°Ëâ´ SHOW THE EVIDENCE, not the time!! don't say "three months later" and have everything exactly the same. Show the evidence: the houseplant is dead now, there's a new coffee shop, their hair is longer, the season changed, the relationship shifted
°Ëâ´ People don't pause their lives!! during your time skip, other characters didn't freeze. They got new jobs, started dating someone, developed opinions, had experiences. When we come back, there should be GAPS in what your POV character knows
°Ëâ´ Anchor it with a CONCRETE detail!! "The last time she'd been in this room, there'd been snow on the ground. Now the garden outside was screaming with roses." Give the reader something tangible to mark the passage
°Ëâ´ What DIDN'T happen is interesting!! "Six weeks and still no word from him" or "Another year of birthday candles she didn't make wishes on" sometimes the time skip is defined by absence and waiting
°Ëâ´ Compress boring stuff, expand important stuff!! "The trial took three months" can be one sentence. But the five minutes after the verdict? That might be three pages. TIME IS ELASTIC in fiction, use it!!!
°Ëâ´ Characters should FEEL differently about the skip !! time passing changes perspective. Something that felt devastating last year might feel trivial now. Or vice versa. What seemed certain became a mistake. SHOW THE SHIFT
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Warnings: Too much fluff, suggestive contents, cursing, and Aunt Yelena!
To those who requested, here you go! đ
Note: I needed some help from AI for the description of the house because I suck with describing things, otherwise, the rest is all mine.
"Baby, I'm home!"
"In the kitchen!" You informed Natasha, your wife, who had just gotten home from the tower after she submitted her post-mission reports.
Currently, you're tending to your hunger in the kitchen, munching on the delivered chicken wings, lasagna, donuts, and ice cream that you've bought online.
"Hi," Natasha's head poked from the doorway, looking through the variety of foods that you've got all to yourself, smiling amusingly at you, "You hungry, moya lyubov?"
"Don't be homophobic, I'm starving." You frowned, hating the interruption but loving the way her lips had collided into your skin, missing her already even though she had just left a couple of hours ago. "Is Willow still sleeping?"
"Mhm," She smirked while wiggling her brows suggestively as she traced her heated palms around your shoulder, "You know, I've been missing you a lot lately because you always have to tend our Willow."
You raised your brow at her, rolling your eyes. "She's eight months old and in need of some caring hands to guide her."
"Oh, baby," Natasha tutted, "I need some caring hands too, you know...while our daughter is still not in need of yours."
You pursed your lips at that, silently looking back and forth between your wife, who's made you feel really hot, and your food, the one that you can't stop thinking about since last night. Seriously torn between the two.
"Would you let me eat my ice cream on your abs?" You looked up at her with doe eyes, defeatedly sighing, making her chuckle lowly as she looked at you with lustful ones.
"Deal."
There was a quick exchange of sloppy kisses, and the next thing you knew, you were both locked up in your shared room with soundproofed walls, seeing white.
-
Two months later..
"Love, wakey wakey," Natasha mumbled in your ear, shaking your sleeping form gently.
"Piss off!" You groaned, turning away from her, which made her chuckle, kissing the exposed skin on your neck. "Natalia, I'm telling you, if I don't get my sleep, I will make sure that you don't get to see your daughter ever and-"
You didn't get to finish your sentence because soon, your body voluntarily stood up on its own, making your way quickly into the bathroom when something went up into your throat.
Natasha was quick enough to rush to your side, helping you while she rubbed your back comfortingly. "You okay?"
"I'm puking my guts out, and you're still asking me that?" You scoffed at her sarcastically in mid-session.
"Okay, sorry, I was just asking." Natasha frowned at the attitude but decided to ignore it instead. "Why are you throwing up anyway? Did you eat all the cookies again?"
"Hey, it's Wanda's cookies!" You protested, cleaning yourself because you felt icky after flushing the toilet bowl. "Her cookies are special. I don't know why; maybe she's putting her magic on them, but they're really yummy, so don't blame it on me. Blame Wanda."
"Mhm, whatever you say," Natasha uttered unconvincingly, causing you to pout at her through the mirror as you brushed your teeth. "I'm thinking about visiting the compound with Willow later; would you like to come?"
"Why?"
"Her aunts and uncles are bugging me." She pursed her lips while brushing her teeth beside you also. "They said that I've kept her all to myself, and they want to see her."
It's true, though.
You were staying in some hidden land in Ohio, where only Natasha and you had access. You both have asked Wanda to make your house invisible in the eyes of the others in order for you to be safe, which she easily agreed to.
Your home is the perfect combination of aesthetics, simplicity, and elegance, making it the ideal paradise for a family. Its façade exudes timeless charm with its deep color palette and graceful architectural lines. As you enter, an open-plan living space greets you, characterized by a clean, streamlined design and plenty of natural light streaming in through the large windows. The fully equipped kitchen, decorated with sleek cabinets and modern appliances, seamlessly connects to the cozy dining area, making it the center of family gatherings. Upstairs, you'll discover quiet and spacious bedrooms, including the master suite, a peaceful hideaway with an en-suite bathroom and dressing room. The meticulously landscaped backyard provides a peaceful outdoor oasis for relaxation and play, completing this elegant yet unpretentious family residence.
In addition to that, you've stopped taking missions, wanting to focus solely on your daughter and family. For now, at least.
So..
You smiled, longing for your friends while being a mother. Wanting to talk about your journey of motherhood with Natasha and Willow with your friends would surely make your day.
"Sure, let's go and make some trouble on Tony's property!"
-
"She's grown so much!" Kate gushed while Yelena held your guys' daughter tightly in her chest. The blonde melted at the sight of her niece clinging onto her (not that she'll ever admit that), like they had already made some connection after seeing and clinging to each other for ten minutes. "She's so cute. I want to have one-"
"What?!" Yelena widened her eyes, slightly raising her voice in shock, causing Willow to pout at her with wide orbs, thinking that her aunt was yelling at her. She saw the tears gathering in the corner of your daughter's eyes, causing her to panic and feel guilty at the same time she comforted her, "Oh, no, no, no, noâI'm sorry, it's not you. It's Kate Bishop, I promise!"
"Do you keep saying my full name just to point out that you know it?"⢠Kate sighed, making faces at Willow to make her laugh.
"Yes," Yelena proudly stated, "I know a lot about you. Mother, Eleanor. Arrested for-"
"Yeah, yeah, I get it," Kate quickly mumbled, stopping Yelena from discussing her family history in front of you. "Can I hold her now? You've been holding her for so long already."
Yelena glared at her, "No."
"Come on! Let's take turns."
"Um, excuse me," You interrupted them both. "My daughter's not a toy; I just want to remind you guys, you know, in case you forgot, that's all."
"I'm still mad at you," The blonde told you pointedly, her attention shifting into you. "You should've told me, so I gave my sestra some shovel talk."
"Yeah," You cringed, looking at Natasha, who was laughing quietly at your side, "Let's not do that. Not really cool, dude."
You bid your goodbyes after that, leaving Natasha with Yelena, Kate, and the others, letting them meet and bond with your daughter, chuckling lowly as you heard Natasha in your earshot while you find your way to the medbay, where you're sure Bruce and Tony were.
"Shovel talk? Really?"
-
"Good afternoon, gentlemen!" You greeted loudly, not bothering to knock as you entered the lab. Bruce jumped slightly from his seat while Tony had just looked up from his sciencey tech to blink at you before turning his attention back to the equipment, causing you to frown and say, "Hey, didn't you miss me?"
"No." Tony stuck his tongue out at you childishly, making you gasp in offense. "See? We bond over our ego and pride. I told you before, you should've just married me instead of Red."
"Okay, first of all, I'll tell Pepper that you said that." You smirked teasingly when he widened his eyes in panic. "And secondly, dude, that's fucking disgusting, so fuck you. Lastly, fuck you very much because I feel disgusting now."
"Hey, Y/n," Bruce gently cut in his greeting, "How are you?"
"I'm fine." You shrugged. "We've brought Willow along, though."
"Really?" Tony looked up at you with interest. You nodded as an answer, causing him to sprint off the room, shouting, "You should've started with that!"
Now that you're finally alone, you've turned to Bruce.
"Thank god the nosy is finally gone!" You breathed out lowly, resulting in some manly chuckles from him. You laughed with him for quite a while before turning serious and mumbling.
"Bruce, we have a mission."
-
"Hey, baby," Natasha mumbled from your side. You're all gathered in the dining area in the compound, having some dinner together, courtesy of Tony's credit card. "Where have you been a while ago?"
"Bruce," You replied shortly with a shrug, munching onto your fries and dipping them in the ice cream that you'd specifically asked for yourself.
"Why?"
"Too many questions, Natalia." You pursed your lips, looking over Thor, who's playing with Willow to keep her attention away from you. "Hey, Thunder, show her some tricks!"
"Absolutely not!" Natasha reprimanded quickly, turning her attention to the team with full authority. "No tricks, no weapons, no fighting, or anything around my daughter, understood?"
"Copy." All of them replied with an eye roll, causing the former assassin to glare at them in warning.
"Hey, Romanoff, you've got a cake here!" Sam called Natasha from the doorway, having just gotten home from his mission in Nebraska. He dropped the sealed cake in front of your wife, making the redhead frown.
"I didn't order anything," Natasha mumbled cautiously. She was being extremely careful when she opened it; her trained senses and alert mode were all turned on, not wanting to put anyone in harm's way just in case there was a bomb inside the box.
"Couldn't you be any slower?" Yelena groaned impatiently from her chair.
Natasha gazed at her with furrowed brows and scolded, "Shut up!"
"You're such a mom!"â˘
"It's because I... am..." Natasha's sentence had died down in her tongue when she finally opened the box. It was your guys' favorite cake from the store down the block. She blinked owlishly at the dedication written on the cake, trying to make sure that she wasn't hallucinating in any way. The redhead read it out loud again, still not wanting to believe it.
Hi, Mama! We'll see you in March!
"What does this mean?" Natasha gazed at you, already tearing up. "We'll? Meaning.."
You nodded eagerly, sobbing uncontrollably, "We're having twins, you sharpshooter!"
"Oh, my god! This is amazing, baby!" Natasha lunged at you with kisses, not caring about the teasing whistles that she got from the team. "Thank you! I'm so happy, moya lyubov!"
You chuckled at her, kissing her passionately while she returned the sentiment with the same intensity, only breaking apart when you heard Yelena shouting about something that had you gasping with a horrified look when she began running away with your daughter.
Bianca: What's the most illegal thing you can do with 1 dollar.
Enid: What the fuck Bianca.
Wednesday, not looking up from her book: Exchange it all for pennies, stick the pennies all in a sock and then beat someone to death with it. A very simple way to get a murder charge.
I'm going to assume you know a decent amount the Winclair fandom, I'm curious why so many fanfic writers have Wednesday speaking Italian instead of Spanish, considering Netflix Wednesday is pretty firmly considered Latina?
Interesting question. I donât know for certain, obviously fandom is a community and therefore there are various different perspectives taken when creating fan-content that kind of just amalgamates into various levels of popular and unpopular fanon. So in all honesty I donât actually know.
But having said that, if I had to wager an educated guess itâs probably a mixture of a few things.
The first being that Wednesday, though Latina in heritage through her father, is also canonically multilingual and Italian is one of the languages she is fluent in. We find this out during her first meeting with Tyler when she fixes the espresso machine.
And though weâve seen her almost get into a romantic relationship, again with Tyler, that ends almost as soon as it begins when she finds out heâs the Hyde during their first kiss. And so we havenât yet seen Wednesday take that final step and actually be in a romantic relationship which is where I find most of the Italian comes out in Wenclair fanfic.
One of the more popular fanon concepts is âthe Gomezification of Wednesday Addamsâ which is just Wednesday being as openly affectionate and insanely in love with Enid as Gomez is with Morticia. Sometimes to itâs full extent, though more often than not itâs a more subdued and private version where it tends to stay just between her and Enid and itâs all very cute and romantic.
Obviously as she is multilingual Wednesday and fic authors are then able to take their pick of the more romantic languages she knows when talking to/about Enid. Italian, French and Spanish being the main three that Iâve noticed.
Why Italian is the favoured choice of the three is probably also due to Gomez within previous Addams Family media. Though my favourite will always be the 60âs show most people will be more familiar with the 90âs movies in which Gomez refers to Morticia as Cara Mia (Italian for my beloved) quite frequently.
Though speaking of the 60âs show Gomez is more prone to Querida (Spanish for darling or beloved) in that iteration. So at the end of the day itâs a matter of preference for the author and also likely to them being unfamiliar with the romantic languages and going off of other Wenclair authors and/or using previous Addams Family media in which Italian is often used and spiralling onwards.
Summary: you and Wednesday were best friends when you were kids, but after Neroâs death, she became cold and distant, and your former friendship turned into a rivalry. Ten years after your friendship ended, unusual circumstances force you two back together.
Trope: childhood friends to enemies to lovers
Warnings: small violent at beginning, angst, death of Nero. Let me know if I missed any!
My Masterlist
Word Count: 12.3K (whatâs a word count?)
The sound of children laughing rang throughout the woods on a crisp fall morning. The trees were beautiful vibrant colors that painted the landscape with shades of fiery red, golden yellow, and earthly orange. The crisp air that one could taste in their lungs carried a gentle rustling of fallen leaves while the scent of decaying foliage filled the atmosphere. The ground was adorned with a carpet of fallen leaves that created a soft crunch when the two children ran through the serene woodland.
Even though one child chased the other with a small ax, the two had the same fun. The one with the ax was a taller girl with jet-black twin braids who wore all-black clothing, expert for her white collar shirt. She wore a giant smile on her face as she chased her best friend, Y/N.
You were shorter than Wednesday but had just as much fire in you as Wednesday did. Where Wednesdayâs eyes were as black as night, you had a gray and green eye that you used to hide behind sunglasses until Wednesday told you they were the most beautiful things in the world, âYou shouldnât hide what separates you from others, Y/N. Especially if it makes you all the more beautiful.â
You wore brighter colors than Wednesday, but you both shared a love for darkness. You were nothing without Wednesday, just as Wednesday was nothing without you.
The two made an odd pair, but one was never seen without the other. There were times when Morticia had to pry her daughter away from you to find that you had snuck back over sometime in the moonlight. Whenever Wednesday would practice her cello, she would invite you to play the piano, and together you two would create the most heavenly sound that would make angels cry. The contrast was there, but they fit together like puzzle pieces.
As they ran through the woods, you tripped on a small branch and fell to the ground, causing worry to overtake Wednesday as she sprinted to the fallen girl. âAre you alright, Y/N?â Wednesday asked as she knelt beside her friend, but her worry quickly disappeared when you sprang up and tackled her to the ground. You removed the ax from the taller girlâs grasp and held it to her neck. âI appear to be the victor,â you said with a giant smile contrasting Wednesdayâs grim expression.
Wednesday leaned up and shoved you off her as she stood up and brushed herself off. âThatâs hardly a win; you cheated,â Wednesday replied dryly as she helped you off the ground.
âI might have cheated, but youâre still the loser,â you shot back while standing up. You lived for the playful banter with Wednesday and would rather lose your tongue than go without annoying Wednesday for a day. You handed Wednesday the ax back so she could be the Hunter again, and she placed it in its holster on her hip.
As you two were getting ready to start a new game, a voice rattled the trees around you, âWednesday! Y/N! Time to come home!â The two shared a look and rolled their eyes simultaneously; they both hated it when Morticia ruined their fun, but they started their walk back to the house nonetheless.
As they walked, Wednesday felt bold and pulled you into a headlock and brought the smaller girlâs head against her ribcage. You didnât even have time to protest before you felt Wednesdayâs knuckles dig into your scalp. You squirmed against Wednesdayâs hold, but it was useless; the taller girl was stronger than you. So, you did what any sane person would do; you bit down on Wednesdayâs forearm that was keeping you in place. Not enough to hurt the assailant, but just enough to let go of you. And just as you predicted, Wednesday let go of you and grabbed the area that the smaller girl just bit. âWhy did you do that?â Wednesday questioned as she rubbed her arm back and forth.
âUh, because I can?â You retorted as you motioned with her hand, giving Wednesday an attitude that the other girl scoffed at. âLet us go, my compact companion; we have tasks at hand,â Wednesday said as she grabbed your hand, and the two ran back to the Addamsâ residence together.
âYou have to stop calling me that,â you whined. Wednesday had her collection of names to call you, and the shorter girl hated them.
âItâs not my fault youâre shorter than me; blame your genetics,â Wednesday replied with a dry tone but a slight smile that caused you to smile once you saw it. Wednesday never smiled at anyone except you; Wednesday made a lot of exceptions for the more petite girl, even though she would never admit it.
When they arrived at the mansion, both girls were out of breath as Morticia came outside to greet them. âHello, my little doves. Did you two enjoy the hunt?â Wednesdayâs mother asked them as they went inside and took off their shoes.
âYes, Mrs. Addams, I always have fun with Wens. Sheâs the best,â you breathlessly replied as you followed Wednesday up to her room.
Morticia was always fond of you; she loved how her morbid daughter seemed to light up when she was around you, and she knew that her daughter could always rely on and trust you. But all great things must come to an end.
Wednesday held her bedroom door open for you as they entered. The room was dark and cold, but it had character, like Wednesday. There were two giant windows that Wednesday always kept covered on the opposite wall of the door. There were collections of knives hung up on the walls, and the shelves were littered with bookshelves, and in the corner of the room was a cello right next to Y/Nâs piano. A small fireplace was built into the wall and had a black, round table in front of it that sat only two. A black bed was in the center of the room with its headboard against the wall, and at the end of the bed was a small bed bench that was purple, Y/Nâs favorite color. Above Wednesdayâs bed were two swords mounted onto the ceiling; one had a black handle with the purple initials of W.A. etched into the ricasso, while the other had a purple handle with your initials engraved in black. You found the swords a bit odd, but according to Wednesday, it made her feel like Damocles.
You messed with the record player beside the fireplace and put on your favorite record. Soon, the upbeat saxophone of âBopâ by Dan Seals filled the room. Wednesday rolled her eyes when she saw you recreate John Travoltaâs âTwistâ dance from Pulp Fiction.
I want to bop with you, baby, all night long
I want to be-bop with you, baby, till the break of dawn
I want to bop with you, baby, all night long
âCome on, Wens. You know you wanna dance with me,â You said as you started making the swimming motion from the dance. Finding that she could never say no to Y/N, Wednesday rolled her eyes again before copying Uma Thurmanâs dance to match you. When Wednesday did the snorkel dance move, you laughed at the taller girlâs awkwardness, and Wednesday smiled at the thought of making you laugh.
Out of breath, the two finished the dance, and they both had giant smiles as their eyes copied their lips. âShall we dance again, my fair lady?â You asked as she stuck out your hand and slightly bowed.
âYouâre exhausting,â Wednesday stated but took your hand and allowed the girl to spin her.
Twenty minutes had passed when the clock on the fireplace dinged, telling Wednesday it was time to walk Nero. âItâs time for me to walk Nero, but I will see you when I get back,â Wednesday stated as she moved toward the area that was reserved for Nero and got him out of his cage, and put him on his leash.
The three walked down the front door together and left the house together. âSee you in a minute,â you said as you walked away from Wednesday. The taller girl sent you a small wave as she walked toward town with Nero.
You arrived home and did what you usually did when Wednesday was away; you waited. You knew Wednesdayâs schedule to the tee: wake up at six, morning torture with Pugsley at six-thirty, breakfast at seven-thirty, play with Y/N at eight until her walk with Nero at ten-thirty, come back at eleven and practice her cello with Y/N until twelve-thirty and have lunch at twelve-thirty five. The hours between one and three were filled with any âspontaneous activitiesâ Wednesday might want to do, and at four, she read until five, had dinner at six, and did nightly torturing with Pugsley (or Y/N if you consented) at six-thirty until bedtime at eight-thirty.
So when you checked the clock and saw it was ten-thirty-five, you left her house and skipped to Wednesdayâs. As you approached the house, there was a sudden shift in the air, and you could taste it on your lips: death had arrived. You cautiously walked up the stairs and knocked on the door, something you never did. You were always around Wednesday so much that Morticia told you that you didnât need to knock anymore as she could âsenseâ the girlâs presence.
When the door opened, you knew that something had happened; you just hoped that Wednesday was okay. Gomez was standing before you with a grim expression as he ushered you in. Your eyes landed on a weeping Wednesday, and your heart broke. You moved to sit next to the goth girl and opened your arms, and Wednesday immediately hugged you and buried her face in the crook of your neck. You rubbed her best friendâs back as she continued crying; you didnât know what to do, but you only knew that you wanted to be with Wednesday.
The following day, Wednesday had a funeral for Nero, and no one but Y/N could attend. The two girls shed a tear as they both placed a flower on his grave, and you comforted Wednesday once more. Later that night, in Wednesdayâs room, Wednesday had allowed you to sleep in bed with her. The two girls were cuddled together, staring at the swords above them, when Wednesday broke the silence, âYou are far too dear to me, Y/N. The pain I have felt the past two days is something I never want to experience again, and I certainly do not wish to experience it all over again because of you.â
âDonât worry, Wednesday. Youâre stuck with me till life do us part,â you replied as you hugged your best friend, never wanting to lose the girl.
At just six years old, Wednesday had lost her beloved pet and experienced grief for the first time, and she knew that she would have to grieve every single person in her life at some point. So that night, she made a vow; never to be close enough to someone where she would shed a tear because of their death, and that meant letting go of who she loved most: Y/N.
At first, it was very subtle: Wednesday would smile less around you, and she would spend less time working with you on your music. It was so subtle that no one but you noticed, and it hurt you. Then, more significant things began to happen; Wednesday would purposely fill her schedule with things to do that didnât involve you, and when you two did hang out, she made sure to try and distance herself from you. And then it all came crashing down on Wednesdayâs seventh birthday.
You had a small box in your hand as you walked up the steps to the front door of the Addams mansion and knocked, patiently waiting for someone to open the door. Only a few seconds had passed before Morticia opened the door and towered over the small child. âHello, my darling. Wednesday is in the greenhouse,â Morticia said as she stood aside and let you into the house before shutting the door.
âThank you, Mrs. Addams. I havenât seen her in a couple of days, so I hope she wonât be angry,â you innocently said as you ignored the pain in her heart that Morticia seemed to pick up on.
Eager to change the subject in fear of you becoming sad, Morticia asked as she led you to the greenhouse, âIâve already told you that you can stop calling me âMrs. Addams,â My child, so why do you continue?â
You shrugged your shoulders at the comment. You didnât know why you still spoke to the woman in a formal tone, but it felt weird on your tongue to call her anything else. âI donât know, I think itâs a respect thing for me,â you replied as you opened the door to the greenhouse. Morticia nodded at the childâs words before whispering, âHave fun with my little death trap.â
You smiled at Morticiaâs words as you entered the greenhouse. You knew precisely where Wednesday would be and didnât pretend to look for the goth girl.
Wednesday was cutting black roses from their stem when she heard soft footsteps behind her. She didnât bother turning around; she could recognize those footsteps in the crowd of a thousand people. âWhat are you doing here, YN?â Wednesday asked in a dry tone that caused you to stiffen.
âItâs your birthday, and I wanted to give you something,â you said as you approached Wednesday and set the box next to her. âI know you love your birthday, as it is one more year closer to your death, so hereâs your present to celebrate.â
Wednesday gave the more petite girl a suspicious look before putting down the rose and scissors and picking up the box. It was unnaturally light, so she doubted it was a weapon or bomb. She slowly took the lid off the box, and any words died on the tip of her tongue once she realized what it was.
It was a small, black, crocheted scorpion that took you hours to make. She also saw a small note underneath the scorpion, but she didnât pick it up as her vision became red.
She didnât know why she was angry. All Wednesday knew was that she wanted you gone. âGet out,â Wednesday hissed as she set the box down and grabbed a knife from her boot.
âWhat? Why?â You asked as you slowly backed up from Wednesday as your eyes fell on the knife. Of course, Wednesday would make the occasional threats, but you had never believed them; until now.
âFriends are nothing but liabilities, and they only hold me back. So. Get. Out.â Wednesday repeated as she backed you against a small flower pot. She no longer had control over her emotions, and every second she spent with you only seemed to anger her more.
âWednesday, please. I didnât mean to upset you. I thought you would have liked the gift. Please, Iâm your best friend, and I-â Any words you were about to say got caught in your throat as Wednesday brought the knife up, cutting a straight line on your left eye. The cut was three inches below your eye and an inch above it.
The two stood there in disbelief as neither could believe what happened. Only when blood started pouring out of your cut, and you collapsed onto the floor did Wednesday do something; she called out for her motherâs help for the first and only time as she held you in her eyes, trying her best to fight back tears.
Morticia ran out to the greenhouse and instantly scooped you into her arms as she yelled for Gomez. The man came burling down the stairs and could not contain his tears as she saw your blood-covered state.
The couple quickly rushed you to the hospital, and once you were checked into the ER, the couple notified your parents. They arrived within ten minutes of the phone call, and they were everything but calm, from questioning how Morticia and Gomez allowed this to happen to demanding that Wednesday be punished.
The two sets of parents seemed to be at each otherâs throats while Wednesday tried her best to disappear. She felt nothing but guilt for hurting her Y/N, and she wanted to do everything possible to make it up to the girl. So when Wednesday got her chance to see you, she practically sprinted into your room.
You were lying in a hospital with the entire left side of your face bandaged up, and Wednesday could see some blood seeping through. Wednesday slowly approached the bed and gently grabbed your hand. As if repulsed by the touch, you quickly pulled your hand away from Wednesdayâs and brought it to your chest. You glared at Wednesday with your right eye before hissing, âGet out.â
âNo, Y/N, you donât understand-â Wednesday started but was quickly cut off by Y/N.
âIâm nothing but a liability to you, Wednesday, so leave,â you said as you crossed your arms and looked away from Wednesday, refusing to cry in front of the taller girl. âI think Iâll miss you forever; like the stars miss the sun in the morning skies,â you thought as you watched your best friend leave.
Wednesday nodded her head and slowly walked to the door, and turned to face you one last time. âPlease donât ever become a stranger whose laugh I could recognize anywhere.â
You were once her crown, and now she was in exile seeing you out. She gave you so many warning signs, but you never learned to read her mind.
When she left the hospital, she felt nothing but shame and guilt that filled her body the entire car ride back home. She cleaned the blood off the floor before going to her room, where she sobbed for the second and last time.
School was different after that happened; the former best friends refused to meet each otherâs gaze and soon found that their previous partnership turned into rivalry, constantly competing to be number one. It was an unfair competition, as Wednesday was more naturally gifted than you, and she seemed to beat you at everything, but you refused to give you. You would spend hours perfecting your craft, and when it came time for the archery competition, you beat Wednesday by a single point. Any chance for friendship was ruined when you accepted the first-place trophy and sent Wednesday an evil glare when she was awarded her second-place trophy.
Their rivalry continued like this for numerous years, always for captain for a particular activity or number one in their grade, but just as before, you always seemed to fall short. It continued for three years until you suddenly stopped showing up for school.
Wednesday believed that she had beaten you so far into the ground that you decided to stop coming to school. But after two weeks had passed and Wednesday had not seen her former best friend, she became curious and decided to stop by your house.
Only when Wednesday saw the âfor saleâ sign in your yard, she allowed herself to be swallowed by guilt. She had pushed you too far in their competition for first and had made you move. Wednesday realized that she might never see her Y/N again, and regret flooded her mind as she slept on the purple bed bench with your sword in her arms.
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âI think we are getting a new student today, and I'm totes excited!â Enid exclaimed as she skipped to Wednesdayâs side of the room. The last person to arrive at Nevermore Academy was Wednesday herself, so naturally, Enid was ecstatic to meet someone new.
âYou know I do not care for new faces who share the same boring personalities as everyone else here,â Wednesday mumbled while she typed on her type-writer.
Enid huffed at Wednesdayâs remark before glancing at her roommateâs work. Wednesday noticed the action and quickly sent an elbow into Enidâs side, causing the girl to groan in pain. âYou also know I hate it when you try to read my work. I have no idea why you keep trying to read anything; you know the result,â Wednesday stated as she continued typing.
âWhatever. Just humor me for a moment,â Enid said as she put some space between her and Wednesday, avoiding any elbows that might be sent her way. âI will not humor you but continue.â
âSo, from what my sources tell me, sheâs from Italy, not like the normal part of Italy, but the mob part!â Enid informed while using her hands to talk.
âEnid, just because someone is from Sicily doesnât mean they are in the mob. And if she is, I would like to interrogate her about it; it could add a new element to my novel,â Wednesday said.
The brighter girl walked to her side of the room and grabbed her phone. When she picked it up, she made an obnoxious sound before sprinting to Wednesday. âSheâs here Wednesday. You have to come and meet her!â Enid exclaimed as she lightly pulled on Wednesdayâs arm, causing her to receive a death glare, but she allowed herself to be drawn from her seat.
The two quickly walked down the stairs and arrived at Weemsâ office. âWhy are we standing creepily outside Weemsâ office?â Wednesday questioned as she glanced over her shoulder at her roommate.
âBecause, silly, sheâs in there talking to Weems right now, and when she comes out, I want to be the first to greet her. And Iâve already volunteered to give her a tour of the grounds,â Enid exclaimed in a hushed tone as if the stranger and Weems were pressed against the door, spying on their conversion.
âAnd what will I do? I am certainly not talking to another half-brain student,â Wednesday said dryly as she stared at the door.
Enid rolled her eyes at the goth girlâs statement; she had made Wednesday talk to someone new only once to find out that the person only talked about horses and the patriarchy. âYou can glare uncomfortably on the sidelines then,â Enid replied.
Wednesday was getting ready to retort when she heard shuffling from behind the door and soft-spoken words that she could not make out.
âHowdie, friend! Iâm Enid, and Iâll be giving you the tour!â Enid enthusiastically said as she attacked the girl with a hug.
All the air from Wednesdayâs lungs had been sucked out as she stared at the stranger before her. She prayed to the old gods and new that this wasnât some evil joke, her punishment for raising the dead. But when she saw the stranger smile, she knew this was her Y/N.
You stood before Wednesday with a human highlighter wrapped around your waist. You were wearing black slacks with a black button-up, and Wednesday felt a heart pick up as she admired you in her color. Where you once had chubby cheeks, they were now thinned out, and you had a jawline that could cut glass. You were once a short and stocky kid, but now you towered over Enid, and your muscular arms wrapped around the rainbow girl. It seemed like everything about you had changed, but nothing at all as well. You still had that bright smile and charming personality, as always, but Wednesdayâs heart sank when she saw the scar on your eye. It took her a moment to notice it as you wore black sunglasses hiding your beautiful heterochromia.
âAh, good, youâre already here, Enid, to give Miss Y/L/N a tour, and youâve brought Miss Addams as well,â Weems said as she stepped out of her room and stood next to Enid and you. Wednesday nearly melted onto the floor when she saw you pull back from Enid and stand up straight, just a few inches shorter than Weems. She noticed how your smile faltered at the mention of âAddamsâ before you played it off and plastered a fake smile on your lips. The air that was once filled with playful curiosity was one of tension, anger, betrayal, and longing.
âAddams,â you said with no emotion in a thick Italian accent as you extended your large and callused hand toward Wednesday that engulfed the goth girlâs small and cold hand. When your hands touched for the first time in ten years since the hospital, you both felt an electric charge pass between you two, and time seemed to stand still for a moment while the rest of the world disappeared around them.
Your covered eyes locked with Wednesdayâs, and you both knew you felt an undeniable spark that sent shivers down your spines. Unspoken words seemed to flow between their fingertips as if their souls were communicating through the simple touch. They both felt the unexplainable and undeniable chemistry rushing back and flooding their minds as they looked at each other for the first time in seven years.
âY/L/N,â Wednesday replied as she eagerly dropped your hand and wiped her palm on her pants as if it would erase the spark she felt.
Enid and Weems both shared a look as they watched the awkward encounter between the two girls, clearly displaying that they have a history between them. Enid cleared her throat as she stepped between you and Wednesday, âalrighty then, shall we get started with our tour?â
Your mood switched on a dime, and you instantly beamed at Enidâs words. You smiled down at the girl and locked your elbow with hers, and rested your hand gently on her arm, âOf course, my dear, let us begin our journey.â Wednesday pulled her eyes at your remark but walked a few paces behind you and her roommate; she knew this would be the start of a very unfortunate friendship.
âWelcome to the quad,â Enid said as she unlocked your arms and motioned around with her hands. âItâs a pentagon,â you replied as you looked at your surroundings.
Enid rolled her eyes at your comment; great, now sheâd have to deal with two Wednesdays as if one wasnât enough. âYou know, Wednesday said the same thing when she first arrived too. I have a feeling you two will be the best of friends!â Enid stated in a cheerful tone after releasing that her roommate can have more than one friend.
âNo,â the formal best friends said simultaneously and sent each other a glare, and if Enid picked up on it, you were glad she didnât say anything.
âAllow me to give you a rundown on the social scene here at Nevermore,â Enid said as she walked around the âquad.â âThere are many flavors of outcasts here, but the four main cliques are Fangs, Furs, Stoners, and Scales,â the brighter girl stated while counting her fingers.
As Enid gave you the tour, you half paid attention out of respect for the girl trying to sell Nevermore to you, but all you could think about was the more petite girl standing a few feet behind you. You could feel her eyes burning holes into your back, but you couldnât face her again, not after everything youâve been through. There was once a time when you would have laid down your life for Wednesday; now, you could barely breathe the same air as her without getting angry. You knew it was stupid to hold a grudge for this long, but Wednesday was your first and only love, and you would be damned if you let her see you weak again.
When you finished the tour, Enid took you to your room, which was, unfortunately, in Ophelia Hall. âO-M-G! Youâre rooming with Yoko! She is my best friend,â Enid announced before looking over at Wednesday, âwell, besides Wens, obviously.â
Your heart sank at the nickname for Wednesday. Only you were allowed to call her Wens when you were children, and she barely let you do that. And now, here she was, allowing someone dressed like unicorn vomit to call her that without so much as an idle threat.
ââWens?ââ You questioned with an eyebrow raised as you looked between the two roommates. You were glad you started to wear your sunglasses again so that neither girl could see the sadness in your eyes. But Wednesday knew you all too well, and she saw how your posture faltered when Enid called her that, and she saw the barely noticeable frown that tugged at your lips. âMy name should only ever leave your lips,â Wednesday wanted to say, but she held her tongue.
âOh, yeah. Thatâs my nickname for Wednesday. She told me that no one has ever given her one before, so I decided to give her one,â Enid said as she ushered the two girls back to her room, âCome on, I wanna show you mine and Wednesdayâs room.â
At the mention of Wednesday never having a nickname, you dropped your fake smile and looked at Wednesday, who was refusing to meet your gaze. âDo I mean that little to you where you would erase even our happiest memories?â You thought when Wednesday finally looked up at you, and for the first time today, you saw emotion in her dark eyes: regret.
âI love the window,â you said as you entered Enid and Wednesdayâs room. You loved the contrast between the two girls and how they seemed to get along perfectly; it reminded you of when you were young and Wednesdayâs favorite person. Now, the girl barely looked at you.
âThanks; the first day here, Wednesday took off her side of color and then put tape down to divide our room. And now look at how far weâve come! Iâm like the only one here who Wens actually cares about!âEnid exclaimed as she spun in her circle with her arms outstretched, clearly happy to be buddy-buddy with Wednesday. You nodded your head, trying to push back the tears that weld in your eyes at the mention of Wednesday caring for someone else before your eyes snapped to something on Wednesdayâs wall.
âWhatâs this?â You questioned as you moved to get a closer look at the object that had caught your attention, causing both of the roommates to follow you.
âOh, thatâs one of Wednesdayâs favorite weapons. She doesnât let anyone touch it, not even me,â Enid said as her eyes fell on the sword mounted to the wall above Wednesdayâs writing desk. Your eyes scanned over the sheathed sword and fell to the purple handle before you turned and looked at Wednesday. âMay I?â You asked in a barely audible voice.
You expected Wednesday to shoot you down before you even finished speaking, but the girl gave you a curt nod, not trusting her voice at this moment. Your hands reached up and took the sword off its mantle, and you slowly took it out of its sheath and set it down on Wednesdayâs desk. You turned the sword over and admired the sharp edge as you carefully ran your pointer finger along the bladeâs edge; you could easily tell that Wednesday had been sharpening it routinely. Your finger finally made its way to the helm of the sword, and you turned it over and sucked in air as you let out a small chuckle.
You read your initials that were still engraved in the sword before your saddened eyes finally looked up at Wednesdayâs guilt-ridden ones. Wednesday thanks the gods that you had your eyes covered, as she knew her heart would have broken ten times over if she saw the sadness in them.
âWell, then,â you said with a shaky breath as you sheathed the sword and placed it back on its mantle, âitâs a beautiful blade, Wednesday.â Your eyes caught something in the corner of Wednesdayâs desk, and you felt every single emotion wash over you like waves crashing onto the shore: a small, black crocheted scorpion sat on top of an unopened note. Before you could comment on it, Wednesdayâs voice pulled you out of your thoughts.
âI know it is,â Wednesday spoke honestly as her eyes danced across your face while you picked up on the double meaning behind her words.
After several seconds of awkward tension, you cleared your throat and walked to the door, âAlright then, Iâll, uh, leave you guys to it.â
Wait!â Enid shouted as she skipped over to you with her phone in hand. âLet me get your Snapchat so we can talk some more,â she said as she pulled up Snapchat. You smiled politely as you pulled your phone out of your back pocket and opened up Snapchat, and allowed the werewolf to add you, and you accepted her friend request when it popped up.
âIâll see you later, Enid,â you said as you opened up the door to walk out, but you stopped and turned around to face Wednesday, âsee you around sometime, Addams.â As you left, only one thought ran across both of your minds: âI canât say hello to you and risk another goodbye.â
When you left the room, Enid immediately turned to face her roommate. âWhat was that about?â She questioned while staring down at the goth girl.
âI have no idea what you are referring to,â Wednesday replied as she walked over to her desk and began working on her novel. She had emotions come back that she had not felt in nearly ten years, and she needed to get them off her chest, writing out different scenarios of her killing Y/N.
Enid stomped to Wednesdayâs desk and turned the small girl around in her chair. She grasped Wednesdayâs shoulders and tightly gripped them as she spoke, âYes, you do. Do not lie to me, Wednesday, or I will paint the side of your hot pink.â
The more petite girl rolled her eyes at her roommateâs comment before prying the hands off her shoulders and returning to her typewriter. âWe used to be friends, and now we arenât; end of story,â Wednesday flatly replied.
âI donât believe you, I know thereâs more to the story, but I wonât pressure you,â Enid defeatedly said as she walked over to her bed and lay down. Of course, she was dying to know the history between you and Wednesday. Still, she would never force Wednesday to talk about something uncomfortable, so she decided to wait it out and see if she could get an answer from either you or Wednesday first.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The two roommates walked into fencing class and heard the ringing of metal crashing together, and saw that Bianca was in a match with you. The two watched as you blocked Biancaâs advances and matched each of her assaults with double the force, causing the siren to walk backward toward the end of the mat. With one final blow against Biancaâs foil, you cause her to step backward off of the mat and ultimately lose the match.
Bianca let out an angry huff at the loss but shook your hand afterward. âYou gave me a nice challenge, and I respect that. I hope to go up against you again soon,â the siren said as she walked off the mat.
âMaybe youâll get lucky next time and beat me,â you joked as you started to take off your gear when your eyes landed on Wednesday. Before you had moved, you and Wednesday were always in fencing competitions, and it seemed that the two of you were always paired to go against one another. Naturally, you lost every time you went against her, but that was seven years ago, and you spent the past seven years perfecting every little thing that Wednesday was better at.
âCoach Vlad, I was wondering if I could go against someone else before class ends?â You questioned as you stood up. You knew that if you publicly challenged Wednesday that she couldnât turn it down, and you also knew that she believed she was still the better fencer, so both of those gave you an advantage.
Coach Vlad studied your expression and determined that you only asked to prove a point, so he let you. âWho will you be challenging, miss Y/LN?â
âAddams,â was all you said as you stared at the girl dressed in an all-black fencing attire. Wednesdayâs ears perked up at you challenging her, and she knew she would clear you.
âVery well, Wednesday, if you accept the challenge, stand the opposite of Y/N,â Coach Vlad stated with a hint of excitement. He loved watching the way the Addams sparred with his students; she was graceful yet coarse, which reminded him of when he was a student here at Nevermore.
Wednesday walked over to the mat you were standing on, her eyes locked with your covered ones. She wondered what made you wear those sunglasses again, and she missed those eyes she once called home.
âEn garde,â Coach Vlad yelled as the atmosphere crackled with tension. The room falls into a reverent silence as the match begins. With grace and precision, you and Wednesday engage in a mesmerizing dance of footwork and technique, each exchange showcasing your guys' skill and determination.
Their moves were swift and calculated, their attacks and defenses fluid, each striving to gain the upper hand. The crowd of students watched in awe as they witnessed a display of finesse and competitive spirit.
Wednesday made the first aggressive move, launching a series of rapid lunges, attempting to catch you off guard. But you proved your prowess with deft parries, countering with swift ripostes that keep Wednesday on her toes.
As the match progressed, the intensity escalated, and their footwork became even more intricate, seeking to exploit any opening in their opponent's defense. The clang of metal echoed through the hall as their foils met in a series of fierce clashes.
Neither competitor gave an inch, their faces showing steely determination. You and Wednesday are evenly matched, your skills complementing each other, creating a mesmerizing spectacle for the crowd.
With each point you and Wednesday scored, your fellow students held their breaths, afraid that if they cheered, it would mess you two up. Yours and Wednesdayâs adrenaline surged, and your focus sharpened, all distractions fading away as you two immersed yourselves entirely in the moment.
Time seemed to slow down, the seconds stretching into eternity as the match neared its climax. With one final burst of energy, you executed a daring feint, catching Wednesday off balance. In that split second, you placed your foot on top of Wednesdayâs and advanced, causing the more petite girl to fall backward onto the mat. You stood over her and shoved the tip of the foil into her chest armor.
âI appear to be the victor,â you said as you towered over Wednesday before she quickly jumped up from the ground and stormed out of the hall, with you right on her heels.
âThat was hardly a win; you cheated,â Wednesday stated as she stomped toward Ophelia hall. âAnd stop following me.â
âI might have cheated, but youâre still the loser,â you retorted as you quickened your step to walk beside Wednesday. âAnd Iâm not following you; we live in the same hall.â
Wednesday said nothing; she couldnât argue with the fact you two shared a hallway, but she still didnât like it. You watched as Wednesday threw her door open and slammed it shut with a smile on your face; it felt good to have that playful banter back.
Naturally, your rivalry with Wednesday continued as if it had never left; you two constantly competed for the correct answers in your classes, and you two refused to fence with anyone else. It became so toxic that teachers started putting you two out in the hallway during class, like little toddlers who were being disruptive.
âI had a marvelous time ruininâ everything,â you joked with Wednesday as it seemed you two were sitting outside your potions class once more. You had your back pressed against the stone wall next to the door, and Wednesday opted to sit next to you but kept a few feet between you.
âI do suppose ruining the activities of others is tolerable with you,â Wednesday said as she looked over at your beautiful smile that she once loved and felt her own lips twitch upward.
âI know my antics should be celebrated, but Iâm glad you tolerate it,â you said once you saw her scary attempt at a smile.
At the week's end, Enid invited you to her room for some âgirl talk.â You had no idea what girl talk would involve, but you wouldnât pass up a chance to piss Wednesday off.
âWelcome to my dreamhouse!â Enid exclaimed as she opened the door and ushered you into her room. You knew it might be ill-tempered to say this, but you were jealous of Enidâs room. You loved the giant window in the center that emitted different colors throughout the room, highlighting and contrasting the two drastically different sides.
You followed Enid to her side and sat down on her bed with her. You allowed the werewolf to paint your nails a dark purple. She asked you questions about your past and what you wanted to do in the future. You told her that Criminal Justice intrigued you and you thought about becoming a detective at some point. In turn, you asked her what her future plans were, and she told you that if her parents allowed her, she would want to explore the world and see all the beauties she offered.
After you two had fallen into a peaceful conversation, she finally asked the question plaguing her mind since you first arrived, âSo, how did you get that scar? If you donât mind me asking.â
You swore you could hear a hairpin drop right when you felt the moment stop. It was as if someone had sucked all the air out of the room and replaced it with tension. Your eyes shot to Wednesday, who was previously typing on her typewriter but stopped when Enid asked the question. You quietly cleared your throat before speaking, âI, uh⌠it was my fault. I did something stupid without asking for permission, and I paid the consequences. Thatâs all.â
Wednesday felt her heart shatter into a million pieces when she heard you blame yourself for what happened. She wanted to run to Enidâs side of the room and tell you that it wasnât your fault and that she would do anything she could to take it back, to have you back. She felt a single tear run down her cheek as she returned to her novel.
Not believing your story, Enid didnât say anything else. She knew there was something more to the story, but she didnât want to pressure you into telling her. âWell, I think it makes you look ten times hotter,â Enid confessed with a sly smile and a wink. She ignored how her hearing picked up on Wednesdayâs heartbeat increased with jealousy at the comment.
You slightly chuckled at Enidâs comment before looking at Enidâs own scars that she sometimes tried to cover up. They were out of place on the brightly dressed girl, but it added a hint of toughness and bravery to her look that almost made you laugh. âWhat about your scars?â You politely asked, but Enid tensed up at your question.
âOh. I got them from saving Wednesday last year,â she responded quietly as she continued painting your nails. She refused to meet your gaze, and you felt bad for asking about them, but you wanted to know more. âWhy do you cover them up then? You shouldnât be ashamed of your scars; they prove your loyalty to Wednesday.â
A slight grin tugged at Enidâs lips; she had never had anyone, but Wednesday tell her she was brave. âThank you, Y/N. Itâs just,â she paused as she glanced up at you before continuing her work on your hand, âmy mother hates them and says I should be ashamed of myself for ruining any chance I have at finding someone.â
âYou shouldnât listen to your mother, Enid. I think those scars are beautiful, and they display your bravery,â you said as you reached up with your hand and gently traced the scar above Enidâs eyebrow. When a small tear fell down Enidâs cheek, you wiped it away and gave her a soft smile, and Enid knew right then that you were the most authentic person she had ever met. No one has ever been this honest with her, and she cherished your friendship.
Enid let a few quiet minutes pass by before she asked you about your first week at Nevermore, and you told her your honest thoughts. You enjoyed the classes but felt that some students cared too much about their social status and that you loved walking in the woods at night, causing the girl to stop painting your left ring finger.
âYou do what at night?â Enid questioned harshly as her bright blue eyes stared into your soul.
âI go for midnight strolls by myself. Weems never told me not to.â
Enid scoffed at your words before glaring at Wednesday, who was working on her novel. âWednesday is actually the reason we canât walk around at night.â
At the mention of her name, Wednesday straightened her poster and turned around to face you two.
âDo not blame me for the shortcomings of the town sheriff for being unable to keep the people safe from his own son,â the goth girl stated in a threatening manner with an undertone of regret that you picked up on. You noticed the way Wednesdayâs eyes seemed to gloss over with anger when she mentioned the sheriffâs son, and you could only assume something happened between them, which caused your heart to stink at the thought.
âIâm not blaming you, Wens. Iâm just stating that you and your boy toy did play a part in ruining our time outside at night,â Enid said innocently as she went back to pairing your nails; she didnât notice how you tensed up, and you're surprised that she didnât hear your heart break in two. Your heartbroken eyes shoot to Wednesdayâs pained ones, and you can practically read the thoughts behind her eyes, âI lost myself when I lost you.â
Even though you still had your eyes covered, Wednesday knew what you were thinking, âhow could you betray me like this?â You two were children when you last saw each other, but now as almost adults, you knew that all those feelings you felt for each other were more than platonic; it just took you two a lifetime and a half to realize it. As you two stared at each other, you felt all the love you once felt for each other return in an instant; feelings that come back are feelings that never left.
ââBoy toy?ââ You questioned as your eyes refused to leave Wednesdayâs. You knew you would only get hurt by asking, but you had to know.
âIt was a moment of weakness, Y/N. Nothing more,â Wednesday spoke with emotion for the first time as her voice broke off towards the end. She quickly cleared her throat and excused herself to the balcony with her cello before you had time to respond to her.
When Enid finished up your nails, you two were getting ready to do a face mask when she got a text. âYes! Ajax just texted me to hang out with him! Is it alright if I leave you here? Or you can go back to your room if you want?â Enid asked as she stood up from her bed; you ignored the name at the top of her screen that read âYoko.â
âI think Iâm going to stay here for a while and hang out with Thing but go have fun,â you said with a faint smile as you watched Enid leave. Honestly, you missed Thing almost as much as you missed Wednesday. Anytime Wednesday would be away, and you were over, you would always hang out with Thing, and right now, he was definitely your favorite Addams.
You chatted with Thing over the sound of Wednesdayâs cello for nearly twenty minutes as you did his nails and filled him in on what has happened to you in the past seven years. You told him stuff that you would be too afraid to share with Wednesday, not out of trust, but in fear of what she might do to the people that hurt you.
Only when Wednesdayâs cello started to pick up and play a heavy melody did you stop talking. You listened to the way the smaller girl seemed to pour all of her emotions into her song, a song that was full of yearning, hurt, and regret. You listened as there was a slight shift in the music that resembled anger and frustration before turning into a declaration of love. And when the song finally ended on a note that sounded like longing, you got up and walked out to the balcony.
âThat was a lovely song,â you said as you walked past Wednesday and rested your elbows against the balcony edge.
Wednesday gave you a quiet âmhmâ as a response as she set her cello to the side and joined you at the stone railing, making sure to keep five feet between you for homosexual purposes.
The two of you quietly enjoyed the starry night with a crescent moon above you.
âThe sky is so beautiful tonight,â you said, gazing at the stars and moon with your sunglasses still on.
âIt is,â Wednesday agreed, but she wasnât looking up at the sky at all.
When you looked down at Wednesday, she was already staring at you with a tiny glint in her eyes. She subconsciously moved closer to you til she was standing a few inches away from you, and she slowly reached her hands up to take your glasses off. You turned to face her, quickly backing away, and put a foot between you two, âthe fuck are you doing?â
âTake it off,â Wednesday stated in a dry tone.
âNo.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause this ânerdy girl takes off her glasses and everyone finds out sheâs actually really hotâ will not work on you,â you replied with sass in your voice.
âNo, it wonât because you are not attractive in the slightest way,â Wednesday retorted while still staring into your soul.
âThank you, Addams.â
âIt wasnât a compliment.â
âI know,â you said with a smile as you turned and leaned your elbows on the railing once more and continued staring at the stars. âYou are my compact companion, after all,â you teased.
Wednesday rolled her eyes at comment; it felt like it was a lifetime again when she would call you that, and now you turned it against her. She had to agree with you, it was an awful nickname.
âAll the pretty stars shine for you, my love,â you said after a couple of minutes had passed. âitâs from a song,â you added to clear up any confusion that might have been stirred.
Wednesday looked over at you, but you still had your eyes fixed on the sky, but she noticed how your hand slowly inched toward her own, and she picked up on the double meaning as she placed her palm over the back of your hand. She gave your hand three gentle squeezes before returning inside with her cello.
After that night, you two continued with your rivalry, of course, but something had changed that worried Wednesday. She didnât know what that change was, but she felt it like a gentle shift in the air before a big storm; she knew something had changed between you two, but she didnât know what.
On Tuesday of the following week, Nevermore was hosting an archery tournament that lasted all day that you and Wednesday were competing in. As the day dragged out, numerous Nevermore students were booted from the competition, and when it came down to the final two competitors, no one was surprised when they saw you line up next to Wednesday.
âI think Iâve seen this film before,â you said as you grabbed an arrow and notched it before slightly pulling back on the string. The memories of your last archery competition came flooding back as you watched the beautiful girl to the left of you grab an arrow.
âAnd I didnât like the ending,â Wednesday finished as she notched her arrow, drew, and let it loose, nailing the target's bullseye. You scoffed at her words before drawing back your arrow and firing, hitting the bullseye a few centimeters away from Wednesdayâs.
As the contest continued, you and Wednesday engaged in a back-and-forth display of remarkable archery skills. Each shot was precise, and the competition grew fiercer with every arrow released. The crowd of students that had formed around you two was captivated, witnessing a display of talent that would mold the archery competitions of Nevermore for ages.
As the final round approached, you and Wednesday were neck and neck. The tension was palpable, and the spectators held their breath in anticipation. You looked over your left shoulder at Wednesday as you notched and drew your arrow. The smaller girlâs eyes stared into your covered ones, and you saw the way her eyes danced across your face as if she was trying to place a curse on you.
With a shaky breath, you turned away from Wednesday and looked at your target before you slightly lowered the tip of your bow; it was so unnoticeable that no one picked up on it besides the girl who was soul bound to you.
You let the arrow loose and smiled slightly when you saw it hit the outer ring. Wednesday sent you a slight glance before drawing back on her arrow and letting it fly, nailing it right in the center of the bullseye.
The crowd around them let out a few cheers and applause as Weems got the trophies ready. âI knew you could do it, roomie!â Enid exclaimed as she skipped over to Wednesday and gently shook the girlâs shoulders. Wednesday nodded her head at Enid before she walked onto the makeshift sports pedestal podium for first and second. She stepped onto the stage for first and watched as you stood on the one for second, and you sent her a smile that confirmed everything she needed: you threw the match for her.
When Weems handed you two your trophies, you had a giant smile as people took your picture, while Wednesday bore an uncomfortable expression.
âI appear to be the victor,â Wednesday said as you two walked back to Ophelia Hall together. The sun was just setting, and the light seeped into the hallway, creating a romantic lighting that seemed a bit on the nose for you.
âIt appears so,â you replied with a gentle smile as you flipped your trophy around and read the words â2nd place winnerâ underneath your name.
Wednesday scoffed at your comment before glaring up at your towering figure. âYou arenât going to finish the saying?â
You tapped your pointer finger on your chin, acting as if you were thinking profoundly. âWhy would I? You didnât cheat,â you said honestly and dropped your hand back down to your side.
âNo, but you threw the match,â Wednesday said as she approached her door with you a few paces behind her. She wanted nothing more than to bring you inside and cherish you, but she would never stoop to her motherâs way of life.
âIf I am capable of such an outlandish thing, Iâm sure I would not do that just so you-of all people-could win,â you said with a serious tone but your smile told Wednesday you were joking and it made her cold, black heart ache for something for had felt once and only with you.
Deciding against her better judgment, Wednesday set her trophy on the ground, and before you had time to ask her what she was doing, her left hand gently grabbed your neck and pulled down as she stood on her tippy-toes to place a chaste kiss on your cheek. Your entire body heated up at the contact, and a smile overtook your face. The kiss lasted longer than it should have, as Wednesdayâs lips lingered on your cheek as if she was making you a promise that she would one day taste your lips.
âGoodnight, Y/N,â Wednesday said as she picked up her trophy and entered her room, closing the door on your shell-shocked expression. You had butterflies dancing in your stomach as you walked back to your room with a gentle smile on your face and went to sleep with the thought of Wednesdayâs lips against your skin. As you drifted off to sleep, Wednesday stayed up all night writing out the way you made her stomach feel like a thousand spiders lived there and the way your hair warmed her black heart. She once vowed to push you away to avoid the pain of losing you, but every waking moment she spent without you had caused her to feel that pain tenfold. Even if she would lose you at the end of your lives, at least she would have had the honor of calling you hers.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The eerie gothic ballroom was cloaked in darkness, dimly lit by flickering candlelight that cast haunting shadows upon the ancient stone walls. Heavy velvet drapes, tinged with a rich deep crimson, adorned the tall arched windows, adding a sense of mystery and opulence. Gothic-style chandeliers hung from the vaulted ceilings, their twisted metal work resembling gnarled branches, and their candelabras emitting a spectral glow. The air is filled with a subtle scent of incense, adding to the mysterious ambiance of the room as Wednesday prepared to entire the ballroom.
It was the Grimoire Soiree, Nevermoreâs official gothic ball, that was hosted at the end of the Fall semester every year. Wednesday was naturally intrigued when she heard of a gothic ball and believed attending one might add a new element to her novel, including murder. Still, now, as she watched her peers walk into the ballroom, she felt out of place. Her heart yearned for the one who wouldnât be attending.
It had been several months since the archery contest, and you and Wednesday had not talked to each other. Neither of you knew what to say, but you both wanted to say everything. You two continued with your rivalry, but there was a shift in the air when you two competed against each other, like you two were silently rooting for the other, and it gnawed at both of your hearts.
Deciding to face the music and the calling of her heart, Wednesday walked down the stairs and entered the room.
The polished black marble floors, etched with intricate patterns, mirror the gloomy setting as if reflecting the dark secrets concealed within the ballroom's history that enticed Wednesday. Elaborate gargoyles and stone statues of long-forgotten figures stood sentinel in the corners, their solemn expressions lending an air of solemnity to the space. Crimson roses, tinged with black, were carefully arranged in vases throughout the room, their haunting beauty contrasting with the darkness surrounding them.
As the haunting melody of a haunting organ filled the air, the students of Nevermore were clad in elaborate gothic attire and moved with an aura of elegance and enigma. The atmosphere was both haunting and enchanting, transporting the attendees to a realm of forgotten tales and otherworldly delights that overwhelmed Wednesday. Just as she was about to leave, an overly happy voice exclaimed, âWednesday! You look amazing!â
The smaller girl wore a mesmerizing black gothic ball gown that is a sight of dark enchantment, featuring a flowing skirt that gracefully grazes the ground. Small black accents on the skirt add a touch of intricate detailing, enhancing its allure. The black corset, elegantly laced in the front, complements the gown's bewitching aesthetic and leads to long, puffy sleeves that exude an air of Victorian charm.
A small cutout on the chest, just above the corset, added a daring yet sophisticated touch, leaving a hint of mystery while maintaining an elegant appeal. The gown encapsulated a perfect blend of gothic elegance and captivating allure, making it an ideal choice for Wednesday's hauntingly beautiful ballroom event.
Wednesday turned around, and she noticed that her flamboyant roommate, who usually wore bright, borderline blinding colors, was in a darker-colored ball gown. The ball gown itself was a mesmerizing creation, enveloped in an enchanting dark purple hue that exudes an air of mystery and sophistication. It had a black corset adorned with dark purple accents that added an element of striking contrast, enhancing its captivating allure. Its intricate lacework and velvet accents add an extra layer of elegance. At the same time, its flowing silhouette gracefully captures the essence of gothic charm, something that Wednesday had never seen on Enid before.
The gown caught Wednesday off guard, and she believed that Enid somehow pulled it off, highlighting her piercing blue eyes that would blind anyone. Wednesday might have even given Enid some form of a compliment, but she knew that Enid didnât need that kind of ego inflation.
âI appreciate your words, Enid. And you,â Wednesday wanted to be nice tonight but struggled with the words, âDo not look ridiculous.â
The werewolf beamed at her roommate's words, and a smile formed from cheek to cheek. âAwww! Thank you, Wens!â Enid said as she turned to walk toward Ajax but then suddenly turned back to Wednesday as if she had forgotten something. âOh, and your lover was looking for you earlier; she said she has something to tell you.â And with that, Enid disappeared into the crowd of dancing students with Ajax. Wednesdayâs cold heart picked up at the mention of you wanting to talk to her and beat rapidly against her chest. Her eyes scanned the room for you as an all too familiar saxophone interrupted the organ.
As if it was magic, Wednesdayâs dark eyes immediately found your heterochromia ones in the vast sea of swirling gowns and powdered faces. You were standing on the opposite side of the room, wearing a gothic suit that consisted of a slightly ruffled white shirt, adding a touch of romanticism to the ensemble. Over the shirt, there was a black cavalier vest adorned with mesmerizing purple tapestry, creating a captivating contrast of colors and textures. Completing the look was a sleek black jacket, lending an air of sophistication and dark allure. The suit is further enhanced by a small yet elegant collar chain featuring a black scorpion on both collars, adding a subtle yet distinctive element of gothic charm to the overall attire.
Put on your Bobbi-sox baby
Pull up your old blue jeans
Thereâs a band playinâ down at the armory
Knowâs what rock and roll really means
You two gravitated towards each other at a slow pace before picking up as your hearts quickened with excitement, and soon, you two were standing face to face. âHi,â you said breathlessly as you got lost in Wednesdayâs eyes.
âHi,â she replied as she looked into your beautiful eyes for the first time in seven years. She had forgotten just how beautiful they were; the green eye seemed to dance with the room's lighting while the gray one gave Wednesday a feeling of comfort, the dark color reminding her of her own material home in New Jersey.
I want to bop with you baby, all night long
I want to bop the night away
I want to make it a night like it used to be
âMay I have this dance?â You asked as you slowly started to do âThe Twistâ from Pulp Fiction. Wednesday smiled and began doing Uma Thurmanâs part of the dance as if you two were just six years old again and dancing in Wednesdayâs room. You two smiled and joked the entire dance and felt the whole room disappear as the song drew to a close. âShall we dance again, my fair lady?â You asked when the dance was finished as you stuck out your hand and slightly bowed, just as you did ten years ago.
âYouâre exhausting,â Wednesday replied when the room began waltzing to the beautiful melody of âMerry-Go-Round of Life,â but she took your hand. You placed your free hand just underneath her shoulder blade as her spare hand rested upon the shoulder of the arm that was under her shoulder blade. As the music played, Wednesday allowed you to lead the dance and found herself in a trance as she stared into your beautiful eyes that she missed.
âStop staring into my soul,â you commented as you spun around with Wednesday.
She huffed at your words and playfully stepped on your foot before continuing the dance. âIâm not staring into your soul; I am just admiring your breathtaking eyes,â she confessed honestly while you two continued your fluid movements. âWhy did you start covering them again?â
You tensed up at her words but continued with the graceful dance. âThe only person who found beauty in them was gone,â you said shyly as you gave Wednesday a tight-lipped smile. The smaller girl frowned at your words; she didnât know what to say without confessing her undying love for you. So she stayed quiet and let her eyes drift over to the scar on your face and let regret and pain wash over her like waves on the shoreline. âI never meant to hurt you,â Wednesday mumbled out as she let the pain show on her face. You were her best friend, her soulmate, and her home, and even though she didnât know that it was either you or no one when she was just a child, she now wanted to wrap you in her arms and never let anything or anyone harm you again; even if that meant protecting you from herself.
So, she dropped your hand while dancing and left you out there standing. Crestfallen on the landing as Wednesday left you in the ballroom and disappeared outside.
You snapped out of your disappointed state and were quick on her heels as you followed her outside. âWednesday, whatâs wrong?â You asked as you followed her to a water fountain and watched her sit down on the side.
She was sick to her stomach; she could hear her heartbeat pounding in her ears as she had an internal battle with her heart and brain. Her brain told Wednesday to run in the opposite direction, never to talk to you again. But her heart was telling her to run toward you, to embrace you with her loving heart that seemed to only beat for you. She felt nauseous as her thoughts bounced around; what if you didnât feel the same way toward her? The last time you two were friendly with each other was almost eleven years ago when you guys were six. What if by showing you this much softer side of her, you reject her and use her weakness as a spear to her chest? Nearly killing her but leaving her alive just enough to continue living a life of nothingness. Your heart was glass, and she dropped it.
But what if you felt the same? What if your heart only beat for her, and you would rather die than not have been able to call her yours? All the moments you two spent at each otherâs throats during competitions as you sent her little glances and silently prayed she would win so that you could see her eyes light up.
âEnid said you had something to say to me, Y/N,â Wednesday finally spoke as her thoughts ran rapidly in her mind. She needed to know what you wanted to say to her; she could not die in peace without knowing.
You stared at the alluring girl who refused to meet your eyes. There were thousands of things you wanted to tell her, but you didnât know how. âWednesday, thereâs things I wanna say to you, but Iâll just let you live,â you said quietly as Wednesdayâs eyes finally met yours. Wednesday dryly laughed at your words as her eyes glossed over with tears. The last time she had cried was because she lost you, and now, she was crying because she had finally found you. All of this silence and patience, pining and anticipation, was killing her. Wednesdayâs hands were shaking from holding back from you. When you said her name, everything just stopped; she didnât want you like a best friend.
Wednesdayâs eyes darted across your face, looking for anything resembling rejection. When she found only love and longing in your ocean eyes, she took in a deep breath and spoke in a broken voice, âI used to look at you and see my best friend, and now I can hardly look at you without picturing our bones resting together in a grave dug for two. I left you in there because I cannot live without knowing if it meant more to you too as well. I would rather die than bear these feelings alone.â
The words that left Wednesdayâs lips took you off guard; you had a speech, and now youâre speechless. âWhat do you mean by that, Wednesday? Are you telling me that you have feelings for me?â You asked with disbelief on your face; you needed to know if she was confessing her love for you, but you werenât quite sure if thatâs what she meant.
âThe sun rises and sets with your smile. At least it does for me. Youâre the only thing on this planet worth worshipping. In simpler terms: I want you. Iâve always wanted you. It just took me ten years to realize it. Iâm your jazz singer, and youâre my cult leader,â Wednesday confessed as she stared into your eyes, already accepting rejection.
âWednesday, you donât have to bear those feelings alone,â you stated with a sigh of relief. Wednesdayâs eyes smiled for her as she pushed herself off the fountain, and slowly walked toward you. She stopped a few feet in front, giving you space to run away if you desired.
âI once had someone tell me I was destined to be alone, but I would like to be alone with you. If Iâm enough - if you want me, if youâll have me - Iâm yours, only yours, Y/N,â Wednesday admitted with a silent prayer.
âWednesday, I have only wanted you since we were kids. I only wanted you as a best friend then, but now, when I look at you, I only see my other half. I would rather die than not be able to call you mine, even if itâs just for a second.â
Slowly, Wednesday stepped to you until you were close enough to touch, begging you to make the first move she has always been afraid to take. âFor the past ten years, I have been trying to form a way to apologize for the way I treated you, but every time I come up with something, I only see you in that hospital bed,â Wednesday admitted.
You gently reached out to Wednesdayâs hand and brought it to your cheek. You gave a small kiss on the palm of her hand before moving it to cup your cheek as your free hand wiped away the lone tear that fell down Wednesdayâs cheek. âI forgive you, Wednesday. I had forgiven you the moment I moved; I thought I would never see you again,â you whispered with tears in your eyes as you brought your forehead against Wednesdayâs.
Wednesday sighed in relief as she brought up her other hand and cupped your cheeks. You pulled back from her, and Wednesday wanted to cry. You placed a kiss on her forehead that felt like a promise, then kissed her nose, silently telling her everything will be alright, another on her cheek that felt like you would wait however long for her, and finally, you kissed her lips with so much love Wednesday almost died. She let a small, choked-up gasp escape her lips before gently kissing you back. For the first time in ten years, you both finally felt at home.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A blanket of snow fell upon the Addamsâ residence that coated the peaceful house as Morticia Addams shot up in bed. She gasped for breath as her eyes panicky shot around the room.
The action woke Gomez up, and he reached over to the bedside table to turn on the lamp before reaching out to his wife. âCara mia, whatâs wrong?â He asked with worry laced in his voice, but his worry faded when he saw a giant smile plastered on Morticiaâs face that accompanied the tears of joy in her eyes.
She wrapped her arms around her husband and pulled him against her, in complete disbelief at the vision she just had of her daughter. She pulled back from the embrace before exclaiming, âOur darling viper has found someone to share her grave with!â
Gomez lit up with excitement at the mention of Wednesday having a lover; words could not express his joy when his daughter finally fell to the Addams Family Curse. âMy love, this is dreadful news! I cannot wait to meet them,â he said with a smile on his face.
Morticia laughed at her husband's words before placing a hand on his cheek and stroking it with her thumb. âDonât worry, Gomez. You have known her since she was a child.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AN: if you recognized âthe sun rises and sets with your smileâ quote, I love you so much đŤś
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Description: Now aged 22, Wednesday Addams is an up-and-coming author. Her time at Nevermore is well behind her, and she is alone, and that suits her just fine...But when a 'new' neighbour shows up in her apartment building, she'll truly be tested on whether her "bad habit" of caring truly has been broken. (Hint: It hasn't.) Â
Pairing: Wednesday Addams / Enid Sinclair
Rating: Mature (Fic is fully SFW up to Chapter 20)
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x-x-x-x-x-x
Pain.
Silence.
Then more pain.
This describes the last few hours of Wednesdayâs life following her successful attempt to hinder Enidâs brother, Jacob. Whilst Wednesday would love to claim she is having the time of her life⌠she very much isnât. The fleeting moments of consciousness sheâs experiencing are nothing short of agonising, and frustratingly, time seems to escape her grasp, drifting in and around her, unable to be caught. Sometimes â briefly - Wednesday feels awake; the left side of her body stiff and aching. Other times, it as though sheâs underwater; quiet, muffled voices sending incoherent whispers of conversation her way. Otherwise there is darkness and nothing much else. Time seems slow⌠yet everything seems to pass in an instant.
Wednesday cannot tell how long it has been.
She cannot even tell where she is during her brief flashes of awareness. All Wednesday can feel is a softness having replaced the floor, and the desperate begging from her bones to continually rest. She fights it, naturally. She does not wish to heed the temptation of the darkness that encroaches on her vision. Unfortunately, she is repeatedly tamed by her humanity. It is cruel, really. No amount of Addams stubbornness can keep an injured body awake â much to her behest.
Most recently, she manages a bleary eyed glance into the room. She sees dark shapes; blurry outlines of figures she cannot discern. Her eyes cannot focus, and when she attempts to pull her head up slightly, she is met only with a sharp resistant burn from within her shoulder before she is pulled back under by the depths of unconsciousness.
So Wednesday closes her eyes and awaits the cycle again.
Silence.
Pain.
Muffled Noise.
Pain.
But thenâŚ
After some time, and out of nowhere-
Enid.
Enidâs voice. Hoarse; tired, but unmistakable. It reaches Wednesdayâs ears like a beautiful symphony of rain come to ruin a sunny day, or the soothing screech of bats on a dark night. It is the first time a voice has been recognisable since she passed out⌠which by all means could have been ten minutes ago, or five hours. It is impossible to tell.
But it is Enidâs voice, and it calls to Wednesdayâs addled brain.
It is a soft whisper. Secretive, almost. As though Enid wishes for no one to hear but Wednesday herself.
âWednesday?â She says, gently.
Wednesday stirs, her consciousness pulled to the sound of her name.
âWednesday, baby, please⌠you need to wake up now.â
Enidâs voice is like a tether, desperately latching itself around Wednesdayâs wrist. It pulls, and tugs, and pleads against the shroud Wednesday finds herself accosted by. Enid seems close and yet a million miles away - but each gentle sentence uttered, Wednesday feels that distance grow shorter and shorter. She is lead like a dead man to his grave, Enidâs voice growing louder as consciousness grows nearer.
Until, with a gasp, Wednesday finds herself flung into the world of the waking. Her eyes open and she meets a ceiling that isnât her own. She feels groggy, like sheâs multiple drinks and a vial of poison deep. Thereâs a searing pain in her shoulder; a crippling headache behind her eyes. It is â frankly â not the best sheâs ever felt. Quite the opposite, one might say⌠but her eyes fall upon Enid standing beside her, and Wednesdayâs body grows quiet of its complaints.
Enidâs face erupts into a relieved smile.
âHey.â She hums.
Wednesday lets out a quiet groan.
âYouâve been out quite some time.â Enid explains, âI was getting worried...â
Wednesday rubs at her eyes with the hand that doesnât hurt to move. Initially, she cannot truly recall what she is doing here; why her body aches in the way it does⌠but it doesnât take long for her memories to seep back in. They return to her slowly, rebuilding themselves up to the very moment she collapsed. She sees flashes, like a vision in reverse â Enidâs leering brothers, their taunts; attacks, threats. It feels almost like a dream, despite the very real outcome that lays before her now⌠and now sheâs awake, she finds herself both concerned and frustrated with knowing she has missed potentially hours of time â Hours that couldâve been used making sure Enidâs family never bother her again. She doesnât even know where her knife wentâŚ
âWhere am I?â Wednesday asks, her voice struggling to come alive. Her throat feels like sandpaper.
âMy bedroom.â Enid answers.
Of course. The first time Wednesday sleeps in Enidâs bed and itâs because she passed out from being injured. If this were any other time, Wednesday reckons thereâd be a storm in her chest and a void in her stomach â but sheâs much too focused on the mystery at hand: what sheâs missed; where Enidâs brothers have gone, and how she can stop them from ever coming back.
Wednesday goes to push herself up and sit, determined to pursue answers about this missing time, but she is quickly paralysed by the crippling pain that burns through the nerves of her upper left body. She hisses; teeth gritted through the agony. It would seem Jacob really did a number on her shoulder. The bastard.
Enid expression turns uncomfortable.
âYou need to go to hospital, Wends.â
Wednesday scowls. Thereâs no time for a hospital visit. There are more pressing matters at hand, and in any case â the only part of a hospital sheâd willingly visit for her own use is the morgue.
âNo.â She mutters. âIt is simply a dislocated shoulder. There are other matters to attend to.â
Enid stares at her flatly.
Wednesday maintains her scowl, her eyes having now adjusting to the dim lighting enough that she can fully see Enidâs features. Though she shouldnât be surprised, Wednesday will admit to herself that she is silently stunned by the sight she meets: the red slashes down Enidâs cheek â clean of blood, but still raw and angry⌠and on Enidâs brow on the other side⌠is that a bruise? Wednesday does not remember that being there beforeâŚ
Did something happen whilst she was out?
Wednesdayâs stomach drops. Her free hand comes to hover at Enidâs cheek. A possessive anger fills her body as she stares upon her injured girlfriend. Family or not, Wednesday will not stand for someone hurting what belongs to her.
âThe bruising⌠It was not there before.â Wednesday points out, a hint of venom staining her words. âWhat did your brothers do?â
Enidâs hand brushes along her brow where the bruise stains her skin. She winces slightly.
âOh, this?â She replies meekly. âNo⌠I-⌠I kind of half fainted whilst cleaning my face up.â
Wednesday relaxes slightly at this, but feels a twang of guilt in realising Enid has dealt with the aftermath of everything that happened alone. This should have been her responsibility. It is her responsibility. It is her who insisted on chasing her vision to fruition, and what for? All it has resulted in is misery and misfortune â and not in a way that Wednesday can even claim to be satisfied with. It is quite infuriating, in fact.
Considering the nature of her visions, Wednesday shouldâve expected this... It is not an uncommon occurrence for those around her to end up maimed, or worse. In most occasions, such bad luck is something Wednesday would be delighted by. These consequences generally mean little to her.
But with Enid, it is different.
Enid should not have had to deal with this outcome alone.
Wednesday glances down, staring emptily into the darkness of the room.
âMy vision missed out key details. This outcome could have been prevented.â She states. As with all her guilt, this has caught up with her after itâs too late and the damage is done. Her answer-hungry hubris has reaped what she sewed, and now she finds herself in an even deeper trench â wanting more resolution; more blood spilled, so she may right what she got wrong. She needs to know what happened to Enidâs brothers.
Wednesday then pulls away the blankets and pulls herself up, clamping her jaw shut to prevent an anguished whine escaping her mouth from the pain emanating out of her shoulder.
She continues speaking as she clambers out of the bed, speaking through gritted teeth, âYou have been harmed beyond what I foresaw. That is unacceptable.â
Wednesday notices her knife on the bedside cabinet. She picks it up, and tucks it back in her pocket.
Enid looks at her exasperatedly. There is a distinct discomfort in the way she stares.
âWends, you need to rest⌠we can talk about this later.â She pleads.
Wednesday stares at Enid for a moment. She glances back at the bed, feeling the weight of her body; the pounding in her head. She does need to rest, frankly. She should. Enid is correct.
But she cannot.
âEnid, please cover your eyes.â Wednesday requests.
Enid frowns in confusion.
âThis is for your benefit, not mine, mi cariĂąo.â
Enid takes pause, still frowning, but evidently thinks better of second guessing such a request. She wordlessly brings her hands up obscure her vision.
Then, in a swift motion, so that her body cannot paralyse itself in painful hesitance, Wednesday throws up her left arm. She immediately grabs the underside of her left elbow with her right hand and gives it an almighty tug. Her shoulder is hit with a lighting strike of agony that would cause most to weep, but Wednesday does little more than hiss out a tense breath. Her shoulder pops back into itâs socket with a satisfying click. All at once, the agony stops. Wednesdayâs body floods with relief.
There. Thatâs one problem solved at least.
Enid grimaces. She peeks through her fingers.
âDid you just-â
âSet my shoulder back into place? Yes. It is quite simple.â Wednesday answers. She rolls her shoulder a few times to test her work. All seems good.
Enidâs face pales, but she holds herself steady.
Wednesday then takes a step towards her, closing the distance between them so she may closer inspect the gashes along Enidâs face. Her hand comes to Enidâs chin and she gently turns Enidâs cheek towards her. A fire grows in her chest as she fully takes in the extent of the damage. The slashes are not particularly deep â not enough to require stitches, at least â but they are long and they will certainly scar. Enid has always cared for her appearance; it is why she spent so long fading her previous scars so they were barely visible...and now, that work is undone.
Unsure of what to say, for comfort is something Wednesday still struggles to grasp, she leans in and plants a chaste kiss to the corner of Enidâs cheek. It is intended as both an apology and a promise. She cannot fix these wounds, but she can stop their cause before it happens again.
As she pulls back, Wednesday notes a single tear rolling down Enidâs cheek.
She gives Enid a questioning look.
âPlease donât go after them,â Enid sobs suddenly. Her face crumbles as she drags her sleeve across her wet eyes, trying vehemently to prevent herself from crying further. She dips her head away from Wednesdayâs touch. âLook...It doesnât matter what happened...whether your vision was right, wrong, whatever. Either way, it was either us getting hurt or my apartment getting ransacked. We were screwed either way.â
Wednesday scowls. Sheâs not sure what Enid is trying to say.
âWell I intend to make it so there are no futures where anything-â
â-No, Wednesday,â Enid interrupts, sighing. She wipes her eyes again. âIt doesnât matter. Bad shit just happens and you canât always fix that. Going after my brothers isnât going to fix anything.â
Wednesday disagrees. She pulls her knife out of her pocket, turning it over in her hand. She can still feel the way it felt when the blade jammed itself into Jacobâs back. She felt powerful; unstoppable, even. In that moment she had taken control â and Wednesday wishes to take that control again. To stop anything bad happening to Enid, and to herself, and to bring misery to those who oppose either of them.
She would kill Enidâs brothers, if necessary⌠and would happily die, doing so. Either way, what bliss.
Enid watches her as she explains this, her teary eyed gaze turning quietly sombre. As Wednesday finishes her reasoning, Enid simple shakes her head, sighing once more.
âYou donât even see how reckless youâre being.â She mumbles. âOr how reckless youâve beenâŚâ
âI pursued resolution, and I must continue to do so,â Wednesday argues. âIf I can just-â
Enid interrupts again with a frustrated groan. It stops Wednesday in her tracks. She stares at Enid, frowning slightly, peturbed by Enidâs lack of foresight. If she could simply follow her nose; know what she missed, and track down Jacob and Mason once again, Wednesday could guarantee this time that they will never hear another peep out of them again. Enid would be free from her familyâs torment, and Wednesday would be free of her vision-related error. Surely that is an ideal solution?
Enid does not seem to agree. She stares Wednesday down, her breathing uneven and angered, eyes brimming with tears again. She walks over to the bed and sits, head in hands.
Wednesday looks at Enid, unsure what to say. She wants to justify herself, again...but something stops her. This weighty angst that sits in her stomach, dragging her ego down with it. The situation feels familiar, suddenly.
âThis is just like when we first met.â Enid sighs.
Wednesdayâs blood runs cold.
She does not like where this is going.
Enid continues, âYou know what Iâm talking about? Where your desire to have answers and hold the cards in the situation nearly blew up everything before it even started?â
Wednesday feels herself shrink. The bravado filled might she had just instilled within herself quickly dissolves. She wants to feel right; to feel the control she craves⌠but in an instant, Enid has reminded her that it was almost her downfall before, and could very well be once again.
That silver knife in her hand may as well be stabbing through her own black heart.
Wednesday says nothing.
Enid rubs her eyes, laughing bitterly.
âEverythingâs been going so great with us, and I thought maybe you had really changed since that first argument, because you've grown in so many ways⌠sure everythingâs been quick, yâknow, barely a full couple months but⌠itâs us. It always had been.â She then looks back to Wednesday again. Her expression is nothing short of forlorn. âBut this impulsive, reckless need to win? Iâm scared it canât ever change. Itâs going to get you killed.â
Wednesdayâs heart fully sinks. Enid has spoken like a cannon shot directly to the helm of Wednesdayâs pride. She did not think things would end up here. As she basks in the silence left after Enidâs words, it dawns now what she has done - what she truly has done. Wednesday believed this righteous impulsivity a nobler cause than the pathetic âinterrogationâ she put upon Enid during the earliest days of their rekindling relationship⌠but, when it is simplified, it is all the same.
It is her, wanting to throw caution to the wind, and chase a resolution that may be unachievable; that may have dire consequences affecting more than just her⌠all because she needs to be on top.
Letting go simply isnât an optionâŚ
Wednesday redirects her gaze to the floor. She feels angry, guilty; frustrated â A whole symphony of dissonant emotions that swirl inside her, but different from how she felt them before. It is now self-directed upon being faced with the reality that â yet again â these serious matters are not puzzles to be solved; not games to win, as much as she would like them to be.
She grinds her jaw for a second, thinking of what to say. She still thinks Enidâs brothers deserve to meet a cruel fate, and she cannot ascertain they will survive should they ever meet in a dark alley â so must she simply stand down, otherwise? It does not sit right with her.
Though, it cannot be emphasised enough that she would do anything for Enid. She would overcome her resentment of attachments, unlearn four years of isolation, accept her ability to love, and care, and yearn. She has done all these things that did not âsit right with herâ.
So is letting this go an option, after all?
Wednesday lets out a quiet, thoughtful noise.
âYou are scared of me dying?â She asks.
Enid sniffs. She nods, a few stray tears staining her cheeks once more.
Wednesday clasps her hands together in front of her. How troubling it is for another to be concerned with her mortality in such a way. To die, by the Addamsâ standard, would be the biggest adventure of them all⌠but Enid is not an Addams. Enid is different. It is this that drives the last nail into the coffin of her decision.
Wednesday stills feels a fiery murderous intent, and perhaps she always will â but she will hold onto it for now; let it burn itself to ash.
âVery well.â Wednesday says after a moment. She joins Enid on the bed. âI will cease my pursuit.â
Enid turns to Wednesday, eyes glistening. Without another word she engulfs Wednesday in a hug, and all her love, and relief, and amazement could not be louder stated. Wednesday feels it, like that familiar electricity that Enidâs touch always brings, except somehow stronger - Consuming and engulfing, but Wednesday can only let it wash over her.
Is this what Enid needed from her all along⌠not bloodshed; not vengeance, nor a resolution to her familyâs insufferable appearances. Enid just needed her.
Wednesday can only hope the message sticks this time.
But then, as their embrace continues, there is a strange growing sense of malice in the air. Gentle scuffing noises begin to reverberate from outside the apartment.
Suddenly, there is a loud banging from outside Enidâs bedroom. Presumably someone knocking on what remains of Enidâs door.
Then, a voice.
âHey Enid⌠itâs Mason. We- We couldnât find anywhere to go. Jacobâs in real bad shape.â
Enid: Mom, dadâŚ. Iâm in love with Wednesday Addams.
Esther: *choking on her coffee* Wait-whoa-hang on now, stop.
Murray: Awww, sweetie thatâs wonderfu-
Esther: No it is NOT, Murray. An Addams? Enid, there are hundreds of beautiful and talented girls in Nevermore and you choose⌠an Addams?
Enid: Well actually sheâs-
Esther: No, no, no, NO! I will not have it. Itâs bad enough that you havenât even transformed yet-
Enid: Here we go-
Esther: -But to be falling for some sadistic, unnatural, bizarre being⌠some egotistical and soulless creature⌠an ADDAMS?! Enid, what do you have to say for yourself?
âââââââ
Wednesday: Mother, Father. My heart belongs to Enid Sinclair.
Gomez: Oh my little storm cloud! That is beyond beautiful!
Morticia: Would you like to have the wedding at the Addams cemetery? Or a cemetery of your choosing?