Reservoir Dogs (1992)
The Outfit (2022): “The Wound Needs To Be Sealed. We Have To Stop This Bleeding.”
[PART 1] [PART 2]
Hi everyone! @whumpetywhumpwhump here- I noticed there doesn't seem to be an official Medwhump May running this year, so I'm running one myself :)
I appreciate it's pretty late in the game to be releasing prompts, but I was waiting to see whether the official page was going to post anything before deciding to start mine. Hopefully a few of you would like to get involved (even if it is short notice lol)
No AI-generated content
Please tag this account if you post your challenge submissions on Tumblr and use the tag 'medwhump may' (as in the tags of this post)
For completionists, all 31 days must be completed (using either the daily prompt or an alt prompt)
When creating content for chronic illnesses and seizures, PLEASE USE THE RELEVANT WHUMP TAGS INSTEAD OF THE GENERAL TAGS. e.g 'seizure whump' rather than just 'seizures'. This avoids important tags being flooded with whump fics
Have fun!
I will update these rules if necessary! Happy whumping!
Please reblog this to get the word out :)
Toshiro Mifune as Detective Murakami in Stray Dog (1949) dir. Akira Kurosawa
Box
Magic
Cell
(BBC Merlin)
@themerrywhumpofmay
“If- no, when, we get out of here, I’m going to write a book about what an idiot you are.”
Merlin sighed and rested his head against the wooden bars. “Well, write what you know, I suppose.”
“How could you think stopping to ask for directions could ever be a good idea? I knew where we were going.”
“We were lost and they looked friendly enough.” Merlin turned away from the bars and looked down at Arthur. “Look, how long are you going to complain? Maybe we should try figuring out how to get out here?”
“You figure out how to get us out.” Arthur drawled from his spot on the floor. He was lounging on the one and only pile of damp hay in the cell. The bruises from the attack were still fresh and swollen across his cheek and eye. “I’ll continue to complain, thank you very much.”
Merlin gently rubbed the bump on the back of his head. He looked around the cell for what felt like the hundredth time. They had been taken to a sort of cave lair, a wooden holding cell built into the rock wall. It was sturdy. And they had a guard at all times.
Merlin licked his dry lips.
He couldn’t use magic. Arthur was here.
They were stuck, for now.
Why had they been captured anyway? Maybe they planned to ransom the prince? Merlin puzzled over it until his head began to throb again. He sat down and closed his eyes.
“Don’t tell me you’ve given up.”
“I haven’t.” Merlin murmured and leaned his forehead against the lattice of wooden bars. “I’m thinking.”
Arthur barked out a laugh. “Good luck with that.”
Merlin frowned and made himself bite back several rude remarks.
It was at that moment that a few more bandits, or whatever they were, appeared in the chamber and opened the cell door.
“Oh thank goodness, you’ve come to your senses-” Arthur got up from the floor.
“Stay where you are.” The woman who had opened the door, green eyes blazing in the torchlight, pointed at Arthur.
Then she pointed to Merlin. “You. Come.”
“Me?” Merlin swallowed hard.
“Now.” She ordered.
Arthur took a step forward. “Look, he’s just a servant-”
Another of the bandits pointed a crossbow at Prince Arthur through the cell bars.
Arthur stopped, hands raised.
Merlin picked himself off the rough stone floor. His head throbbed. The woman then grabbed him by the collar and dragged him out of the cell. Merlin threw one last look at Arthur before he disappeared around the corner, deeper into the cave tunnel.
Merlin was taken to a smaller, darker chamber. The walls were wet and moss was growing there. He was forced onto a chair in the middle of the room.
“My name is Deryn.” The green-eyed woman spoke while the others tied Merlin to the chair. “That’s all you need to know about me. As for my companions, ignore them. You will speak only to me; whether answering my questions or begging for mercy. Do you understand?”
Merlin swallowed hard. The ropes binding him to the chair were rough and were painfully tight. His heart was racing. What did they want with him?
“Do you understand?” Deryn repeated.
“Yes.” Merlin rasped. His head throbbed in time with his heartbeat.
“Good.”
One of the bandits handed a large, flat wooden box to Deryn. The wood was dark and cracked with age and carved with strange symbols. Merlin tried to make them out in the flickering torchlight. But they swam and danced before his eyes.
Deryn walked forward and set the box on Merlin’s lap.
“Here.” She said, “Hold this for me.”
Merlin, arms bound behind him, could not help but watch as she lifted the lid off, wood scraping, and revealed an enormous, golden collar. It was wide and flat, resembling a darkly glimmering crescent moon. There were fastenings at the two tips. It was old. Very old. Merlin could sense it.
Merlin licked his dry lips and looked back up at Deryn. “What do you want, Deryn?” He asked.
She did not answer.
Deryn picked up the collar by the two ends, leaned forward, and fastened it around Merlin’s neck. It was heavy and cold against his skin. Deryn set the box aside.
“This is a very ancient treasure.” Deryn circled around Merlin and ran a finger over the minute carvings on the collar. “It was found a long time ago and was passed down through my family. It’s been called a blessing. And a bane. Let me show you how it works.”
Deryn brushed a curl of her dark hair back, took out a bone-handled knife, and plunged it into Merlin’s gut.
Merlin opened his mouth to scream, to breathe, to cry. But he could not draw breath. The pain was a fire in his stomach. It blazed through him. He shuddered and realized he’d closed his eyes, tears leaking over his cheeks.
He opened his eyes to see Deryn again. She pulled the knife out.
Agony again. Merlin began to wail, low and keening, each breath he took to cry out was misery.
A wound to the stomach was a death sentence. No one could fix that kind of injury. Not even Gaius. Why had she decided to kill him? Panting and curled over his wound, Merlin watched Deryn wipe off her knife.
“It is a very powerful treasure. One that I’ve had to protect my whole life.” Deryn said. “It should reveal its purpose now.”
And just as she spoke, Merlin felt the pain intensify. He choked.
Every nerve around his wound began to blaze even more. He was dying. He had to be. How could he endure this?
Restrained by the chair, Merlin began to tremble and shake, screaming and screaming and screaming. The collar was killing him.
Hours passed. Or many minutes. Merlin could not tell. Sweat poured down his face, mixing with tears.
Eventually, he noticed that Deryn had approached him again and lifted his shirt. Merlin caught sight of his stomach. No, it couldn’t be.
The wound was gone. There was blood. And a thin, pale scar. But no gaping knife wound. Nothing.
“It heals.” Deryn let Merlin’s shirt drop back down. “Painfully. So,” Deryn brought a chair over and sat down in front of Merlin. “I’m going to ask you some questions. If you refuse.” Deryn held up the knife. “You know what to expect. No surprises.”
Merlin felt the blood leave his face. He threw up all over his lap.
“Let’s get started.”
Sometime later, Merlin found himself being dragged, arms supported and legs limp. Then he was dropped. Someone was calling his name. Every inch of him throbbed, raw with remembered pain.
Merlin felt himself being turned over and he cracked his eyes open.
He found Arthur above him and a rough hand touching his cheek. There was something soft beneath his head.
“Can you hear me? Are you alright?” Arthur’s voice was far away. “Where are you hurt?”
Merlin could not help but attempt a smile.
He wasn’t hurt anywhere. It was all healed. But he still shivered and ached. And it still felt like he had the collar on. He could feel its phantom weight around his neck, cold and heavy.
“Fine.” He managed to rasp in answer to Arthur’s questions. Merlin closed his eyes again. He was so tired. “Not… hurt.” He sighed.
“How am I supposed to believe that when you’re covered in blood?”
“Magic?”
Merlin heard a soft laugh above him and felt a cool hand push his sweaty hair back from his forehead. He drifted.
Merlin awoke to yelling. And pain.
His eyes snapped open.
Arthur was being held back by two of the bandits.
And Deryn was there, standing over Merlin. “Come along.” She ordered.
Swaying and still half-asleep, Merlin struggled to his feet and followed her.
The moss-covered cave room. The box. The collar.
It began again.
But Merlin was ready.
Last time, he didn’t know what to expect. But now he did. No surprises.
As soon as Deryn fastened the golden, crescent-shaped collar about his neck, Merlin kicked out with every ounce of magic he had.
He burned his bonds away. He threw Deryn across the room and heard her spine snap. Then Merlin ran. He knew the way. Falling, half-conscious, he ran to Arthur.
Merlin raised his hands and ripped and tore the wooden cell to pieces. Wood splinters flew. Dust hung in the air. Shouting. Crossbow bolts flew.
“Arthur!” Merlin roared.
Merlin looked at one of the bandits and they burst into fire and sparks. Screams.
They ran. Out of the cave. And into the cold night.
Merlin didn’t realize that they had stopped until he found himself in Arthur’s arms.
“Don’t worry, we’ll get you to Gaius. He- he’ll fix you up, I promise.”
Arthur was laying him down on the cold, wet ground. In the light of a weak dawn, Merlin could see two crossbow bolts sticking out his chest. How had he not noticed?
Arthur’s hands moved to Merlin’s neck, around back, to take off the collar.
No.
Merlin flung his hand out and pushed Arthur away. “Don’t.” He gasped.
The collar was the only thing keeping him alive.
“Take out the bolts.” Merlin begged. “Not this.” He touched the gold collar.
“I don’t understand.” Arthur’s eyes were wide. And frightened.
“It’s magic.” Merlin’s thoughts were too fuzzy to properly explain. “It heals wounds. Take the bolts out. Let it heal me.”
Arthur moved forward, grimacing. “Right now?”
Merlin huffed out a laugh. “Should I schedule a better time for you?”
At that, Arthur gave him a watery smile. “Sorry.”
“It’s okay.” Merlin took Arthur’s hand and guided it to one of the bolts. “Let’s get started.”
Circle
Blinded
Field
(original characters/story)
@themerrywhumpofmay
“It’s the only way to know what happened here.” Rex shed his jacket and tossed it on the ground. The sun beat down upon them, searing and merciless. The cicadas sang and sang. With every weak breath of wind, the grass around them sighed and fluttered. The field was empty save for Rex, Stockton, Burden, and the last survivor.
Rex rolled up his sleeves. “Stay back, all of you, until it’s done.”
“And how will we know when it’s done?” Stockton picked up Rex’s jacket.
Rex didn’t answer and walked towards the last survivor.
Tied to a stake in the middle of the field was a young woman. Was, a young woman. She had died three days ago and laid in the hot sun until now, and it showed. Rex had tracked her down and arrived too late. Always too late.
The last survivor rasped and stood on unsteady legs as Rex approached. He needed to know what she knew. Tears stung Rex’s eyes as he drew closer.
“I’m sorry.” He whispered. “I’m really sorry. We tried. We tried.”
The last survivor’s skin was bloated and dark with pooled blood. Where there were once eyes, dark, crusted sockets stared out at Rex. Rex looked up and saw the vultures responsible still circling overhead. Every so often, one flew close enough to noonday sun to blot it out. A shadow covering the field. Ragged and brief.
Rex knelt as close as he dared.
He had searched the minds of humans before and had become good at it. It was easy to read people, to open up their minds and read their innermost thoughts. But reading the dead? Something about it turned his stomach. It wasn’t the putrid flesh before him, or clicking teeth, but the act of uniting his mind with the dead.
Rex hadn’t told Stockton or Burden, but he wasn’t sure that it wouldn’t kill him.
But he had promised to try. This last survivor, survivor no more, had known something important to their cause. And he owed it to her to try. He had to try.
Rex took the dead woman’s face in his hands and gently pushed the limp hair away from her sightless eyes. She tried to bite him. The bloody foam that oozed from her mouth and nose ran over his fingers, lukewarm and slimy. The stake and her bound arms held her back. Rex closed his eyes. The sun was harsh above and behind his eyelids he saw only red.
The last survivor rasped and gurgled.
Rex took a deep breath. He began to read.
A moment.
He began to scream.
The ground vibrated, shuddering and shaking. Waves in the field. A flock of birds flee, black dots against the pale, hot sky. The grass around Rex and the last survivor begins to die. It shriveled. It turned black. A circle of rotting darkness. Then, nothing. Only death.
Rex felt someone stroking his hair.
“You’re safe.” It was Burden’s voice. And Burden’s hand.
The rotting smell of the corpse still lingered in Rex’s senses, but Burden’s scent was chasing it away.
Rex shifted a little. His muscles ached and his limbs shook with the effort. His head was resting on someone’s lap. Probably Burden.
“You’re safe?” Rex rasped. His throat was dry and sticky. He coughed.
“Yeah. Stocky’s getting you water. Hang on.”
Rex opened his eyes and saw nothing.
His heart clenched.
Rex closed his eyes again, braced himself, and opened them. Nothing.
“Uh, Burden?” Rex reached out towards the hand in his hair. He gripped Burden’s rough, calloused fingers.
“Yeah?”
“I can't see.”
Rex felt Burden become still and tense. Then Burden squeezed Rex’s hand.
A sigh. “Did you not read the fine print on those powers you got?”
Rex’s laugh was shaky. He felt a tear slip from the corner of his eye and trail down his cheek, pooling in his ear. “No, not really. Didn’t come with a manual, you know?”
“It'll come back.”
“Maybe. But I got the information. She saw where they went.” Rex didn’t think too hard about what he had seen when reading the dead woman. He had gotten what they needed and that was that.
Burden pulled Rex a little closer. “You shouldn’t have done this.” Burden spoke into Rex’s hair, his breath warm on Rex’s scalp.
Rex closed his eyes. He didn’t need them open.
For twelve hours a day, every day, Evelyn had been tested.
They asked him to build from schematics. They asked him to design schematics. They immobilized him in the same chair and had him direct others to build machines.
They gave him drugs. A lot of drugs. They would dose him with something that made him nauseous and faint and dizzy and asked him to complete tasks. Solve equations. Answer their questions. Blindfolded. Ears plugged. Starved. Sleep-deprived. Sedated. Hot. Cold. Dizzy.
Over and over and over.
He was tested under every possible circumstance. Every possible test. Until now.
Evelyn winced as the needle probed beneath his skin and into a vein.
Evelyn wanted to pull away from the needle and the IV bag and everything they were about to do to him, but the restraints kept his wrists, ankles, and chest firmly pressed to the chair. He swallowed hard. The IV needle was taped to his skin and the nurse left the room without even meeting his eyes.
The door hissed and clanged shut.
Evelyn only had a minute or two to try and calm down before the door opened again and someone else entered.
The lady wore a strained smile and a nice suit. She sat down, keeping the table between her and Evelyn. And ignoring him, she began to shuffle through the papers she had brought. After what seemed like ten minutes or so, she spoke.
“My name is Ms. Brown, I am the Assistant Deputy Supervisor at the Bureau of Extrohuman Affairs and Regulation. I am here today to give your official status and category as an Extrohuman, witness your tagging procedure, and answer any questions you have. Do you understand?”
She never looked at him, not once.
Evelyn opened his mouth to speak.
The nurse came back.
Ms. Brown continued. “Evelyn Earl, your tests indicate that you place with the Enhanced Category, subtype Intelligence, archetype Crafter, division Mechanics.”
The saline was cold and Evelyn began to shiver. Of course he was good with machines. That was obvious. Why did they have to test for it? Why?
The lady continued. “Established legal precedents necessitate a procedure to display your status upon your person, this is sometimes called tagging. Once this procedure is completed, displaying this status mark will be used in conjunction with other identification you carry in order to comply with requests for identification. Please give verbal confirmation that you understand this procedure.”
The lady stopped talking and looked up at Evelyn. Staring at him.
Finally looking right into his eyes. Nothing in her expression indicated that she was looking at another human being. He may as well be another piece of paper that needed initials and dates.
Evelyn started when he realized he was meant to speak.
“Oh.” He licked his dry lips. “Right, yeah, I understand.”
The lady made another note on her papers. The room was so quiet that Evelyn could hear her pen scratching.
Eventually, the lady looked up and nodded at the nurse. “You may proceed.”
The nurse wheeled a cart with a machine closer to Evelyn. The nurse turned it on and the machine began to hum. Evelyn only began to panic when the nurse began to untie the front of his gown.
“What are you doing?” Evelyn felt his heart begin to quicken.
The nurse bared his chest and disinfected the skin over his heart.
The lady with the papers got up from the table.
“What is the procedure?” Evelyn asked, panic edging his voice.
“Identification.” Was all the lady answered.
The nurse leaned in close, holding something like a pen, which was connected to the machine by a cord.
“What is that?” Evelyn could not tear his eyes away from the strange pen.
The nurse turned and looked at the lady.
The lady shrugged.
What was tagging?
When the pen first touched his skin, Evelyn thought he had been cut. But when the smell of sizzling, burning, charred flesh filled his nose, he knew this was false.
Evelyn let out a scream and struggled to get away from the electrocautery device. But the bindings held him firmly.
The pain continued and amplified.
Evelyn thought he could hear the pain. Like barbed wire screeching through his ears.
He screamed again. And again. Evelyn felt sweat bead upon his forehead and roll down into his eyes, stinging and hot. He sobbed until his throat became raw. It went on and on, for what felt like hours.
Then, the hum of the machine ceased. The nurse moved away. A crinkling sound
Evelyn was left panting. He cracked his eyes open and saw the nurse was unwrapping bandages.
He could not stand it any longer. He needed to know.
Evelyn looked down to his chest, to the spot over his heart.
Shiny, bleeding burns. The smell of cooked flesh. Skin crackling.
A series of numbers and letters. They meant nothing.
But they were now branded into him. Into his flesh. Tagging. Identification.
Evelyn let out another sob.
Kemp knocked softly on the apartment door then leaned his head on it. It was cool. And he was hot. And sweating. And so very tired. The door wasn’t opening. Cyril wasn’t opening the door.
Kemp swallowed hard and knocked again. He waited even longer this time. Still nothing. His heart rate ramped up and he felt his hands and feet grow cold. His stomach lurched.
Kemp tried the knock they had agreed on one more time. He waited and waited and waited. Nothing.
The edges of Kemp’s vision grew blurry and cloudy. He reeled back and kicked the door. Once. Twice. It banged open, the wood around the bolt cracked and splintered. Kemp’s hand went for the gun at his side: the gun that wasn’t there. Shit. He pulled the knife from his boot instead.
Kemp checked the living room. “Cyril!”
Sweat dripped from his forehead, stinging his eyes. He was so hot and freezing at the same time.
Kemp checked the kitchen. The kettle was on and boiling. “Cyril!” He tried to breathe but all he could do was gasp. His heart raced. As Kemp paced into the bedroom, knife ready, the floor tilted sideways and he had to lean on the wall to stay upright.
The shower was running. It sounded like a waterfall. So loud.
“Cyril?!”
“What?”
Kemp turned.
Cyril was there. Coming out of the bathroom. Towel around his waist. And safe.
Cyril was safe.
Kemp dropped the knife. The carpet came up to meet him. Kemp felt like he was dying. Why was he dying? Why couldn’t he breathe?
Cyril was saying something but Kemp couldn’t hear him.
Kemp opened his eyes.
When had his eyes closed?
He was on his side, his head resting on something soft. Someone was stroking his hair. His cheek throbbed.
“Are you with me?” Cyril asked, his voice coming from above.
Kemp turned his head a little. He was resting on Cyril’s lap while Cyril ran his fingers through his hair. The shower was still running.
“Yeah.” Kemp whispered. “I’m with you.”
“Good.” Cyril leaned down and kissed Kemp’s forehead.
That was new. Fainting was new too. But kisses especially so.
“You look awful.” Cyril smiled down at him.
“Can’t imagine why.” Kemp tried to sit up but the world tilted again.
Cyril eased him back down to the floor and kept his head in his lap. “Careful there. You had a panic attack maybe. Give it a minute.”
“Don’t have panic attacks.”
“Well, you do now. What happened? Why were you looking for me?”
“Didn’t answer the knock.” Kemp closed his eyes. The towel was thin about Cyril’s thighs and his body heat was soothing. “Thought something happened.”
“You had a panic attack over me?” Kemp could hear the smile in Cyril’s voice.
“It’s not funny.” Kemp grumbled.
“I’m not laughing.” Kemp felt Cyril’s breath as he leaned down over Kemp’s ear and kissed his hair.
Kemp turned his head. And met Cyril’s lips with his own.
“You are laughing at me.” Kemp breathed into Cyril’s mouth.
“Never.” Cyril whispered, and kissed him again.
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