So like hypothetically if I asked for a part 2 to the hypothetical blonde blazer x cyn reader (possibly turned into a z-team x reader where blazer just tries to make up excuses as to why theyâre there while reader screws around in the background) how would you hypothetically respond? All hypothetical ofc
"Yellow Words From The Dark" Part 2 Mandy / Blonde Blazer x Cyn!Reader
Blonde Blazer did not announce her arrival.
That alone was unusual.
The Torrance SDN building glowed the way it always didâwhite light, glass, corporate reassurance baked into every reflective surfaceâbut Mandy slipped through a side entrance instead of the front doors. Her amulet hummed low against her sternum, a persistent vibration she kept mistaking for nerves.
She told herself this was temporary. An assessment. A containment decision.
Behind her, the person(?) followed.
Not closely. Not distantly. At an angle that never quite aligned with Mandyâs peripheral vision.
Their gait was wrong, too careful, like gravity was a suggestion rather than a rule. Every few steps their head tipped sideways, neck joint clicking faintly, until they steadied it with one hand. Their feet pointed inward as they walked, shoes scuffing the polished floor.
âQuiet traversal,â ââââââ murmured. âSuccessful.â
Mandy flinched, then caught herself. âYou donât need to narrate,â she said, sharper than intended.
ââââââ looked at her. Really looked. Yellow eyes reflective in the overhead lights.
âUnderstood,â they said. A beat. âReduced narration.â
Two seconds passed.
âSilence imitation.â
Mandy exhaled through her nose and kept walking.
She still didnât know why sheâd brought them here.
No, that wasnât true.
She knew the reasons, theyâd been unconscious in an alley, anomalous readings, non-hostile behavior, no criminal activity she could immediately pin on them. SDN had protocols for displaced supers, undocumented metas, even extradimensional refugees.
What it didnât have protocols for was the feeling in her chest when sheâd tried to leave them behind.
A subtle pressure. A sense of wrongness. As if abandoning them would create a problem larger than keeping them.
She told herself that was empathy.
She did not consider the possibility that it wasnât entirely her thought.
The hallway to the live-in quarters was mercifully empty at first. Late shift. Reduced staff. Mandy walked with the brisk confidence of someone who absolutely belonged here, even as her mind scrambled for excuses.
Consultant. Witness. Temporary asset. None of them fit.
Behind her, ââââââ paused at a wall-mounted hero poster and leaned in close, nose almost touching the glass.
âObservation,â they said softly. âBrand consistency.â
âDonât touch anything,â Mandy said automatically.
ââââââ pulled their hands back and clasped them behind their back. âCompliance.â
They resumed walking.
The first person they ran into was Prism.
Alice was leaning against the vending machines near the junction corridor, light idly spiraling around her fingers as she scrolled through her phone. She looked up mid-swipe, and froze.
Her pupils dilated.
âOh,â she said, smiling slowly. âHi.â
Mandy felt her shoulders tense. âPrism. Youâre⌠still here.â
âLate edits,â Alice replied absently, eyes never leaving the Reader. âAnd, wow. You didnât tell me we were getting a new one.â
ââââââ tilted their head. Too far. Corrected it with their hand.
âGreeting,â they said. âHello, luminous individual.â
Alice laughed, bright and delighted.
âYouâre creepy,â she said fondly. âI love it.â
âAffection acknowledged,â the Reader replied.
Mandy stepped in. âTheyâre not... theyâre with me.â
Aliceâs grin widened. âYeah, I figured.â
She circled once, slow, appraising. Light refracted oddly around the Reader, bending in angles Alice wasnât consciously shaping.
Her instincts were screaming predator, not attacking, not hostile, just waiting. But the feeling thrilled her more than it scared her.
âWhatâs your name?â Alice asked.
They opened their mouth.
They spoke.
The name slid out of Aliceâs mind like oil over glass. Her smile faltered for half a second.
ââŚOkay,â she said, blinking. âThatâs not fair.â
Mandy stiffened. âThis isâtemporary.â
âSure it is,â Alice said breezily, circling ââââââ like she was appraising a sculpture. âTheyâve got vibes. Big vibes. Creepy-cute. Likeââ she snapped her fingers, light flaring, ââif static learned how to people.â
ââââââ tracked her perfectly as she moved.
âCompliment acknowledged,â they said. âTail wag imitation unavailable.â
Alice laughed, delighted. âOkay, that was adorable.â
Mandy opened her mouth to shut this downâ
âbut the ââââââ suddenly leaned forward, peering at Aliceâs glowing hands.
âPhotokinesis,â they murmured. âPretty.â
Aliceâs heart skipped.
She hadnât told them that.
ââŚYeah,â she said slowly. âYouâre not wrong.â
For a moment, Alice could swear the light bent toward the Reader, not the other way around.
Then Mandy stepped between them. âWe need to get going, if you don't mindâ
Mandyâs stomach tightened.
Alice laughed it off, stepping back. âWell. Whatever you are, welcome to SDN. Try not to eat the building.â
âConsumption not scheduled.â ââââââ replied.
Mandy dragged them gently but firmly down the hall before Alice could ask more questions.
Behind them, Prism watched, light coiling tighter around her fingers, smile thoughtful rather than playful now.
They didnât make it much farther before a portal irised open in the air ahead of them.
Malevola stepped through, broadsword resting easily on her shoulder. She took one look at the Reader and stopped.
Her expression did not change.
âChild?â she asked in a one word question.
ââââââ straightened.
âClassification uncertain.â they replied.
Malevola knelt anyway, bringing herself level with them. Her presence was grounding, solid demonic gravity rather than human warmth.
âYouâre shaking.â she observed.
ââââââ looked down at their hands. They were trembling, just slightly.
âKinetic posture unstable,â they admitted. âBut⌠fine.â
Malevola nodded, like that explained everything. She reached out, adjusting âââââââs collar with surprising care, fingers lingering just long enough to ensure they were real.
âYouâre cold,â she observed.
âTemperature sensation minimal.â
âHm.â
Malevola straightened, turning her gaze to Mandy. âYouâre planning to hide them in the live-ins.â
Mandy froze. âIââ
âYou donât know what they are,â Malevola continued calmly. âBut you know they donât belong on the street.â
It wasnât a question.
Mandy swallowed. ââŚYes.â
Malevola looked back at ââââââ. Studied the way their shadow didnât quite line up. The way space felt thicker around them.
Then she nodded once.
âOkay,â she said. âIâll keep an eye out.â
ââââââ tilted their head.
âThank you,â they said, sincerely.
Malevola smiled faintly. âYouâre welcome.â
But she stepped aside, letting them pass.
ââââââ watched her go, head tilted.
âProtective entity,â they murmured. âNoted.â
They were almost to the residential wing when Courtney appeared out of nowhere.
She phased into visibility directly in front of them, arms crossed, eyes sharp and unamused. Stood at the far end of the corridor, arms crossed, inhaler clipped at her belt. Her eyes flicked between Mandy and the Reader.
âHey blondyâ she said flatly. âWhat the hell is that?â
ââââââ stopped dead.
Mandyâs mind blanked for half a second.
âThatâs none of your business,â she said quickly. Courtney scoffed. âFunny, because brand new people in SDN are my business.â Courtneyâs gaze flicked to ââââââ. âThey donât blink.â
âI blink.â ââââââ said immediately. âBlink.â
They squeezed their eyes shut once. Hard. Too deliberate.
Courtney recoiled. âOh, hell no.â ââââââ tilted their head, studying Courtney with unsettling intensity.
âSuspicion and respiratory strain detected,â they said. âyou are tense.â
Courtney bristled. âDonât analyze me.â
âUnderstood,â ââââââ replied. A pause. âCeasing analysis.â
They did not stop looking.
Courtneyâs hand hovered near her inhaler. âYouâre making excuses,â she said to Mandy. âWhy?â
Mandy opened her mouth.
Nothing came out.
For a terrifying moment, she couldnât remember why sheâd brought ââââââ here, only that it would be wrong not to.
ââââââ leaned slightly closer to her, not touching.
âStress indicators elevated,â they whispered. âAssistance.â
Mandyâs breath steadied.
âIâm responsible for them,â she said firmly. âThatâs enough.â
Courtney searched her face, then the ââââââ's.
ââŚFine,â she said at last. âbut youâre making a mistake.â
Courtney vanished again, leaving behind a chill and the echo of distrust. After a beat ââââââ replied to the empty air âPossibility acknowledged,â they replied. âGoodnight, Courtney.â Mandy didnât notice that ââââââ suddenly knew someones name. She was already ushering the Reader down the hall, heart pounding, thoughts reassuringly smooth.
They reached the live-in room at the end of the hall, small, utilitarian, meant for exhausted heroes between shifts or SDN Staff who have to work overnight.
Mandy used her masterkey to open the door.
âJust for tonight,â she said again, more to herself than anyone else.
ââââââ stepped inside, looking around with quiet fascination. They sat on the edge of the bed, posture awkward, feet turned inward, hands folded in their lap.
âTemporary containment accepted,â they said.
Mandy leaned against the doorframe, suddenly exhausted.
She didnât see the way the ââââââ's eyes followed her every movement.
Didnât hear the almost-silent hum beneath their voice as they added, to no one at all:
âIntegration proceeding.â










