Oh how I wish I had grown up on this show man
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Oh how I wish I had grown up on this show man

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What's so tragic and difficult about season 1-2 walking dead and their treatment of daryl is how hard he tried to be a good member of the group. he defended camp in season 1, he fought to get out of the c.d.c with everything he had, he saved t-dog with no hesitation, he looked for sophia (he looked for that girl every single day!!) the moment they told him they needed something daryl made it happen. he even had the drugs to fight tdogs infection. AND he was offering everyone as much comfort as he could along the way. The way his conversations with carol and andrea went,,,, the man just wanted to make things okay in his on way. and people judged him so much for being a hick and never thanked him for all of the effort he put into everything he did- and because they never thanked him and showed him the kindness he deserved he genuinely thought they looked down on him in the way merle said.
ugh
season 2 daryl dixon you mean everything to me
THE WALKING DEAD (rewatch) 1.05 â wildfire
TWD incorrect quotes cuz Iâm obsessed now
Carol: you have to apologize to Shane
Daryl: fineÂ
Daryl: unfuck you, or whatever
Â
Daryl, Carol, and Maggie sitting on a bench with a deflated look
Rick: why are the three of you sitting sad like that?Â
Maggie: sit with us so we can tell you
Rick *sitting down*: well?Â
Daryl: this bench is freshly paintedÂ
Rick: ...
Carol: yeah, they did it to me too
Glenn, texting Maggie: text me when youâre home safelyÂ
Maggie: Iâm home dangerouslyÂ
Glenn: stop it
Maggie: Iâm home lethallyÂ
Carol: Iâm gonna count to three
Daryl: what did I do?
Carol: one
Daryl, running away: wHaT dId I dO?!?!
Beth, about Andrea: whatâs wrong with her?
Daryl: everyone has a different theoryÂ
Carol: if you took a shot for every time you made a bad decision, how drunk would you be?Â
Maggie: maybe a little tipsy
Daryl: drunkÂ
Lori: wastedÂ
Andrea: deadÂ
Maggie, calling Beth: Where are you?
Beth: I waved to a man because I thought he was waving at me. Apparently he was waving to the guy behind me so to get out of the awkward situation I kept my hand up so a taxi pulled over and took me to the train station. I am now in California, I should be back by Thursday.
Maggie: Wha-
Glenn: Understandable. Have a nice day
Glenn, after briefing another plan: thoughts?
Daryl: and prayers. Holy shit.
Maggie: I have the urge to do something stupid
Glenn: Iâm stupid, do me
Rick: I left instructions for everyone while Iâm gone
Andrea: mine just says âAndrea noâ
Rick: and I want you to apply that to every possible situationÂ
Dale: I swear to God Iâm the only one here with a brain cell
Daryl, T-Dog, Rick, Shane, and Glenn: ALL HAIL THE KEEPER OF THE BRAIN CELL!!!
Onstage
What - it's nothing to panic about, Lori's secret pregnancy, Shane's changes for the worse, Sophia gone for over a week, and now a barn full of walkers. It's fine. No big deal, nothing is wrong, so you're gonna step onstage and act like it. On the bright side, Daryl isn't stuck in a bed anymore!
When - the morning after Keep this dog asleep. (the night where Glenn discovers the barn in Season 2)
Who - this is part of the Slowpoke Series, which is a canon compliant slow burn Reader x Daryl. You're also Shane's younger sibling
Pronouns - she/her
TWs - a few cusses, panic, bad screenshots
References - lots, y'all, want the Masterlist?
Length - longer bc I've been awol, I've been dreading posting again, friends, so thank you much for reading. Kind feedback is always welcome :)
âGoodness. You two slept together.â
âWhaâCarol!â you squeak, accidentally splashing some coffee on your hands while youâre at it, to which Carol apologizes, âOops!â
Glenn and you fell asleep beside each other, by the fire pit. You two must have conked out while staring at the barn.
Brr, the sun hasnât warmed the day yet, youâre like an ice-pop.
âWhâappened?â Glenn mumbles, still half-asleep in Daleâs camp chair.
Carl, freshly freed from the house and now officially back to the tents, also wanted to know, âWhat was the joke?â
âSorry, couldnât resist,â Carol whispers in your ear and wipes the coffee off your hand with a tissue she had in her pocket.
That ship has sailed, Carol!
Lori smiles and shakes her head, and hands Glenn a coffee cup. âCarol was teasing them about having spent the night out here. Mustâve stayed up far too late having fun.â
ââFun,ââ Glenn groans to himself, blindly nursing his coffee. You notice he winces and reaches for the back of his neck when he tries to bend it forward. Mustâve slept on it wrong.
âHow late did you guys stay up?â
âI donât even know, little man,â you answer Carl while reaching out for a hug. âBut âfar too lateâ sure is correct.â
He returns your reach and hugs you back, tucking his head down across your neck like he used to when he was little. You press a kiss to his temple and hold him awhile longer, not wanting to let go first.
Itâs good to have started the day on an up-note. Youâre already on guard this morning. Less so about the genuine, bona-fide barn full of walkers on the property and moreso that Glenn wonât keep the secret long enough.
Which is backwards, butâŚthe worry is that Shane will, um, and, andâ oh God, and Carl canât go near it! What are you gonâ
ââHere, Maggie left these for you two.â Lori has returned and plunks down what resembles an Easter basket filled with peaches.
âWait, should you be lifting heavââ Glenn cuts himself off, apparently having woken up a brain cell and remembering the pregnancy is still a secret.
You run onstage and speak up for Lori. âThatâs how her arms stay so toned. Can you believe she hand-whipped the cream for the ambrosia?â Solid improv.
Lori seems to tamp down on whatever frustration sheâs feeling. âItâs not heavy, Glenn.â
âMom can lift so much, that puny basket of peaches is nothing,â Carl tells him, apparently thinking Glenn was being dumb.
Rattled, it takes a moment before Lori recalls what she was talking about. âMaggie also gave us a bucket filled with tomatoes along with another big bowl of eggs. We have to find a way to thank them. Theyâve done so much.â She sighs. âEven last night, we cooked the meal, but they provided the food. Meat, even. All we contributed food-wise was the field green salad and the two cans of creamed corn.â
Youâve got to keep it to yourself that by not revealing the Greeneâs massive secret about a barn full of walkers, youâre certainly giving them some kind of fucked up recompense.
And like you said last night, there are worse things to be bribed with than food. In fact, you have no immediate plans to do anything other than sit here, miserably tired, in T-Dogâs camp chair and stress-eat peaches â and stick close to Glenn lest he get the urge to open Pandoraâs box about that barn.
âCarl, Miss Patricia hopefully mentioned how the barn is unstable? They wonât even go near it, and we are forbidden.â You swipe a peach and have at it. The juice dribbles down your hand and chin. Carl smirks. You snort; at least heâs seen you look grosser. So, in a very ladylike fashion, you shove the rest of it in your mouth in one bite and immediately swipe another. âThereâs some kind of vermin problem, too, and you donât want none of them diseases rats and the like carry. Keep away.â
Mid-chew, you realize that you just lied flawlessly by slipping in truth. Youâre not big on lying. In fact, you hate it. You donât do it, or, at least you think you donât? Do you?
This and the weight of last nightâs inward decision that you made sits heavy in your stomach, making the peach sink like a rock.
Youâre going to leave, with your brother. Shane canât stay here, not when the news of the baby and now the barn gets out. Youâll even go to Fort Benning despite all your misgivings. Anything to keep things from imploding here when those secrets get out. Not, um, not that youâll stay away forever from the group, just until, umâŚ
Well, if looks are any indication, Glennâs also busy being miserably tired and stressed. He was the one to discover the barnâs secret, first off. And heâs not good with secrets, and now has three to contend with. The pregnancy, Shane losing his temper and physically hurting you. And now, the stupid, stupid, awful barn.
âDid your head flop down when you fell asleep, Glenn?â
âIt mustâve, itâs so stiff!â he mutters. âI canât have a stiff neck when theâŚâ
Smart, he knows not to finish the sentence and instead resumes warily eyeing the barn. Youâre grateful your neck is fine and dandy, youâre in no fit state to mess up your neck or shoulder again. For real, by the grace of God, youâd fallen asleep nestled in T-Dogâs camp chair and your neck stayed blessedly straight and untwisted.
âWe search for Sophia in groups, itâs all good,â you cover for him. Carl is still next to you, so the fewer questions, the better.
Maybe itâs the lack of sleep, but youâre restless. Seeking something to busy your hands with, you think to yourself you know what? Your friend could use a massage. Itâs the gentlemanly thing to do, considering you slept together (lol).
Shoving the rest of the second peach in your mouth, you consider that slurping the juice off your hand may be a mite untoward, so instead youâŚwipe it on the clothes you wore all day yesterday and fell asleep inâŚsuch a feminine, classy woman. Didnât even brush your teeth last night.
Whatever, a neck and shoulder rub is the least you can do for a friend you may not see again. âGlenn, I can do you a massage,â you offer.
âWait. Really?â
ââCourse.â Letâs face it, you may not see him again after you leave. Maybe no one here, just look at the track record of losing peop â oh my gosh, crybaby much? Get your butt back onstage and act fine.
âCan you, with your arm still wrapped like that?â he checks regarding your modified sling.
âSure can.â
âDude, that would be, like,â Glenn sighs, then you hear Lori call for Carl, who gets up and goes to his mother. âThank you, that would be awesome, it hurts really bad,â your friend accepts.
âEh, itâs the least I could do, considering last night we did,â pause for dramatic effect, âsleep together.â
âWhat the hââ
ââBro, I know," you drone. "Thatâs what Carol joked about a few minutes ago. Didnât expect that joke outta her, right?â
âSlept together, now I get it,â he cracks up halfheartedly. But in an instant, his gaze gets drawn right back toward the barn and resettles into uneasy, blatant stare.
That rattles you. Suddenly, you become convinced heâs gonna spill the beans before the one week (at least one week!) trial. For a few moments, you feel breathless, as in you canât inhale enough. That happened last night, too, you figured it was because of the cold air.
You cough, inhale extra deep. The sensation goes away. But now youâre starting to get mad. As you rise from the chair, youâre more than conscious of your inner kettle beginning to simmer. Not gonna lie, you sound snotty when you comment, âGlad to see they didnât learn how to jump as high as a hayloft and find their way out yet.â
âY/N.â
In lieu of any new comeback, you start on his neck. Immediately and likely without meaning to, he lets out a thankful groan. That warms you, and you remind yourself heâs worried for a good reason and that you love your friend.
And, strangely, then you think back to how you did this for Daryl, gave him a massage. How pleasant the closeness felt, how strange it made your stomach feel. How heâd silently cried but was vulnerable enough to ask you not to stopâŚ
And with the jokes about you and Glenn, youâre feeling some unpleasantly conflicting emotions. Full disclosure, youâd had some hidden and very unwelcome hurt feelings when you found out about him and Maggie. Residual, you reckon, from when youâd two had a little fondness (lol Dale) for each other.
Really, you know itâs just that youâre lonely and things are stressful. More than stressful.
âWanna kick the ball around later with the others, see if the girls canât beat yâall this time?â Together, Jimmy and he have been an unbeatable team so far, and you three girls want to change that.
âAnything to make the pharmacy trip suck less.â
Man, youâd forgotten all about that. Itâs supposed to feature none other than Glenn, Maggie, yourself, and maybe T-Dog. âThatâs still on?â
Glenn shrugs. âI donât remember. And I donât want to go today, letâs do it tomorrow or Monday.â
âFine by me. Naught dire we need yet.â
He unexpectedly exhales in pleasure when you mustâve hit a spot he needs worked out.âI havenât gotten a massage since, like,â your friend sighs again, and he sounds weighed down when he continues. âVarsity baseball in high school. Appa was really good at shoulder rubs.â
âOh.â A memory about his dad might will probably spark a whole lot of memories, and heâs still iffy about crying in front of people. âWant me to stop?â
âHeck no.â
âAre you cool with crying? Massages sometimes do that,â you hesitate.
âWhat do you mean?â
âI meant the act itself can make folk cry sometimes.â Especially if memories get brought up.
âMake âfolkâ cry?â he teases. "You already used the word 'naught,' too, bumpkin."
You pause the massage to give him a very light shove. âShut up, buttface.â
Breakfast is eggs again, you can smell them cooking. The Greenes have been very generous with eggs. And, of course, now extra-generous with the peaches and some tomatoes, apparently. Maybe the thrill of yellow squash or string beans is in the future, too.
Ooh, or dairy. Oh my gosh, or red meat! Jimmy mentioned theyâve made a ton of jerky what with their cattle.
âGâmorning,â you hear Shane behind you.
âHeya.â
âMorning, Shane.â
The razzing is clear in his tone of voice, but try telling that to Glenn as your brother says, âLookinâ cute, you two. Didnât know this was a thing now, I thought that ship had sailed.â
Yeahhhhh, Glenn wriggles away from your hands quicker than you can whine, âShaney!â who simply cracks up, âJust teasing.â
âIâll tease your face,â you wish you werenât snickering back. âAnd you know my heart belongs to darling Theodore,â you add in an exaggerated accent.
T-Dog, unfortunately, hears, and utters a soft âDa hell?â aaand you cackle even harder. Surely he knows the not-so-secret secret that you think heâs a catch? Too old for you, but, like. What a gem.
âGlenn, my apologies.â Shane winks. âItâs too easy to rile this one up. And Dog, donât worry.â
âItâs cool,â Glenn answers so awkwardly.
You scrunch your lips at your brother in an effort not to smile. Heâs acting like himself again, the real Shane. You donât feel as if youâre looking at a stranger, you donât feel the urge to stay on-guard or stay onstage. âProud of yourself?â
He shrugs with a lazy grin. âIt is real easy to rile you up.â
âMmhm, well Iâm fixing to escape to Fort Benning right now, lemme just wash up first.â You insert this little seed in hope it takes root. He was planning to go there before things changed.
He was planning to go without your input or foreknowledge, too, but he was doing what he thought was best for the group. For Lori and Rick.
Until he didnât anymore, according to what he said to Lori.
That night, the same day Daryl had almost died, was something else.
The things he said to Lori echo in your head, the confident flirting while she was visibly unreceptive and shaken.
Then you recall the way heâs been âpragmaticâ and almost irritated about the continuing search for Sophia.
Then the way he blew up at you, hurt you.
And finally, how your first reaction to finding out there was a barn filled with walkers a mere one minute trek from where your people are sleeping in tents was to insist that the secret must be kept from Shane at all costs. That the secret had to stay that way because of what would happen if Shane found out.
Maybe itâs from sleeping too close to the campfire or because it was so chilly last night, but the breathing trouble is back. It's fine, this happened last night, it ended up being fine.
You cough a few times to try and inhale more deeply and ease the tightness in your chest, but you feel strange and a little nauseous. Maybe you're coming down with something.
âLemme take over here â aw, Glenn, hey, sit back on down,â Shane insists to your friend who just tried to escape. âHeard you slept on your neck wrong. That shit stinks, man. But,â he holds out his hands and wiggles his fingers. âI got so much practice with massages from this oneâs migraines, I might should switch careers. Câmon then,â he says lightheartedly.
The unease you just wrestled with lessens. This is the real Shane, the confident, even cocky, but goodhearted one.
Huh, cool, your breathing feels a little better, too.
He looks at you and points with his thumb toward the house. âThe uh, the little one, whatâs the blonde girlâs name again?â
âSophâoh! Um, sorry, y-you mean âBeth,ââ you stammer, all the mirth from a moment ago zapped.
The look in your brotherâs eyes changes from easygoing to dampened to cold.
He tries to sound nonchalant behind a thin veil of both defense and offense. âYeah, the, uh, the teenager. She asked for you.â
âOkay. Thanks.â Youâd be off like a shot if there wasnât another potential time bomb to worry about.
Glenn.
To your friend, you assure in truth, âHe does give a mighty solid massage.â But when you lean over enough for him to see your face, you can feel your eyes darken when you hold the finger to your lips and set your jaw.
And as you make toward the house with your coffee and another two peaches, youâre grappling with the fact that, in an effort to keep Glenn quiet so everything wonât blow to pieces, youâre behaving not unlike the very person that youâre trying to prevent from igniting the explosion in the first place.
Another worry is the way you so easily slipped in and out of being onstage.
Youâve always been one to insist on truth and honesty. Itâs a badge of honor you wear with pride, and even Daryl, prickly grump Daryl, has mentioned it and appreciates that about you.
And yet, look at your conduct over the past week or so. You can certainly lie, and be believable at it. You donât like that.
Ew, gross, youâre getting nauseous again.
As you near the porch, Bethâs soft, clear voice calls your name, and she exits the house to meet you. âI got somethinâ for you. Can you come upstairs?â
âSure. Your dress is cute!â comes out automatically. Youâre still dazed and stressed. Her sundress really is pretty, though. Briefly, you consider how it would be nice to feel feminine again.
She leads you up the stairs, and it strikes you how odd it is that you have to go upstairs for whatever sheâs going to give you, right? Then, you worry that itâs to do with the barn.
And youâre right.
Or, at least, you think you are. Maggie is upstairs when Beth brings you there.
The tightness comes back, so you focus on your breathing and will your stomach to chill out. You're onstage, you need to perform.
âY/N, hi!â Margaret says this a little overly chipper, even though her appearance suggests that sheâs had about as much shut-eye as you, if not less. âSleep okay?â
âA-About as well as you, I reckon,â you answer with a hint of humor and only a trace of a stress stutter. Buying time with a few more coughs, before you get too defensive, you play it off as if Beth does not know that you and Glenn know. âWe stayed up far too late and ate way too many peaches,â you say the girl. Which is the truth, you arenât lying! You aren't lyi â nope, don't you cry! Stay onstage, stay onstage, stay onstageâ
âAs it so happens, now is when you recall how you are currently carrying two peaches in your hand, so your cheeks heat. The urge to cry goes away, so, small win. âI ate way too many, at least.â
Beth giggles. âI love peaches, too. I had peach cobbler as my birthday cake two years ago. The ones we grow are so good!â
âThank you for the basket of food, by the way, it was very kind.â Very kind bribery, please keep it up, we havenât had this much available food in months, in fact, weâll probably do anything you ask us if you let us stay here!
âThereâs plenty more where the peaches came from. The seasonâs almost over, but we still have bushels left to pick, the hens havenât slowed production yet, and weâre almost out of canning supplies weâve done so many,â Maggie responds.
Beth is opening a big trash bag on her bed that looks like itâs filled with blankets, so Maggie takes the opportunity to lock eyes with you again. She mouths, âThank you.â
For not saying anything? âShe doesnât know we know?â you mouth back.
She shakes her head.
You relax muscles you didnât know you were tensing.
âYay, I got it open without rippin' it!â Beth exclaims. âY/N, Maggie and I had gathered up a bunch of clothes for charity, but thatâs when things got, w-well,â she halts, unsure of how to describe the outbreaks. âThe bad things happened, but, um, we, well, we still had all the donations bagged. Daddy and Shawn alsoâŚâ She quiets at mentioning her deceased older brother and turns weepy.
Her big sister finishes for her. âShawn donated clothes, too. And Mom.â She swallows. âThereâs plenty to share with your group, is what she means.â Maggie nods her head at the bag on the bed, then to two others on the floor.
They're sharing...all of those?
You donât get a chance to ask it because Beth is already answering. âWhen I saw how yâall looked, it was scary. The,â she starts, then stops. âNot that you were scary, I meant yâall mustâve been out there a long time. Itâs scary to think about.â
âIn your defense, I did look scary the first time you saw me.â Wild hair, sweat-drenched, sobbing, and covered in Carlâs and your own blood. Rough day.
But having been âout there,â as Beth worded it, itâs not so scary when youâre with a group you trust. It even feels comforting to have them all. Which is when you consider how Shane and you will be back out there in a couple weeks, alone.
âHere.â Beth shyly points to the bag. âI wanted to offer for you to look through the bags first. If, if you want.â
The offer is (more) bribery to keep you quiet, which cools the warmth of the charity, but doesn't lessen the grateful tears you spill. Plus, yes, you all could use some fresh clothes, thereâs only so much mending that can be done. And to be offered first dibs, even if itâs just to butter you up, is still being offered first dibs. âIâd love to take a look, thank you,â you say in earnest.
Beth combs through the bag and chats in her shy manner, handing you a barely-worn, calf-length dress that had been gift for Maggie, then a (pure wool?!) cardigan their mother had been giving away.
You find it hard to believe that sheâs doing this as bribery, Beth doesnât seem the sort to easily conceal things. Sheâs got an innocence that hits as genuine.
But, then again, you who hate dishonesty are apparently great at it. Whoâs to say sheâs not, too?
The breathlessness briefly comes back. You clear your throat and cough once.
Beth next, to your apprehension and then delight, has you try on the dress and cardigan (which shockingly fit). While retying the modified sling around your upper arm, Maggie keeps trying to catch your eye again in order to, you donât know, communicate something via meaningful glance? But you donât have the bandwidth for it, so return her look with a polite smile and shrug.
Her little sister then proceeds to gussy you up in a way reminiscent of how Amy did once at the quarry camp to see how Glenn would react. Gosh, was that only two-ish months ago, wasnât it? Or has it been longer? It feels like longer.
Beth has manages a quick, respectable braided style for your hair, touches up your eyebrows for you, and even adds blush. She then claims that your hiking boots âlook okayâ with the ensemble and has you use the full length mirror in her closet to inspect the full results.
The dress is lovely, you have to admit. The neckline doesnât dip too low bonus that it doesnât show your bruise, the waist is defined, and itâs long enough past your knees to be comfortable. The length also helps lessen the lingering apprehension you have about showing natural (*cough cough unshaven*) legs.
You actually feelâŚpretty. Been a while.
Itâs as if she knew you were yearning to feel girly again. If this is bribery, you welcome it. Worse ways of being bribed than with fresh food and a makeover from a genuinely sweet kid. And hey, since you have to be onstage so much, might as well dress nicely for the audience.
When youâre walking downstairs to bring your people the donations, Maggie murmurs in your ear, âY/N, I didnât put her up to any of this, it was all her.â
When you pull away from her, she's insistent. âIt wasnât her beinâ nice to keep you quiet. Remember, she doesnât knââ
ââGood morninâ, girls. Whatâs in the bags?â Patriciaâs voice calls from the bottom of the stairwell.
âWe had some clothes to donate since before Easter,â Beth answers. âI figured they could use âem.â
âThey certainly could. Iâm glad I have plenty I brought from my house when we moved in.â You can see Miss Patricia in the hallway by the stairs, clearly wearing one of her late husbandâs shirts over her dress. Her brows lift. âSeems you dolled your friend up some. You clean up nice, sweetpea!â
âThank you, maâam. I-I do feel like a lady again,â you allow, your cheeks again warming.
âNever stopped being one, as far as Iâm concerned. Always kept your Ps and Qs,â sheâs kind enough to maintain. âOh, speaking of ladies, I donât know how yâall are doing on girlsâ supplies, but we should have enough to share while youâre still with us.â
âMargaret and I were gonna look for some more on the next drug store run tomorrow or Monday to make sure youâre well stocked.â Along with everything else on the list(s) that was forgotten when those twoâŚgot distracted.
Ugh, how different things would be if youâd gone along for that trip! None of this barn bullshit!
Again, you feel the need to cough to help you breathe better, so you cough twice and try clearing your throat.
âUh-oh, sounds like cold and flu season is well on itâs way,â she muses. âDonât let me keep you holding them bags all day, girls. Itâll be funny watchinâ your daddy react if one of them ends up dressed in his giveaways,â the woman comments wryly. âNow, I did intend to check on those stitches today, Y/N, so come see me later. Hersh is just finishing up with Darylâs, in fact, then heâll be all set to go, if you were wantinâ to see him out.â
Oh, right! Today is finally the day heâs leaving that room!
Carl, too, but heâs already out and has been wandering around outside as much as his energy and mom will allow (which isnât very much yet).
Daryl, on the other hand, has been too dizzy and too ashamed to do much more than a trip around the perimeter of the house.
Carol and you cleaned his tent yesterday as a surprise. It was her idea, of course. She enlisted your help specifically because you twice mentioned not thinking his sweat smelled bad, which is weird, but, for real, it doesnât smell bad to you. The cigarettes, on the other hand, ew.
âAre we not going today?â Maggie asks quietly about the postponed pharmacy trip.
With tact, you suggest, âWe could all use some rest after stayinâ up so late.â
She peers into your eyes, then nods and adjusts her hold on the two bags in her hands.âThatâs a good idea. Iâm not up to it, either.â
Upon stepping back outside onto the front porch, Jimmy and Glenn are kicking the soccer ball around already. Glenn is keeping his neck taut as he and Jimmy go back and forth, but the pain must have lessened.
The irresistible urge you have to make light of everything seizes you, and you leap into matchmaker mode because, why not? You wonât be here much longer, and maybe Maggie and Glenn linking up will lead to the rest being permitted to stay. Thatâs what matters.
Oh, and, uh, because you love Glenn, and Maggie is kindâŚoh fuck, are you just a calculating, cold strategist?
The feeling that youâre running out of air and going to vomit returns, but you push yourself onstage and commit to the role. You have to keep your shit together.
âAinât he handsome when he plays? Good sportsmanship and confidence rolled into one.â You playfully hold a smile back when you glance at Maggie and giggle to hide your heavy breathing. âAlso the shiny hair.â
âHe does have great hair,â she softly agrees.
âY/N, do you and Glenn like each other? I-I thoughtâŚâ Bethâs face has paled.
Maybe thatâs why you over-act when you exclaim, âOf course I like him, thatâs why Iâm such a great wingwoman for him.â
Margaret blushes. âLetâs get these bags to their camp.â
------------------------------
Him
------------------------------
âI canât hunt?â
âYou can do as you please,â the old man remarks. What, is he making fun of him? âBut doing so while recovering from a concussion would be foolish, as would be heavy lifting or other strenuous activity, and thatâs not considering your collarbone and ribs. Iâm curious as to how youâd wield your weapon or bring back what you hunted, for one, if you would even make it off the property without keeling over.â
Daryl bites his tongue and keeps his words to himself. Well, fine! I can still bring that little girl back. Sheâs got legs, sheâll be able to walk on her own.
Hershel cleans up his stuff and stands. âNow, then, Iâm sure youâre ready to finally see yourself out.â
âDamn straight,â is probably not the smartest response in front of the old man, what with the cuss word, but damn straight he is ready to get the hell out of there. Still, he remembers his manners. âThanks for everythinâ.â He even holds out his hand for a shake. Which is dumb because the guyâs hands are full.
DarylâŚputs his hand back down and grabs the few things he had in there with him. Y/N once described the Dr. Farmer as âunreadable.â Definitely is that.
Unreadable, Hershel drawls, âItâs good youâre on the mend,â and inclines his head toward the door. âAfter you.â
------------------------------
You
------------------------------
Dude, you had a panic attack.
It wasnât too too bad, all things considered. Initially, youâd thought it was a mild asthma attack, but in hindsight, wow you were oblivious to all of the signs.
It started to happen when some of the group was going through the clothes, right after Maggie and you dropped them off and she left to do choring.
Lori was beside you, low-key beside herself trying to figure out how your people could âever repay the family now?â
Next, T-Dog joked about the sizes being too small for him. âAinât sure what here I could fit that wonât result in a show for yâall.â
This is when Andrea murmured to Carol, âReminds me how itâs been awhile.â The way Carol reacted clued you in that it might have been a sex joke. Especially given the way Andy next gave your brother a once-over as if you werenât right there. You vividly recall licking your teeth and rolling your eyes.
Then Shane â and he did this without having seen Andrea do the once-over â nudged T-Dog in the ribs and began to unbutton his own top. âWorse things than a show these days, friend. And that there clean shirt is calling my name.â Naturally, he proceeded to swap garments right where he stood.
Per usual, Lori was more graceful than you. She ignored it as if he were her own brother acting like a frat boy, and merely continued to sift through one of the bags. She smiled upon finding something, tapped Carol on the shoulder, and handed it to her.
Itâs been a week now since Shane's betrayal of her and Rick. Even you are still figuring out how to see him. The hopeful part is that heâs been leaving Lori alone. If his sights have indeed turned to Andrea, all the better.
Back to the moment, you next worried that what if he and Andrea got a little too close, did something foolish, and she ended up pregnant, too.
Not that Loriâs baby is Shaneâs, the baby is Rickâs regardless, but...
The tight feeling returned in your chest.
It was in the midst of this that Dale complimented you. âKiddo, youâre all gussied up! Any occasion?â
âMmhm, all dressed up for the âshow.ââ The nausea was back, plus a fun new notion of being observed, as if everyone and anyone, seen or unseen, was staring you down.
Dale just nodded with raised brows, and you and he shared a look. Instead of tempering your fears, it piqued them. It wasnât his fault, but Mr. Horvathâs expression started to mirror the way he stared into your eyes after catching Shane lose his temper and leave you with a bruise on your sternum.
The fears within you, the stress, the dread, all started roiling stronger and stronger. You cleared your throat, then coughed, but it didnât help. You felt so restless and, oddly, cornered.
And so, not knowing where to look therefore looking in all directions, you happened to spy Glenn staring at the barn. Again.
The air felt tooâŚthin? And then you noticed Lori examining the torso of one of the shirts in the bag as if testing it for stretchiness or room. You could see the shadows clouding her face right before she abruptly put the shirt down.
Then, there was Carol, holding up something that had clearly must have been Bethâs a few years ago, and it looked as if it would fit Sophia perfectly now.
It was just about then that your lungs simply couldnât keep up.
âKiddo?â sounded in your ear.
You may have panted something to do with âpuffer,â referring to your largely unused inhaler. At any rate, instead of next going to the logical location of the RV to find the med bag, you made for the treeline. You didnât want anyone near you, didnât want anybody to see you, didnât want a fuss, didnât want to be touched, didnât want anyone to even think about you, so you had to hide.
Panting, a numbness started to affect your fingers and spread to your torso and toes. You repeatedly coughed in an effort to break up whatever was making it hard to breathe.
Once you started coughing, it dominoed. Your stitches were tugging at the forceful coughs, and soon, you were hacking. The hacking led to retching, one, two, three times. Tears started to fall.
âBaby, here,â came from your right and a warm, delicate hand touched the small of your back. Lori. She pressed the inhaler into your hand. âI shook it up, itâs all ready.â
Bending forward slightly to open your airways, you tried to exhale enough so you could take the dose properly as you clasped the trigger.
One puff. Hold breath in.
Your pulse thudded in your ears.
Another puff. Hold breath in.
The relief that usually comes with the medication wasnât as apparent as it normally would be. It helped somewhat, but.
You tried another dose.
More tears of frustration. You panted to her that you thought your were going to pass out. "F-Feels like m'gonna die," you may have also said.
The phantom sensation of your hand being covered in Amy's blood returned. You recall wiping it with the hem of your dress, and Lori taking your hands, preventing you from continuing to do so.
Lori calmly instructed you to, âTry this with me, honey,â and slowly breathed in through her nose. You copied as best you could.
She then slowly breathed out through her mouth. You copied as best you could.
Over and over she coached you until things started to ease.
You looked around you. Your new sweater was hanging off your elbows. Your pulse was still loudly thumping, but two doses of a corticosteroid will do that. In your escape, youâd made for the big rocks where youâd shared (sort of) a cigarette with Daryl. The stones felt nice and cool, and Loriâs gentle rubbing of her hand across your back was comforting.
âBeen a while since youâve needed the inhaler. âDecorative,â you called it once,â she softly chatted. The sensation of not getting enough air wasnât quite gone just then, but you felt pretty normal again.
âI reckon the cold and the smoke mustâve done me in,â you mumbled. Your throat was mildly sore after all the coughing. âItâs good it was mild.â
âWere you wheezing?â
âNo, IâŚjust couldnât breathe enough or something.â You shrugged. âI donât always wheeze when I need it.â Your nose was stuffy from crying.
She was thoughtful for a moment, and had begun to lightly scratch your back. âYou and Glenn seem off this morning. Iâve seen you two tired before, but today you both seemâŚthereâs something else going on, clearly. Did you two fight?â
âNot exactly.â Itâs true. âWeâre on the same page.â You weren't prepared to have to go onstage again, but just in case, you tried pulling yourself together.
âWas it about Maggie?â
You laughed genuinely. âHa, not at all.â
Lori didnât mirror your laughter or even smile in return. âHoney, I think you had a panic attack.â
That's ridiculous! was your initial reaction, which is why, at first, you protested. âOh, it wasnât that dramatic.â
âIt looked different from where I was. But even still, it didnât have to be or feel âdramaticâ to have been one. You know that.â The nonjudgemental straightforwardness in her voice, in her eyes, was enough to convince you that she could see straight into your heart and read what was there. âY/N, is there something more going on?â
More than anything, at that moment, you didnât want to lie to her.
But what could you do? Tell the truth, yes, 'the truth will out,' you know that. But you were convinced that telling the whole truth, right then, would be like lighting dynamite.
In your view, you would be exposing everyone to chaos and even violence, and you'd all seen too much of that already. And no, you couldnât just tell one person because it never just stays with one person. Lori was/is not in any position to have more fear on her plate.
So what did you do?
You crawled back on that stage and you lied â by telling the truth.
âIâm worried heâll talk.â Vague and a lie of omission, and maybe a little throwing your friend under the bus, but Lord have mercy on you, it was truthful.
Lori squeezed her eyes shut. âMe, too. Oh honey, Iâm so scared!â she whispered, covering her mouth.
So scared of Shane, just like you are. âRick wonât hold any of it against you. We all thought he was dead.â
She shook her head and stared at the ground.âBut you saw how Shane behaved, you, you heard the things he said, Y/N,â she nearly hissed. âI donât know who that man was, but it wasnât Shane, just like when he had mââ then Lori cut off.
âWhen he had what?â
She shook her head again. âSeems Daleâs on his way over. He told me about what was going on so I could bring your medicine to you. He hadn't known what 'puffer' meant." A look of pure guilt. "And âoh, Y/N, Iâm so sorry that youâre worrying yourself like this over my mistakes! It's not fair to you.â
âYour kid ainât a mistake, itâs so good that theyâre here,â you replied in total honesty. First time all day.
Maybe sheâll be honest with you and spill whatever Shane did that sheâs not being upfront about. Whatever it is could surely have been described in a sentence. âWhat else did Shane do, Lore?â It canât have been that bad, or could it?
All she did was shake her head once more. âLike you said, he hasnât been himself.
âHasnât been himself.â Fine. Youâve got secrets, too, so thereâs no way on earth that you can cast stones.
You stepped back onstage for hopefully the final time, and made yourself deliver the next lines. âThatâs why weâre goinâ to Fort Benning.â Without you all. âJust him and me. Within two weeks, I hope?â The nausea still hadnât gone away, and simply saying this brought it back.
Her brows sunk caution. âWhen was this decision made? I-I thoughtââ
ââI ainât told him about it yet.â The bitter smile, you hadnât been able to stifle. âShouldnât be hard to convince him, considering he was fixing to not so long ago.â
Loriâs apologetic tone wasnât a put-on. âIâm so sorry he didnât tell you. I had no idea you were left in the dark.â
Thatâs when some tightness came back to your chest, and your breathing turned faster again. âI know, Lore.â
She noticed. âHoney, hey,â she soothed, âbreathe slowly, deeply." Her hand cupped your cheek. "His mistakes, his choices, his reactions are not your responsibility.â
âI know, b-butââ
ââAnd you donât have to leave with him if you don't want to.â
âBut whââ
ââNo buts.â Lori cupped your cheek, stood, and swiftly made toward Dale.
And here is where you hadnât known she was going to be quite so straightforward with him.
In fact, youâd hoped sheâd join you onstage and lie, too, but she behaved beyond reproach. âIt was a panic attack, so please make sure to respect her privacy about it. Iâve got to check on the laundry.â
------------------------------
Him
------------------------------
Funny thing, heâs wearing the same clothes he had his accident in. Heâs in the same stuff leaving that he had been when he got carried in there, except now theyâre cleaned and mended.
Itâs been good to be back outside, he prefers it. He canât wrap his head around why some people can keep inside in front of a screen all day. You donât get to hear or feel the wind indoors, canât hear the birds and all that.
Now, he couldnât say for sure, but stepping outside and knowing he didnât have to go back in must feel at least half as good as getting freed from prison.
If prison was a nice-ass farmhouse without the risk of getting shanked or worse, obviously.
Merle would have some words if he heard Daryl say something like that out loud. Though, Merle was pretty settled when he was in lock-up. Fared fine.
His first view when he steps out into freedom is Glenn and the teenage boy kicking the ball around. Those two are straight into it and pay him no mind as he walks around them.
The rest of the group is around the picnic table, looks like theyâre sorting laundry (?), therefore ainât paying him no mind, either.
Phew.
This is good. He was wondering if Y/N was gonna parade him out or make it a big deal, but after hearing her and the other ladies talking in the hallway, she didnât come back in. Works for him, he doesnât like a crowd.
âŚBut, like, where is she? He figured sheâd be around, is all, but she ainât by the table.
Ah, yeah, duh â she's probably still doing something with the girl that's about her age and her little sister. Still seems off Y/N and Glenn are only âfive or six years youngerâ than him, but thatâs what Y/N has said a few times.
The next thing he sees is Lori, who is swooping down the yard and toward the big rocks where he and T-Dog took a smoke break once. And where Y/N had her first try of a cigarette, too. Lori looks like a woman on a mission, damn. Dale is staring in the direction Lori is walking, those big-ass brows of his slanted downward. Wonder what that's about?
Over the sound of a few leftover end-of-season cicadas, he hears the normal drone of crickets, light talking from the group, the thunk of the ball getting kicked, a very loud crow, some cows mooing, somebody coughing, birds doing their thing, chickens clucking, the wind blowing. Mmm, good stuff. Being inside and hearing it just donât sound as good as being right out in it.
Then, âDaryl!â comes from his left, and he sees Carol walking to him. Sheâs a good woman.
And now the memory of her kissing him on the cheek is making his cheeks heat up as quick as she steps toward him.
âIâll carry those for you,â she quietly insists about his small pile of clothes. He lets her.
Sheâs been very, um, attentive. Been having most of her meals with him, babying him as much as heâd allow, and all-in-all has been treating him extra after he had his accident.
There are more coughing sounds that he almost pegs as being Y/Nâs, but when he looks back in the direction of the noise, thereâs no one, just Lori off on her walk, and she wasn't coughing.
âWe moved your tent closer to the rest of us, so you would be closer to where we could help you.â
Closer. Great.
Daryl wanted nothing less, but a kind gesture is a kind gesture, so he mans up and acts proper, grunting, âThank you.â Itâs not like they went and messed with his stuff, they just moved the tent, and for a real kind reason.
Glenn rears and kicks, sending the ball soaring. Damn, he's good.
âNow, it may smell and look a little different, but all of your things are still there.â
âHuh?â Whatâd she mean?
âYou deserved a nice, clean place to go back to,â Carol explains. âY/N and I tidied your tent.â
âŚ
...
âŚthey what?
He gets the weirdest image of himself as being onstage and forgetting whatever it was he was supposed to say next, leaving him standing there like a mouthbreather in front of the audience. And he kinda wants to cuss the audience out.
His first idea after learning Carol and Y/N was: What the hell, yâall been messing with my stuff?? What gives y'all the right?
But, come on, even he had it in him to keep his mouth shut. Theyâd taken the time and effort to clean up his shit and it was probably as nice as when Carol had worked her magic in the RV. That's damned decent, in fact.
So, Daryl does not act like a jackass, and instead, remembers his lines and thanks Carol again.
âIt was no trouble. How about I bring you some more breakfast once youâre settled in?â she quickly offers. See? Very attentive. And he didnât do shit to have earned it, which made it more uncomfortable.
Aw shit, his cheeks feel all warm again. First around Y/N, now Carol? Maybe there is something to this whole concussion bullshit.
Or, maybe Carol done kissed you on the cheek and said you were a good man and that you did right by her little girl as much as a father should and thatâs the best possible thing somebody could be told.
âDo you want some more coffee, too?â
I wanna to be left alone, lady. âNah, mâgreat. Thank you.â
------------------------------
You
------------------------------
âLast night seemed to be an indication summer was officially over. But today,â Dale blows through his lips, âWell, we can already tell itâll be a warm one.â
âDid we hit the first day of fall, yet? I forgot what date it is today.â
âNo, thatâs on the 21st. Weâve got some time.â
âOh, wait!â you squeak (ouch, your throat is still sore from coughing). âAinât it the Holy Days for you still?â Rosh Hoshanah was sometime last week, but that one got sort of messed up because of everything thatâs been going on.
Oh man, it was the day after Daryl got into his accident, wasnât it?
Daleâs cordial expression falters. âYes, it was last week.â
âYom Kippur is soon then, right?â
âItâs on the 18th this year, yes. Two days away.â
Thereâs this very insistent raven thatâs been cawing away. Or is that a crow? You canât tell the difference. You can tell that youâve bummed Dale out, however. âIâve bummed you out.â
Smiling sadly, he concedes, âJewish holidays are usually lonely ones in mixed company. And now, especially with it being the holiest time of the year, after everythingâŚâ He lifts his shoulders.
âIâll do the fasting with you so you wonât be alone!â Ow, stop raising your voice so high. âIs it no food or drink at all on that day, or is water okay?â
A happier smile. âNo food or drink â barring serious health concerns, of course, in which case, one is required to not fast.â
âNo water must suck! When my lot do fasting, water donât count.â
He nods his head once. âItâs all part of the atonement. Itâs considered a blessing for us to fast for it.â
âAnd the feast after it is fun,â you sigh with a grin. Youâll enlist Carol and Lori to see about making him a yummy fast-breaking meal for the day.
This is what you needed. Dale didnât press you regarding the panic attack, and has simply been keeping you company by the big rocks. Youâve havenât had to go back onstage while heâs been sitting with you. Youâd probably be content to stay here a good, long time if you didnât have to use the toilet something major.
âDid you see if there was a pair of suspenders in the bags so you and Mr. Greene can match?â
âIs this your way of saying youâre feeling well enough to head back, or that you need privacy?â
âItâs my way of sayinâ I gotta go potty real bad.â You stand. âSuspenders are pretty cool, you can party like itâs 1899.â
âI actually quite like how suspenders look,â he chuckles, stretching and getting to his feet.
âMm, they remind me of the Old West, I love âem.â
Dale and you walk back until reaching the side of the farmhouse, whereupon you excuse yourself to head to the treeline and do your business.
------------------------------
Him
------------------------------
As soon as the heat starts to sink in, he unbuttons his shirt halfway and kicks his shoes off. Getting the socks off without hurting himself takes some effort, but itâs worth it. His stuff is so squeaky clean and fresh, he wants to avoid sweating the place up too quick.
His old pillowcase is gone, probably scrapped for dishrags seeing as it was pretty worn. In its place is a flower-covered one with soft, thick cotton fabric. There's some phrase about a 'woman's touch' that must apply here. Or, if Merle were here, prime Darylina ammo. Joke's on him, the pillowcase is soft as hell.
And being in there might seem boring, but it's 10 times better than being stuck in a damn bed and listening to music for days on end. Just cloud-watching through his tent window is fun enough for him.
In fact, itâs rad! Heâs so psyched to not be in that room anymore!
Cloud watching, playing with his bolts, farting if he's gotta; he's content as can be. Seriously, heâs in such a good mood right now.
But as luck would have it, by the time heâs decided to see how easily a bolt can poke a hole through the mesh window (the answer is very easily, and itâs real satisfying) none other than Andrea herself appears at his tent door. The chick who shot him.
Now, sheâs pretty as a picture and then some, but he doesnât want his belly showing in front of her. If heâd been paying attention and heard her making her way to him, he wouldâve buttoned up.
So, he tries out the same tactic as last night, when Carol walked in on him shirtless; maybe by not closing his shirt, she wouldnât think about it? OrâŚfuck it, just about everybody has seen some part of him uncovered in the past week. At least there ainât no scars on this side.
All heâs got to do is make like heâs onstage and that it doesnât bother him having his literal nipples on display.
âHey.â Andrea steps into his tent, looking like she is about to eat crow.
She hands him a book. He accepts the maybe peace-offering.
âItâs not that great, butâŚâ she trails off, breathes out, and looks as shamefaced as can be.
Y/N, Carol, and T-Dog all mentioned sheâs been kicking her own ass for shooting him. Granted, heâs still a little pissed, and, yeah, real thankful that sheâs a shit shot, but â she was trying to protect the group, right? Ainât even her fault he got stuck in that damn bed. The concussion, split side, and broken ribs did that for him.
He figures heâs gotta make it clear that sheâs off the hook without making her feel worse for being let off the hook. And, he thinks he knows just the way to break the tension. Itâd got the librarian at his high school to laugh the first time he made the remark, which is probably why he was usually allowed to eat in there during lunch if he asked.
Now, he knows reading is still on the no-go list, donât worry, Y/N, but he casually holds the book up and flips through the pages.
Heâs gotta, itâs the setup.
Itâs good that Andrea ainât said nothing yet, because itâs the perfect opportunity for him to pretend to be dead-serious when he complains, âWhat, no pictures?â
The joke does the trick. Andrea smiles and relaxes.
âIâm so sorry. I feel like shit,â she starts to go on, but he puts a stop to it.
Tucking the book aside as he settles down onto the pillow, he cuts in, âYou and me both.â
âI donât expect you to forgive me, but, if thereâs anything I can do, Iââ
He cuts in one more time, ââYou were trying to protect the group. Weâre good.â He means it.
But, ya know, just because things are chill doesnât mean he canât bust her balls a little, right? âBut hey,â he stops her as sheâs leaving. âShoot me again, you best pray Iâm dead.â
------------------------------
You
------------------------------
âIt went great! Better than I ever expected.â Andrea takes a seat beside you on the log. Judging by the look of serenity on her face, it appears that the monkey sheâs had on her back for the past week is finally gone.
âGood, mâglad.â You knew it would be fine, but Andrea was so nervous.
âAnd I have to say, I can see the appeal now.â
âWhat appeal?â
âDaryl was,â she thinks on the right word and picks: âCharming.â
Ah. You see what sheâs trying to do. âWell, go tell him that, then,â you suggest, cool as a cucumber. She and Dale thought you and he had a romantic thing going on. Lol, nah.
âAnd he was funny!â she goes on.
You sip your tea. âMm, he can be.â
âNot angry, or, or nasty.â She closes her eyes and breathes out a sigh of relief. âI was so worried about how it was going be.â
You tilt your head in partial agreement. He can be a dick.
Your job for the rest of the day, so Papa Dale done told you, is to be chill (yes, he used the word âchillâ and it was adorable). Itâs your only responsibility today, seeing as he joined you when you went to check the highway spot for Sophia. She hasnât found it, itâs untouched. Again.
So now, your job = keep chill.
âAre you helping with target practice later?â
Oh, right, and thereâs that. You suppose you could continue helping Beth with drawing her weapon smoothly, keep drilling her never, ever forget to switch the safety back and forth.
ButâŚokay: maybe today, that isnât your job. Maybe you need a rest from being onstage. âI think Iâm gonna sit today out.â
âIs everything okay?â
âI just need a day,â you answer in too high a pitch.
Andy doesnât inquire further. âHowâs the little fuzzball?â she instead asks.
âStill sleeping,â you coo. The sluggish little chick youâd scooped up while quickly sprinkling feed-corn in order to feel useful is your insurance for keeping chill. Canât not keep chill with a chick asleep in your lap.
âIt must feel nice and safe wrapped up like that.â
âMm.â The chick is nestled in a dishtowel, half its body also covered by your new cardigan.
âY/N, have you not gone to visit him yet?â
âNot yet. Heâd appreciate some time to himself, I reckon, after a week beinâ stuck in there and visitors and checkups at all hours.â
Glennâs off doing farm chores with Jimmy, so heâs being kept busy and wonât be a concern. As for you, youâve got your sleepy chick and are content to stay here on the log. You ate lunch, yet another peach (youâre up to six), just finished the leftover raspberries, and are now washing it all down with some fresh mint tea you made in honor of one of your best friends. Sheâd make her own mint tea and would call it âwild mintâ tea because it sounded exotic.
When Dale mentioned todayâs date, you remembered it was her birthday. She was the most confident girl youâd ever met, and a sweetheart to boot. You really hope sheâs alive.
Andrea chuckles to herself. âI gave him that terrible book to keep him occupied.â
Book?? To Daryl? But the concussion! âA book?â
âI brought him The Case of the Missing Man,â she shares with a grin. âHe can join the survivorâs club of those whoâve read it â Y/N, is something wrong?â
âOh, um, nah, itâs all good, uh,â you are fumbling so hard right now. Cool, youâre feeling lightheaded again, cool cool.
Itâs all cool. Thereâs no fire. Stay chill. âIâm gonna pop over and make sure he ainât cracked into it yet, heâs, itâs, itâs not safe yet. C-Concussion and all.â Listen to you, smooth like butter.
âOh shit.â
âAndy, donât sweat. Even if he did start on it, like,â and you pause, because, âI donât actually know what can go wrong, I didnât ask Miss Patricia, but Iâm sure it ainât nothing serious!â You cup the (awoken and now loudly peeping) chick between your hands as you book it (pun intended?) to Darylâs tent.
------------------------------
Him
------------------------------
For Y/N to glide over wearing a pretty dress, hair all fancy, and holding some little bird was not something he put on his bingo sheet.
âHiya, Daryl.â
It takes him a second. âHey.â He ain't never seen her in a dress.
And with that little bird, he gets the image in his head of her bursting into song and the farm animals and forest critters doing a musical number with her.
Heâll *ahem* keep that to himself...
âI hope youâre enjoyinâ your new freedom! Miââ
ââWhoâs the little guy?â he had to ask first.
âIt's a chick.â
Clearly. âWhy?â
âItâs cute.â
She ainât wrong. ââŚCan I see?â
âYeah, it's adorable!â
He begins to get up, but she steps over faster than he can stand. She kneels beside his cot and, delicately, transfers the wrapped chick into his hands. Carefully, he unwraps the washcloth around it and slips his hand underneath it so sits on his palm with its teeny legs dangling through his fingers. Itâs peeping like itâs getting paid for it, holy shit itâs so fucking cute.
âI came here wonderinâ if I might I borrow the, uh, the book Andrea just lent you?â
Ha, called it! The second Y/N found out he had contraband, she came to the rescue.
The chick quiets down, appearing to relax in his hand. His hand must be good and warm for it.
Maybe itâs because heâs in a good mood, but he smiles like a dipshit for a few moments before saying anything. âNah, I wouldnât dream of checking it out âtil you said it was fine.â
âOh ha-ha,â she play-mocks, assuming he wasnât being serious.
Eh, okay, maybe he was sorta razzing her, too. But he wants to come out on the other side of this whole concussion bullshit on the up, and if reading is still off-limits, itâs still off limits. Heâs not gonna full-on disregard somebody who gives a shit.
âHowâd ya end up dressed like that?â is his second question while he pets the chick lightly along its head using the feathers on his bolt.
âI wear this, like, all the time.â
âOh right, yeah, you do,â he sarcastically responds. He tries to reach with his left arm to pick up the book under his cot, but gets a sharp twinge and surrenders that he canât do that move yet.
Y/N snorts at the sarcasm and tells him straight, âThe Greenes had some giveaways, so Beth gave me this outfit. Oh, thank you,â she says when he instead points in the direction of the book. She picks it up and hugs it to herself. âI do believe Carol put a few things aside for you to try on, too.â
ââKay.â
Y/N looks pretty.
Itâs nothing new, obviously her face is nice, but it's the whole blushing thing that keeps happening to Daryl's face that's annoying. Seems he's started blushing like a belle over all the damn women in camp these days. That really was some smack to the head he got.
Heâs imagining himself as being back onstage again, forgetting his lines. He can make something up on the spot: âHow you gonna search in that?â
âAinât like my ankles are tied together. Women have always been able to move, play, do manual labor of all sorts in dresses, corsets, stays, stockinâs, you name it,â she serves back with just enough fire that his belly did one of those good flippy-floppys. âThat reminds me, Nervous Nelly came back! Did any of us tell you? Sheâs fine as can be, I fed her half a peach yesterday!â
Some of them baby hairs around her face are coming out of the braids. Her skin's got a sheen to it. And did she put pink stuff on her cheeks or something? Or is that because she was moving around a lot and itâs gotten warm out? Because her lips donât look like thereâs nothing on them but theyâre nice and â
ââDare, you okay?â
âYeah. Tired.â
âYou must be.â Why is she frowning? âYou looked like youâd just got hypnotized or â you sure you feel normal?â
âMâfine, I just spaced out.â
Sheâs gonna have him do a thing, isnât she? âFollow my finger for a little, please?â Ah-ha, see?
Pointer finger extended, he goes along with it for the 10 or so seconds it takes for the slight crease between her eyebrows to relax.
âPlease stick out your tongue for me?â is her next request and, uh, why?
Well, he goes ahead and does it for her anyway. The hook âem horns he makes at the same time are a sure sign heâs in a good-ass mood.
Y/N lets herself smile, then elaborates: âIf it came out tilted, itâs a sign of stroke.â
Stroke? Thatâs a little much.âCâmon, youâre worried I had a stroke?â
She nods once. Her chest expands big as if she were inhaling really deep. âA smoker, extended bed rest, head trauma,â she quietly counts.
Is he hearing things, or does her breathing sound a little too fast?
âCan you point your toes three times?â
He point his toes three times, and yes, her breathing is a little too fast.
âNow please lift both arms parallel to the bed.â
He lifts both arms. The baby chicken is sleeping now and doesnât wake with the motion.
âOkay,â Y/N whispers to herself.
âTell me youâre not stressing out about nothinâ.â
She blinks a few times and deadpans, âI would never.â
âHere,â he holds the chick near her face. âGet zen like this pipsqueak.â
âBut you ainât ânothingâ and you are at an elevated stroke risk.â
Heâs only got the one word for her: âZen.â The hovering motion he made with the chick was a fun touch, the little thing didnât even mind.
Her expression suggests sheâs trying to not smile, and, in a move he doesnât anticipate, she leans forward to rub her nose on its beak. Her lips brush against his fingertips when she does, and his train of thought derails.
Next thing, her hands are overlapping his as she gently takes the chick back and re-wraps it in the washcloth. ââLil buddy youâre fine, youâre fine,â she coos. âIâll grab you the hand sanitizer and leave you to some peace, alright man?â she addresses to Daryl, who's still a little distracted, so a grunt and a chin tilt is how he acknowledges this.
Merle would be laughing his ass off right now, goddamn. âSweet lil virgin Darylinaâ sounds about what heâd be cackling about.
Y/N flips open the cap with her thumb and squirts the hand stuff onto his palm. Smells like lemons.
So, he didnât have that stuff before, meaning sheâd likely been the one to put it in there when sheâd cleaned his tent with Carol. âHey, um, thanks for the surprise.â Damn, heâs awkward. Smells way better in here.â
âCarol is so wanting to help you in any way she can. I was in it just to see you end up with that pretty floral pillowcase. I had to stop her from hangin' the matching curtains,â she snickers, then waves him goodbye and, boom, leaves.
SoâŚhow long until his heartbeat and head stop racing?
------------------------------
You
------------------------------
Yet another stage performance today. You had to act like you werenât distracted by how boyishly charming Daryl looked lounging there with his shirt unbuttoned to his hecking waist, good Moses. But like, the way he snuggled the chick, and how your legit lips bumped into his fingers?? It was an accident! Ohh, but how he'd noticed your panicking so was all soothing and stuff...
Dude, and you were trying to sit like a dainty lady the whole time, too, what a poser.
Still, you think you were convincing in your latest stage performance. Oscar-worthy. Golden Globe. Emmy. Tony. Somebody hook you up with your EGOT.
Oh, and that little jab at his new pillowcase, aw yes, that was top tier friendzoning!
Or â oh, it wasnât interpreted as flirting, right? No way did you intend that! And, hold up, there's no way he'd even care. It's Daryl.
Eh, you've earned a B- so far at being chill. You've got to get that grade up.
So, you are going to go pick fruit, alone, and youâre going to stuff your face because the show is over, youâre off stage for the rest of the day!
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OKAY IF CARL AND T-DOG DIE LIKE THIS IâLL FUCKING RIOT.
Daryl Dixon in Every Episode - Beside the Dying Fire (S02E013)
Why does this Season look like it's been filmed on a damn microwaveđ
The Walking Dead






