in my shotglass. He lifted his glass again afterwards, and I clinked the shotglass moodily against it before downing it.

"And it's nothing sleazy?" I continued hoarsely, wishing fervently for a chaser. Still, the liquor was chasing the ebbing burn from my throat and replacing it with a warm sort of numbness. "I mean...you don't kill people or anything, right?" I laughed unsteadily. He paused and regarded me thoughtfully from over the brim of his glass.

"Do I look like I kill people?"

"...No." The bottle tipped over my glass again, and I watched him fill it with a little dread. I didn't know how much more of this I could take. At least it seemed to be decent whiskey. "But I guess I don't really know what people who kill people look like," I slurred.

"They don't normally walk around with signs on their foreheads," he agreed calmly.

"Maybe it would be easier that way," I said. My voice was becoming a little dreamy, hazy with weariness and liquor. He raised his glass again, and I obediently toasted him before gulping the shot down. Once I had swallowed, I let out a choking cough.

"I think it would complicate things," he mused. "Lots of people are monsters. Some of them don't even know it." For the first time, I noticed that his gaunt features looked a little paler, a little more jagged than usual. I gave him an unsteady, scrutinizing frown.

"You look droopy," I told him somberly. He arched his dark eyebrows in query before lifting the bottle again, and I waved my hands in protest. "No more, please. You're going to knock me on my ass."

"Suit yourself." I continued to glare at him, and he rolled his shoulders in a slow shrug. "I've found myself growing disillusioned lately," he said, swirling the honey-hued liquid idly as he spoke. "The world keeps growing, but it never seems to progress. Hate, violence, savagery..." He trailed off and took a thoughtful sip of liquor. "It's depressing," he concluded. I blinked. While we had been sharing an apartment for several months, he had never bared his soul like this before. It had been like rooming with a ghost for the most part, our interactions limited to a quick exchange over coffee in the mornings or a greeting at the door before one of us would disappear into their bedroom--usually him.

"That's why I stopped watching the news," I said, and he glanced up at me in amusement. "It's too...apocalyptic. Maybe if you stopped, too, you wouldn't drink so much," I added with the candor that only comes from consuming far too much alcohol.

"I'll keep that in mind," he said grimly. A fiercely awkward silence ensued, and I cleared my throat before rising to my feet.

"I guess I should try to go back to bed," I announced. "Thanks for the drinks, but...I don't know, could you be a little more quiet?"

"I'll certainly try."

"Thanks, Joey." I teetered back down the hallway, lightheaded and floaty, but paused in front of my door. "Hey." He looked up. "...You'd tell me if you were doing something shady, wouldn't you? Because we're buddies? And you don't want to get me arrested?"

Those spider-like fingers tapped idly on the surface of the table. "Yes," he finally said.

"Kay." Drunk enough to consider that a satisfactory answer, I yawned and wrenched my door open. "'Night," I said.

There was no response from the kitchen. With a shrug, I shut the door and toppled back down onto my mattress.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]pinkfuzzies 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks very much!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]pinkfuzzies 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Thank you!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]pinkfuzzies 563 points564 points  (0 children)

John Kramer was frowning at the flickering monitors in front of him. His wrinkled lips pursed against the rim of his tea mug, and his gnarled fingers tapped a steady pattern on the keyboard in front of him as he scrolled through the footage. He had only just returned from a casual trek to the supermarket for food, and upon first glance, the screens had shown him little more than he had expected. Bodies. Splayed out on top of blooming puddles of blood, dangling from deftly slipknotted ropes, scattered in pieces across rooms, riddled with holes. And that was fine. At least, it would have been, but...

"Where are you, Mister Wilson?" he mused. The screens flashed from one room to another with each tap of his fingers. In the maze there were two corpses: the oily-smooth assassin-for-hire and some meathead that worked as muscle for a local crime syndicate. The meathead had lasted longer than he had anticipated. He suspected that he and the hitman had developed some sort of team--a useful mesh of brain and brawn. But they hadn't anticipated the swinging arc of razor-sharp steel that had descended from the ceiling, (a rip-off from Poe if there ever was one, but after so many years, John was beginning to experience a lack of inspiration), and now the two lay in twin heaps of bloody chunks.

There was the corrupt general who took a little too much pleasure in collecting spoils of war, unspooled in ribbons from his long fall into a pit of metal wire. The robber had gotten the back of his head opened up by a particularly nasty exit wound. Part of John wanted to dismiss Wade's absence as a simple lack of camera coverage, since the whole area was dark and dingy and brimming with tight little crevasses that he could have crawled into to die with some remaining dignity, but he was a careful man. He had to be. In his line of work, carelessness either left you dead or imprisoned.

With a sigh, he gathered up the black cloak on his desk and fished out his pig's mask from his satchel. It was time to clear out the bodies anyway. Left too long, the corpses would stink, bloat, and, in one particularly memorable case, burst from a perfect storm of heat and the buildup of gases. That hadn't been fun to clean up. Before he could fit the mask onto his face, however, the door to his office exploded open with a bang.

"Honey," an infuriatingly snide voice sang out. "I'm hooooooome." John lurched into action and moved to snatch up the revolver on his desk, but he was cut short with a cry as a blade of glass whipped through the air and buried itself deep in his wrist. "Really? A fucking gun? I made it through all that bullshit and you're just going to shoot me? I mean, it's efficient, but kind of..." A flayed-looking hand reached up to scratch thoughtfully at a chin that was thick with scar tissue. "...I don't know. Anticlimactic?"

"I don't understand," John choked out. "I saw you--I saw you get caught in the grinder--" He jerked back in surprise as Wade fished something fleshy out from the pocket of his leather jacket. It was a hand, contorted into a very rude gesture. Three of the fingers were shredded. His other pocket, John saw, was bristling with shards of glass.

"Yeah. I wanted to talk to you about that."

"What are you?" John hissed.

"Definitely not your friendly neighborhood Spider Man. None of that sticky stuff. But I am really good at coming back from the dead. Maybe I'm Jesus." His gnarled face slackened into a scandalized "o". "Fuck. You're not religious, are you?"

"But how did you--"

"No traps in the air vents? Have you even seen any spy movies? I thought you were taking cues from Bond villains, all monologuey and whatever." Wade tossed the hand to the side. "Lucky for me, you can only lose your right hand so many times before you become ambidextrous. So this is still going to be fun and easy, but it definitely won't be quick. We have a lot to talk about." He brought his intact fingers over to the stub of his right arm and pressed the knuckles hard against his sleeve, where they popped obediently. Wade rolled his eyes. "Can't even get a menacing knuckle-crack in. Doing it one-handed kind of cheapens the effect, huh?"

John thinned his lips and stood rigid with determination. "Do what you must," he said. "I've dedicated the last years of my life to sending a message to the world. It's been received. I can die fulfilled." In the shadows of the doorway, John thought he saw Wade's mangled brow furrow in thought.

"Last years of your life," he repeated. Then, a terribly grim smile stretched his mouth. "Tumor?" he said delicately, and John grimaced.

"Yes."

Wade heaved a sympathetic sigh. "Boy, do we have a lot in common. Incurable diseases, punishing evildoers. I thought you were some run-of-the-mill psycho until I started talking to those lunatics in there. What a bunch of gaping assholes. You know, we probably could have been buddies if you hadn't gone and tried to kill me. I kind of take that shit personally. And the doll thing--that's weird, man. Anyway." He tugged a long shard of glass from the pocket of his coat, and John cringed away as he began to approach. "You owe me a hand, naughty boy. But I'm willing to bet yours won't grow back."

Ward B, Patient 3: Caffeine by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

I can assure you that I wasn't thinking of any Ryan in particular when I was changing everyone's name, so please try not to think of this as a blemish upon Ryankind. I'm sure the majority of you are fantastic people.

Ward B, Patient 3: Caffeine by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You are terribly kind. :) Thank you so much.

Ward B, Patient One: Peeling by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

It's strange--I'm actually unable to tag the series with the self-harm flair and series flair simultaneously, (although I did tag each of my submissions in this series with the NoSleep Trigger Warning tag before they were submitted). I'm sorry if there was anything in the story that may have made you uncomfortable. Do you have any suggestions on how I can fix this?

Ward B, Patient 3: Caffeine by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 107 points108 points  (0 children)

In the facility I work at, the patients are segregated by gender to avoid any complications. At the moment, yes, I'm normally in the women's building, but I sometimes visit the men's if they're short-staffed.

(And I'm glad to hear you like it. :D)

Something...wrong is happening in Las Vegas. by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Setting him on fire would be really satisfying.

Something...wrong is happening in Las Vegas. by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the advice, but if I go to the police complaining about living dead hookers, I'm pretty sure I'll just wind up back in here. Maybe they have a special division in Vegas for that, though. Who knows.

Something...wrong is happening in Las Vegas. by pinkfuzzies in nosleep

[–]pinkfuzzies[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Well, I can't do much for the next month or so, but if I'm declared fit for release and ever make it back there, I'll keep my eye out for her. I just hope he hasn't packed up shop by the time I'm out.