Dean Winchester matching icon & headerđ˛
(credit / reblog if you use!)
pirates never been so silly
ready or not!
like mother like daughterđ
what college does to a motherfucker đđ
god he is perfect đ
leigh whannell 1998
I'm late to the trend but..
some of my favorite Rowena icons <3
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Iâll live in a cozy home filled with beautiful things and sunlight and Iâll lay on the floor for many hours
SURVIVORâS GUILT.
until dawn
[chris hartley x fem! oc]
major trigger warnings below!
(general until dawn warnings)
The powdery snow clung to his boots, dragging him down with every desperate step as he ran for his life. Each breath burned in his lungs, turning to mist in the freezing air, but he couldnât stopânot now.
Behind him, the forest erupted with chaos. Trees shook violently as the creature flung itself from branch to branch, its guttural snarls echoing through the night like a death knell. The sound grew closerâtoo closeâleaves rattling, snow falling in its wake.
He stumbled, nearly falling, and dared a glance over his shoulder. Nothing. Just shadows. But he could feel it. Watching. Hunting.
Then came the screamsâhigh-pitched, raw, and final. One by one, his friendsâ voices were swallowed by the dark, their cries splintering the silence like shattered glass. Each scream ripped into him, another weight on his back, another name he couldnât save.
Still, he ran. Into the dark. Into the unknown. Because whatever it was, it was behind him nowâand it was hungry.
âChris!â
That voiceâso achingly familiarâpierced the night. Raw. Afraid.
Juliet.
Tears blurred his vision. His breath caught in his throat. Should I turn around? The question struck him like lightning, but there was never really a choice.
His feet skidded in the snow as he pivoted sharply, shouting her name with everything he had left. âJuliet?!â
The snow be damnedâhe ran. Faster than before. Toward her voice. Toward the only thing that mattered.
But the woods werenât silent anymore. Not entirely. The crunch of his boots mingled with something⌠wetter.
The snow beneath him, once untouched and glistening under the moonlight, was now tainted.
Stained.
Dark blotches marred the white, the kind that refused to melt or disappear. The trees around him leaned in, casting warped shadows like grasping fingers, and though the color was lost in the night, the scent said it all.
A sharp, metallic tang curled into his nostrilsâthick and suffocating.
Blood.
His stomach churned. Every instinct screamed at him to stop. To run the other way. But he didnât. He couldnât.
Chris barreled forward, following the trail. The stains grew bolder, darker. No longer scattered dropsâthey were streaks now. Smears. Pools.
And thenâ
The cabin came into view, its windows hollow and black like vacant eyes.
Something was waiting.
Another blood-curdling scream tore through the cabinâs wallsâraw, jagged, and unmistakably Julietâs.
The front door hung crookedly on its hinges, still ajar from his frantic escape earlier. He hadnât looked back then. Hadnât dared. Not after what heâd seen.
He hadnât known she was still alive.
Chris froze for half a second as the memory crashed into him: the sickening thud of her body slamming into the wall, the way she crumpled like a rag doll, red pouring from her head, painting her face in streaks. She hadnât moved. He thoughtâhe knewâshe was gone.
But she screamed. And that meant she was still fighting.
Shoving the memory aside, Chris surged forward, bursting through the doorway. The cold hit him firstâbut it wasnât the air. It was something else. A wrongness.
The house was a war zone.
His eyes scanned the dark interior, following the trail of red across warped floorboards. It was everywhere.
Thick puddles congealed in corners, sticky and black in the moonlight. Smears were dragged across walls like desperate handprints. Splashes painted the stairs. And then there were the chunksâunidentifiable pieces of something organic. Meat, maybe. Bone. Torn clothing. He didnât want to know.
The scent was overwhelming now. Rotting copper and decay, a heavy weight in the air that clung to his clothes, his throat, his soul.
He swallowed hard, the urge to vomit crawling up his chestâbut he kept going.
âJuliet?â he called out, quieter this time. More a plea than a shout.
Only silence answered.
For now.
Upstairs was the first option.
Chris swallowed hard as he crept up the staircase, carefully sidestepping the steps he knew would creak. Every sound felt like a gunshot in the silence that surrounded himâdeafening and unnatural, ringing in his ears with the weight of fear.
At the top stoop, he drew in a shaky breath, then turned left, slipping into the great room.
The moonlight poured in through the high windows, the only thing cutting through the darkness. His boots made soft, wet squeaks as he walked, the soles still damp from the snow.
Without his glasses, everything was a blur. He stumbled over furniture and broken thingsâdebris left behind from the violent fight that had nearly torn the room apart. The fight that had thrown Juliet across the room like a rag doll. The one that had left her still, bloodied, and silent. Heâd thought that was the end.
A low, guttural growl rolled out from somewhere deeper in the cabinâa sound so wrong it made his skin crawl. It clicked between tones, shifting unnaturally as it grew louder with each step.
Chris blinked hard, trying to see. His hands reached out for walls, familiar furniture, anything to guide him forward. He followed memory more than vision, navigating the cabin heâd stayed in so many times before.
Thenâhe heard it.
A whimper. So faint it couldâve been the wind. But no. He knew that sound. Heâd know it anywhere.
Juliet.
With cautious, quiet steps, he slipped into a side room, the guttural clicking growing fainter behind him. The door creaked slightly as he pulled it nearly shut, the shadows swallowing them both.
âJuliet?â he whispered, falling to his knees on the plush carpet.
âChris?â
It was her.
A rush of breath escaped him, part relief, part disbelief. He reached out for her, pulling her trembling body against him. She was soaked in bloodâshaking, brokenâbut alive.
âHey⌠itâs okay. Iâm here,â he whispered, brushing a matted clump of hair away from her face. His fingers stuck to it, wet with something warm. Part of him was grateful he couldnât see clearlyâgrateful the details were just a smear in the dark.
âYou left me,â she sobbed into his chest, her voice hoarse and aching.
âWhat? NoâŚâ he shook his head, voice cracking, chin resting on her blood-matted hair.
âYou did! I was left hereâall alone!â
âHey⌠hey, shh⌠we have to be quiet,â he murmured, heart pounding.
Her blood soaked through his coat like melting snow, hot and endless.
âWh⌠where are you bleeding?â he asked, the words barely escaping him.
She pulled back slightly, the moonlight hitting her just enough to paint her outline.
âEverywhere,â she whispered.
She took his hand in hers, guiding it slowly up to her face.
The moment his fingers touched her skinâor what was left of itâhe froze. He wanted to pull away, wanted to scream, but his body locked in place.
The flesh from the center of her cheek down to the edge of her jaw was gone. Peeled away. De-gloved. Nothing left but exposed muscle and gleaming red, like raw meat glistening in the cold light.
A scream tore from Julietâs throatâshrill, raw, and unearthly. It echoed like a banshee wailing in the hills of Ireland, a harbinger of death.
Thenâ
Crash.
The door behind them exploded open, slamming with such force the knob punched clean through the cabin wall, leaving a jagged hole behind. The hinges shrieked as they twisted, the door now hanging crooked and broken.
The creature was on them in an instant. It lunged, its maw wide, teeth gnashing with rabid fury as it went straight for Chrisâs throat.
âChris?â Julietâs voice was faint, panicked.
He barely heard her.
His hands shot up, grappling with the thingâs faceâskin rough like bark, jaws snapping like a wild animal.
âChris!â she screamed again.
The creatureâs breath was hot and fetid, its teeth clicking closer, closer, closerâ
âChris! Wake up!â
He jolted upright with a gasp, drenched in sweat.
Juliet was standing over him, her scarred face soft in the pale wash of moonlight streaming through the window.
âYou okay?â she asked gently, reaching out to brush the damp hair from his forehead. Her touch was cool, grounding. Real.
âY⌠yeah,â he stammered, sitting up quickly. The black leather couch groaned beneath him, the material peeling away from his sticky skin.
She crouched beside him now, studying his face. âNightmare again?â
He nodded slowly, wiping his palms on his jeans. His heart was still hammering in his chest.
Julietâs eyes searched hisâhaunted, but calm. âSame one?â
Chris swallowed hard. âYeah. The door. that⌠thing. You screamingâŚâ He trailed off, eyes drifting to the stillness of the room.
Juliet looked down for a moment, then back at him. âIt wasnât real, Chris. Youâre safe.â
He shook his head slowly, eyes distant. âI canât get the memory out of my head. Itâs like itâs burned into me. What ifâŚâ his voice faltered. âWhat if we werenât meant to survive? What if it comes back for us?â
Juliet didnât answer right away. Instead, she reached for his hand, her fingers cold but steady as she gave his a gentle squeeze.
âBut we did,â she said quietly. âMaybe not whole. Maybe not the same people we were when we got there. But we made it out. We survived.â
âBarely,â he muttered, voice thick with exhaustion. He dragged his free hand down his face, then slipped his glasses off and rested them in his lap.
The silence lingered between them like smokeâheavy, suffocating.
Juliet leaned back, her eyes scanning the window, the pale snowfall still drifting outside like nothing had ever happened.
âWe lost everything up there,â Chris said after a moment, staring blankly at the floor. âFriends. Our sanity. I donât even know how to live normally anymore. Everything feels like⌠like itâs waiting to go wrong again.â
Juliet nodded slowly, her thumb brushing over the back of his hand. âI know. I feel it too.â
She hesitated, then added, âSometimes I wake up and I swear I can still hear it. The clicking. In the walls, in my dreams. Doesnât matter. Itâs just⌠there.â
Chris looked over at her, eyes sharp behind the tiredness. âThen maybe we didnât really make it out. Not all of us.â
Juliet didnât respond. She just held his hand a little tighter.
âGod,â Chris muttered, voice cracking as he pulled his hand away from Julietâs, âif I could just go back in time⌠tell those idiots not to prank Hannah, none of this wouldâve happened.â
The anger in his voice was raw, but underneath it, grief bled through. He buried his face in his palms, elbows resting on his knees like the weight of the memory might crush him.
Juliet watched him for a moment, her expression unreadable.
âYou couldnât have known,â she said softly. âAnd even if you hadâyou know damn well they wouldnât have listened.â
She eased down onto the couch beside him, sitting sideways, curling her legs up so her shoulder brushed his.
âWhat-ifs canât change the past, Chris. Believe me, Iâve tried.â Her voice wavered slightly, but she held it steady. âEverything that happened⌠happened.â
She touched her cheek, the skin pale and ridged with scars, like melted wax.
âMy face is fucked. Theyâre all gone. Josh is locked away in some psych ward, probably talking to ghostsâŚâ
She paused, looking up at him.
âAnd youâyouâre still here. Youâre breathing. You still wake up every morning.â
She rested her chin gently against his knee, her voice soft but firm. âYou survived, Chris. I donât care how broken you feel. You made it through.â
He didnât respond right away. His fingers dug into his scalp, trembling slightly.
âI donât feel like I did,â he whispered eventually. âI feel like I left part of myself up there⌠with them.â
Juliet let the silence hang for a moment, then said, âMaybe we all did. But whatâs left⌠itâs still worth something. Youâre still worth something.â
She looked up at him, her scarred face lit by the moonlight. âYouâre not alone, okay?â
Chris looked down at her, finally lowering his hands. His eyes were red-rimmed, but she could see the faintest flicker of life still behind them.
He nodded, just once.
âOkay,â he said, voice hoarse.
Outside, the wind howled faintly through the trees, but for now, the house held its breath.
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