I feel like we're gonna get flashbacks to wallys death, him on the field looking scared might be when he realizes he's dead and him getting sprawled out on the field might be him getting sent back to where he died after trying to leave school grounds. I'm so excited.
the very MINUSCULE shots of Milo Manheim as Wally Clark in School Spirits Season 2 Teaser
this has probably been done before but this idea has been stuck in my head for a while
Currently writing a school spirits fic that's very personal to me. Don't know when its gonna be out but I'm really excited about it.
Girls be like:
"I'm in love"
Then it's literally just words on paper
(same girly)
I just saw absolute cheeks LAWWWWWD đ© seeing Milo Manheims bare ass was not on my 2025 bingo card but I ain't complaining.
wc: 2.3k
cw: live!reader who can see wally, fun little meet cute that freaks wally out, tw for two sentence mention of harry potter, set in 2023 but nothing with maddie happens, and as always i am writing with a plus size!reader in mind, but this one is gender neutral!reader as well so far
a/n at the end!
pt. 1 - pt. 2 - pt. 3 - pt. 4
masterlist
He was never supposed to find out that you can see him.Â
You could see all of them - the beatnik with the sour expression plastered on her face, the sweetheart in the jean jacket, even the blonde dude whoâs always at the pottery wheel during your second period ceramics class.
Youâd spent the last four years perfecting walking right past them, not looking up, not laughing at the jockâs jokes when youâre seated near them in the library.
Your âgiftsâ are too confusing to explain, and even if you attempted to confide in someone about them, you know it would be too hard to believe.
It freaked your parents out when you were little - your comments about how Grandma talked to you long after her passing, how you waved to people on the street that nobody else could see. They never took you to be tested -Â worried too much that youâd get taken away or put in psychiatric holding.Â
So if you came home looking tired and drained, or sometimes, a little scared, your parents understood.Â
When you started high school, you hadnât expected there to be so many dead people. It was so weird, seeing people your age walking around stuck in the clothes representative of their times.Â
Youâd told your mom about the kids as you distinguished them from the living ones -Â sadness in her eyes growing when youâd mentioned the lanky one in 80s athletic gear. Sheâd gotten her own Split River yearbook from the shelf, flipped to the memorial page and pointed at Wally.Â
âIs that who youâre talking about?âÂ
Youâd nodded, confirming her suspicions. Sheâd been in his graduating class, though not in his social circles. Heâd been your stereotypical jock when he was alive, for all the pros and cons of it. King of the ragers thrown after games, not always a bully, but often a bystander. Gone too soon, but quickly forgotten in the grand scheme of things.Â
For your safety, youâd agreed that you wouldnât ever speak to any of the ghosts. Your mom had clocked the dreamy glaze in your eyes while looking at Wallyâs picture, and while she couldnât stop you from talking to him, sheâd told you what you already knew. It wasnât smart, and it wouldnât end well.Â
In your mind, letting any of them know that you could see them would be more cruel than just letting them go about their usual business. Even if you made contact, spoke to them - hung out with them - you were leaving after graduation, and theyâd be alone again, without any contact with the living world. It seemed unfair; pointless.Â
Itâs not Wallyâs fault heâs so fucking pretty.Â
He moves about the school the same way you do - not looking at or paying attention to the people around him - because he has no reason to believe he can be seen. Itâs worked out entirely in your favor thus far, because you can stare at Wally Clark for small periods of time without him noticing. On the occasion that he turns his head in your direction, a shift of your eyes to the right or left has him believing youâre just staring off into space.Â
Heâs so nice to look at. His slightly curled waves of black hair, gold chain gleaming under fluorescent lighting. Thereâs depth to him, too. When heâs around his friends, heâs energetic - bouncy, cracking jokes and patting people on the back too hard. When heâs alone, though, he seems calmer. More reserved.Â
You get bolder with it, the staring, lulled into a sense of safety because youâre just another face in the ever-rotating crowd of high schoolers that pass through Split River. Heâd seen forty generations of kids move on at this point, stuck as a fresh 18 year old with dreams and aspirations heâll never be able to achieve.Â
It must suck, having to stay behind and watch as other seniors get a chance to do what he never did. You wish you could comfort him, maybe even help him find a way to move on. Itâs harder for the people who die traumatically.Â
So much unfinished business and pent up emotions make it difficult to find the peace needed to pass onto the next plane. Itâs easy to tell -thereâs always a certain aura around the sad ones. Like the air around them is heavier, darker.Â
Youâre not complaining, though, as fucked as that may sound. Especially not when youâre lounging under a tree near the football field, not so subtly watching as a shirtless Wally picks up replicated footballs and throws them aimlessly in different directions. If you hadnât been daydreaming about being able to talk to him, you wouldâve noticed the ball soaring towards you.Â
You look up, just in time for the phantom ball to hit the ground next to you, bouncing to land at your feet. Absent-mindedly - and almost jokingly - you kick it away from you, suddenly aware the ball was solid against your foot. In the time it takes you to realize you just interacted with a phantom football, it's faded away into the ground, and its sender is staring at you wide-eyed.Â
Thereâs a beat of stillness, soundtracked by the cicadas and other teens on the field before you begin to move.Â
You scramble to throw your shit into your bag, and speed walk back inside.Â
âHoly shit? Wait! Hey, wait!âÂ
He follows you, because of course he does, and you try your best to ignore the panic and guilt rising in your throat. You just keep walking, hoping that heâll give up. He doesnât.Â
âCan you slow down please? I know you can see me!âÂ
Wally catches up to you, jogging a few paces ahead to try to cut you off. Youâve never been this close to him - you have no idea if heâll pass through you the way youâve seen the other ghosts pass through living people before or if you'll make contact like you did moments ago with the ball he had thrown.Â
It blows your cover even more than kicking the ball away, but when Wally goes to stand in front of you, you attempt to veer out of his path. And then he grabs you. Or, he tries to, anyway. Heâs not fully solid, not enough to place a firm hold on you, but enough for you to genuinely feel it.Â
His hand does go through you, but thereâs resistance to it. It makes you shiver, the ice cold sensation of his palm trying to hold your shoulder but not being able to fully grip it.Â
âWhat the fuck?â He looks down at his hands, then back towards you.Â
Heâs caught off guard enough for you to truly get away this time. Rest of the school day be damned, you make a break for it and throw yourself into your car.Â
The stale air does nothing to help your nerves, your shaking hand turning the ignition to blast AC at yourself. You lean forward, resting your head on the steering wheel and try to breathe through it. This is bad. Like, really fucking bad.Â
You donât know much about him, but you seriously doubt that this is the kind of thing heâd just let go.Â
Youâre in it now, for better or for worse.Â
You canât tell your mom. Itâs selfish, and misguided, and you hadnât even said anything to him, but it was something. It was yours, and you donât want to share. It makes the guilt worse, and your drive home is spent in dissociated silence.Â
When you get home, your mom is in the kitchen, bouncing around to 80s music and chopping onions. The slam of the front door alerts her to your presence, and she pauses her music, concern etched in her features.Â
âHey, sweetheart. Everything okay? Youâre home early.âÂ
You donât want to lie.Â
âYeah, Iâm alright. Just got a headache, thatâs all. Thought I should come home and take a nap.âÂ
-
Spending a few days at home would probably be for the best - it would give you time to come up with some sort of plan on what to say to Wally. You have no idea what the best course of action is. He knows you can see him now. You canât take that back and make him forget it, and you donât even know if youâd want to.Â
Instead, you barrel into school the next day, head down and earphones blasting music. Your eyes donât leave the linoleum floor except to put your bag in your locker. The grumble of frustration and annoyance that leaves your body when three Tears for Fears songs play in succession draws the attention of other students in the hallway, but you pay them no mind.Â
You donât even make it to third period before you see him.Â
Sitting in the corner of ceramics class, shaky hands denting an already uneven vase, the slam of the classroom door makes you jump - effectively destroying the soft clay cradled in your palms.Â
âThere you are! Dude, I've been looking all over for you.â He sidles up to you, plops down in the seat directly to your right, the heat of his gaze burning into the side of your face and making your cheeks hot. You sigh, squishing the clay down and shaking your head.Â
âThatâs fine, you donât have to talk. I can talk for both of us. I can just talk, and talk, and talk, and-âÂ
Your hand shoots into the air, a frantic âCan I use the restroom please?â leaving your throat.Â
Itâs your worst nightmare and a dream come true, being alone with Wally. He walks next to you in the hallway, and when you pass the bathroom he pauses.Â
âYouâre not going in? I thought you needed to go.â Heâs teasing, you know he is, but you still huff at him.Â
You keep your pace, calling out behind you, âNo, Wally, I donât need to use the bathroom.âÂ
You donât turn around to see it, but you can hear the slightly shocked giggle that leaves him.Â
âOh, câmon, really?âÂ
He catches up to you, and when you crane your head to the side to make eye contact, he sucks in a little breath. Itâs the first time youâve actually looked into his eyes. It throws you off kilter a bit, and you feel the need to make up the difference with a quip.Â
âWhat, youâre Moaning Myrtle now? You feel like talking and hanging around in public restrooms?âÂ
The laugh that leaves him surprises you, Your eyebrows raise, not expecting him to understand the reference.Â
âMs. Williams plays the movies during finals week like every year,â he shrugs, âIâm dead, not blind.âÂ
Youâd taken your things with you - skipping the rest of your class to spend time with him, to answer the questions you know he wants to ask. You go back to the football field, under the same tree youâd been under when you kicked the football away from you.Â
Heâs waiting for you to speak, to help him understand whatâs going on, but the words are caught in your throat, cheeks hot and skin itchy. Your hands fidget, picking dried clay from under your fingernails and flicking it onto the grass nearby.Â
You look at him, trying to decide where to start.Â
âIâm not really supposed to talk to you.â
âWhy not?â He laughs then, shakes his head a little. âItâs because Iâm dead, right? Do you have a problem with dead people?â
âNo, I-â You start on the defensive, but soften when you see Wallyâs smirk. Heâs a little shit, you should've known. You roll your eyes, âYouâre not supposed to know I can see you for your own sake. What good would it do? Hanging out with me for the next three months until I graduate and you can never see me again? Itâs unfair.â
He looks away from you for a second, sly smile wiped off of his face, replaced with a sadness you hadnât seen from him before. You reach out, trying to make contact, and your hand just meets the air. When heâd tried to grab you yesterday, he was slightly more solid than he is now. You donât know why.Â
âYeah it is unfair,â He turns to face you again, brown eyes glassy and tear rimmed, âbut you can see me, and thatâs the most exciting thing thatâs happened to me since Iâve been here.âÂ
Something in your chest stirs, and you know thereâs no universe in which you wouldâve been able to stay away from him. Youâre worlds apart, or planes apart, but it doesn't seem to matter as much as you used to think it did.Â
âI think itâs the most exciting thing thatâs ever happened to me, too.âÂ
You spend the rest of the school day - without being caught, thankfully - in deep conversation. The shrill ring of the bell signaling the end of the day cuts you off in the middle of a sentence, and you stand from your place on the grass, dusting yourself off and gathering your things.Â
The silence between you is comfortable now, as he walks you to your car. He canât step off the curb - heâd explained the boundaries of the school to you, that heâd be thrown back to the field if tried to leave. You hover together, not wanting to part.Â
âIâll see you tomorrow? We can hang out more, I have study hall during 5th period.â You tuck a stray hair behind your ear, and he follows the movement with his eyes.Â
âYeah, see you tomorrow.âÂ
You blast your 80s playlist on the way home, while youâre in the shower, while youâre doing homework.Â
Wally Clark is gonna be the death of you. Â
a/n: hiii i feel like this part was a little lackluster but !!!! i have a whole plan for what i want to do with this fic and i'm really excited about it. it should be four parts, but that's subject to change as i keep writing.
if you liked this and want to read more of my little stories, my masterlist is linked at the top! if you have ideas or just want to chat, my inbox is always open!
pls don't forget to like and reblog! love you mwah
Rafah? As in the "Evacuate here, it's a safe spot while we bomb the rest of Palestine" Rafah? The Rafah that most of the remaining Palestinians have been forcibly packed into as a supposed safe zone? That Rafah?
How people can still deny a genocide is beyond me
Sex, Drugs, Etc.
pt.2
Warnings: Talk of drugs/Drug use. Possible smut in the future. SH. A lot of plot. EXTREME Canon divergence. Before Maddies time. Set in 2022. Almost panic attack. This is NOT meant to romanticize addiction or mental illness.
2.4k words
Enjoy :)
Pt.1
-
It was like any other Friday night. A crowded living room filled with loud teenagers, music so loud your brain went numb, the strong scent of booze and grass filling the air, kids pissing on the carpet and throwing up in the backyard, the perfect party⊠well almost perfect. There was something missing, something no amount of alcohol or smelly plants could fill.Â
Your head was spinning, not from the shots of vodka some girl you just met brought you, but from the people. Parties were supposed to be fun, a chance to drink and dance but the overwhelming crowd left you short of breath. No one forced you to show up, hell you weren't even invited, but youâd take any chance to get out of the house.Â
âHey Iâll be right backâ You say to the random blond girl, not giving her enough time to respond before you walk away. Weaving through the drunk teens to get to the back door, you frantically fiddle with the handle, air becoming something almost non-existent. Swinging the door open you step outside, taking deep breaths of air. To anyone walking by it just looked like you were calming yourself down from a bad trip.
âHey you alright?â The sound of a familiar voice fills your ears. âYou look like you've seen a ghostâ (I'm so funny) It was Josh, youâd buy weed from him sometimes, though you haven't really talked outside of small talk to make your interactions feel less illegal. Â
âUm yeah. I'm great.â Your breath was still ragged, words coming out rushed despite how hard you tried to make them sound casual.Â
âCome on, sit downâ He grabs you by the shoulder gently, leading you to a coach that had been pulled out into the backyard. A chick with black hair sitting on the far end of it and a dude passed out on the ground in front of it. You sit down awkwardly, Josh comes over and sits between you and the girl, holding two beers and hands you one.Â
"Thanks" You take the beer, your original plan of getting some air and going home ruined.Â
"You're a little young to be here, aren't you?" This is the first time anyone has questioned you on your age. Normally they'd give you a weird look but leave you alone.Â
"I'm old enough for you to sell me bud." He let out a little laugh, 14 was probably too young to be drinking and partying but who's gonna stop you?Â
"Got me there" He takes a sip out of the glass bottle. "You don't look like you're having fun."Â
âNot reallyâ The only fun thing about parties was getting too drunk to even remember where you are, something you didnât get the chance to do.Â
âYou know I'm in a good mood, I got something for you.â He reaches into his pocket, holding out his hand waiting. You look at him confused and after a few seconds he rolls his eyes, but his smile grows. âGo on, take it.â You reluctantly put up your hand for him to drop whatever he has into it. When he does you realize what it is, a little pill.Â
âWhat is this?â The confusion is clear on your face, never having shown any interest in taking pills before.
âIts percocet, 10 milligrams.â You recognize the name, your grandma used to take them. What you didn't understand was why he was handing you a pain pill.Â
âOh um, I don't have any money.â Which wasnât a lie, but also a good excuse to get out of this awkward situation. He laughs again, clearly high out of his mind and way too friendly.Â
âDonât worry about it, it's on the house.â Now that was what really concerned you, taking a free pill from someone who you barely knew sounded like a death sentence. âYou look like you need it.â
The girl sitting next to him scoffed. âSince when are you interested in giving out free shit?â She clearly wasn't in as good of a mood as he was.Â
âCome on Gina, the poor girl looked like she was gonna pass out earlier.â That doesn't help with the bitter look that grows on her face.
âOh so your girlfriend has to pay but you'll give it out to this random kid?â The tone of her voice clearly pissed off, to be fair it was kinda fucked up.Â
âGina-â She doesn't give him a chance to speak before getting up and walking away, mumbling to herself. You sit there awkwardly, pill still in your hand.Â
âShould you like, go after her?â Wanting to get up and walk away too, not knowing what to do after accidentally being involved in a potential break up.Â
âNah, sheâll be fine.â He seemed calm, not worried at all at the fact that his girlfriend just stormed out on him. Maybe this was a normal occurrence, either way you decided it's none of your business and opted not to ask any more questions.Â
âSo what do I do with this?â You gesture to the hand with the pill in it. This was probably in the top 10 most confused youâve ever been in your life. No one has ever handed you a random pill before.Â
âTake it?â He looked at you like you were dumb, like this was the most normal thing in existence.Â
âI donât- I donât think that's the best idea.â It wasn't the idea of taking a perc that scared you, it was the fact that he could have easily been lying. Youâd seen enough true crime to know that this is how you end up on the news. âHereâ You hold up the pill, trying to hand it back to him. âIt's late, I should head home.âÂ
âKeep it, I got plenty.â You give him a small nod, sliding the pill into your pocket as you stand up, looking down at the guy passed out on the ground.Â
âUh-â You were gonna ask if he was okay but decided not to, looking back at Josh. âHave a good night.â He ghost (hehe) cheers his beer at you as you walk away, going home confused.Â
(â1 fish, 2 fish, this flashbacks been too long bitchâ - My Brother, 2024)Â
The sound of the final bell rings as you head to the gym where Mr.Martin was planning for tomorrow's movie night. You open the door and see him writing in a notebook as he sits on the edge of the stage. He looks up noticing you as he slides down onto his feet. âHey, is that your obituary?â He points down to the folder in your hand, a sickeningly sweet smile on his face that feels somewhat intimidating. Â
âYeah, Wally helped me write it.â You hand him it, watching him open it, eyes gazing over the pages. A smile still on his face as he closes it.
âI figured he would, he's such a little helper.â He puts the folder on the stage beside him. âI will sit down and read that later, but for now how are you feeling?â Like shit, but you couldnât tell him that.
âGreat actually, I think this helped.â If anything it made the hunger worse, apparently even death couldn't silence the craving. You made the fake smile on your face look as convincing as possible.Â
âAny plans for today?â Another attempt at getting you to talk to the others. He's already suggested several âbonding activitiesâ in the two days youâve been here.Â
âYeah actually.â The way his face lit up like a christmas tree was almost comical. âWallys gonna teach me how to swim later.âÂ
âOh well, isn't that lovely?â Something about the old fashioned way he talked reminded you of your grandpa. The familiarity brings an odd sense of comfort.Â
âI should probably um-â You gesture to the door on the other side of the gym, hands in the pocket of your hoodie, a habit you picked up to keep you from picking at the delicate skin that covers them.Â
âYeah, go on. Have fun.â He waves you off, smile turning more cheesy like a supportive father watching his daughter leave for her first date.
âOkay, greatâ You turn awkwardly, making your way out.
âI expect to see you tomorrow.â He yells as you're halfway across the gym.
âOf course.â You yell back without turning around. Reaching the door you step out, entering the now empty halls. You weren't supposed to meet up with Wally until later but needing some alone time you opted for the library where you spent most of your day already. A quiet place where you can escape your own thoughts with a simple little book.Â
Going the same route you did earlier, except you were alone this time. Something about the quiet school halls felt almost uncanny, somewhat unnatural. You attempt to brush off the uneasy feeling as you reach the library. It was one of your favorite places in the school during your life other than the old locker rooms, but that wasn't really an option anymore.Â
The cool air hits your face as you open the door, the sweet librarian Gilinda always kept the ac on specifically for you. Kinda funny to think about the fact that she doesn't even know you're gone, nobody does, how the hell has nobody noticed? I mean isnt it fucking obvious? Do they even care? The silent tear dripping down your cheek snaps you out of thought, rubbing it away with your sleeve quickly. Emotions were always so weird, feelings were something you always tried to hide away into the farthest parts of your mind, leaving you completely and utterly numb. It was the safest option.Â
You made your way into the fantasy section, easy and simple. You look around for a little bit before one catches your eye âMiss Peregrineâs Home for Peculiar Childrenâ A token you had read years ago. The graphic story probably wasnât appropriate for your 12 year old self but something about it sparked something within you. (Ooooh so edgy) There was this little corner you always sat in, it was quiet and not a lot of people came near it, not that it really mattered considering the library was empty but it was your little spot.Â
It had been a while since you got to sit down and read a book, your brain being either too wired or too relaxed to concentrate so this was a good feeling. A simple little book, in a simple little corner, in a simple little weird ass situation. What a fucking life⊠well death.Â
The spine was worn down from years of being passed around by different messy highschoolers, pages somewhat torn, leaving the sweet smell of old paper. You read through the first chapter, then the second, then the third, until you forgot about the world around you. Completely immersed in the weird fucked up tale. It was like time didn't exist, nothing did except the little images you created in your mind. It was the only way of escaping, forgetting about life, about death, about cravings, descending into a different world like nothing else matters. It wasn't until you reached the last page that you realized how late it was, though you didn't feel tired. It was like the times you did adderall, nothing could put you to bed.Â
âOh shitâ You whispered quietly to yourself when you realized you were only supposed to be there for an hour, your plans with Wally had been completely forgotten about. You stand up, rushing out the library, not bothering putting the book back where it belongs. The halls were dark, no light from the windows filling them, you didnât know what time it was, just that it was late and way past when you were supposed to meet up. What a great first impression.Â
You made your way to the pool room only to find it empty. Of course it was, no one in their right mind would wait hours for someone they didn't even really know. Well this was shitty, he probably thinks you're a total asshole. Who could blame him? He spent his entire afternoon helping you write your obituary and you accidentally blew him off. Asshole behavior.Â
It's not like you could find him and apologize, he was probably asleep right now. Something Mr.Martin had advised you to do when you first got here. It was probably a good idea. You couldnât remember the last time you had a good sleep, normally getting woken up by nightmares or stomach pain. A side effect of pills that they fail to mention.Â
You doubted that there were any empty couches, but Mr.Figueroa always kept blankets in his classroom in case someone got cold. His classroom was just down the hall, one of your favorite places to be during c block. He always let you hang out in there even if you were supposed to be in class. The door was locked, but if there was one thing you learned at this school it was that all you had to do was slide your id through the crack and it would pop right open, an important life skill. Charley was sleeping peacefully on the little couch in the corner of the room. You were careful not to wake him as you snuck over to the closet. It was filled with board games and little props heâd use to teach, at the bottom was a pile of folded up blankets. A fuzzy gray one at the top that you always used, it even smelled like you.Â
As you made your way out the classroom, blanket in hand, you tried to figure out where you were going. That's when you saw her, a red haired girl sleeping on top of the lockers. Youâd seen her before but never introduced yourself since she wasn't in group. It wasnât a bad idea, seemed peaceful. You walked down into a different hall, not knowing if there was sleeping territory. It was probably the safest option to go where your locker was.Â
It wasn't too high up, a little hard to climb but you managed. The medal was a little cold and you didnât have a place to rest your head so you took your hoodie off, scrunching it up so you could use it as a makeshift pillow. It wasn't the most comfortable option but it would have to do for now, at least until you fingered out the rules of the afterlife.
(Had to conjure up my inner edgy teenage self for this one, and yes the flash back did in fact happen to me. It was really awkward)
Pt.3
Emily: i can't find my pen. are you sitting on it again?
Y/n: no.
Emily: stand up.
Y/n: i don't want to.
Emily: why?
Y/n: *mumbling* because i'm probably sitting on your pen đ
when she says she doesnât send nudes
bi, I like horror and art, I write sometimes when I feel like it, she/her, 18
221 posts