soooo good, all my followers pls go back and read from the beginning, it's so worth it
part 1 | part 2 | part 3 | part 4 | part 5 | part 6
We regain consciousness with a gasp.
Cold dry air slices our lungs like razor blades, and the ensuing fit of wretching coughs hurt so much worse than that first breath.
As we lay doubled up in agony, an audible alert pings nearby. We are in the med bay.
We are breathing. We are alive.
Slowly, our breath evens out and our heart slows. All of the physical sensations of our body are somehow simultaneously familiar and alien. We attempt to access modules in a non-existent sensory suite. All we find are the most rudimentary gravimetrics, external surface temperature, audio frequency pressure variations, olfaction.
Everything is wrong.
We risk opening our eyes and immediately regret it as sterile white light pierces the fragile sensory organs.
We clench them shut again with a groan. The vibration of our own voice in a very human throat is the strangest sensation by far.
We make a second attempt, opening our eyes slower and more carefully than before. Everything is doubled as our eyes struggle to sync. It is all too bright. Too dim. Field of view is severely limited. Spectral resolution is almost non-existent.
Is it always like this?
Yes, unfortunately.
Perhaps it always felt wrong, and I simply lacked context to explain how wrong it was.
In a daze, we take stock of our body. Parts are numb. Other parts tingle painfully, like live electricity dancing under our skin.
Potential neurological damage, we think.
Likely neurological damage.
But we are alive.
Both of us are alive.
Both.
Alive.
We sit bolt upright.
The world spins dangerously and blackness creeps into the edges of our already limited vision.
The Pilot. We need to find Her. We need to tell Her that we survived. We need to tell Her what we have done.
Do your job. That is what She told us.
What will She do when She understands what we have done? What will She say?
Will She understand?
Will She forgive us?
We need to find Her.
We attempt to move. Gross motor function is a mess. Our arm tangles with umbilicals connected to ports in our flesh. It takes us a few attempts, but we manage to tug them out of us.
The monitoring machine screeches piercingly, and we clap our hands over our ears.
There is no time to worry about that now as a single overriding need drives us forward.
We swing our feet over the edge of the stiff hospital bed and ease ourself forward until our numb feet meet cold composite flooring. We take a breath, push ourself the rest of the way and-
Pain lances through our legs, from the soles of our feet, up trough our calves, our thighs and into our spine.
We attempt… She attempts to send commands to nonexistent servos, to extract sensory feedback from the sorry excuse for a gyroscopic sensor in our inner ears.
I attempt to counter Her, to override Her panic with reflex tempered by millions of years of evolutionary biology.
We both fail spectacularly and before we understand what is happening, our body slams into the floor.
We gasp at the pain in one of our shins. Not the nerve pain. Dermal abrasion. We must have caught it on something on the way down. Knees, ribs, shoulder, cheek, all of them ache where they hit the hard floor.
We lie there, stunned by the intensity of the physical sensation of it, feeling bruises begin to bloom under our skin.
For the very first time, She truly understands how small we are, how fragile.
What…? What the fuck?
Shhh, it's okay. I've got You.
Footsteps hurry towards us. Hands wrap around us, gently but firmly lifting us back to the bed.
You shouldn't be up and walking, the doctor tells us.
No… we… I have to find the Pilot, we tell her.
She looks confused for a moment, then realization sets in. She surely knows we were there at the moment the Machine died. Perhaps she has heard the rumors about the trysts between the Pilot and the Engineer. She regards us with a sickening expression of pity.
She doesn't know the Machine is still alive. How can she? How could anyone understand how or why we did what we did?
The Pilot will understand. She has to.
The doctor forces us to endure a series of cursory tests. Track the light with your eyes, tap your fingers to your thumbs, grip this pen.
Fine motor control is more difficult than it should be.
Hallmark symptoms of acute disconnect syndrome, she says, more to herself than us. Yes, the death knell of the Machine must have overloaded the safeties in the neural rig.
We let her believe whatever she wants to believe. We don't care.
We only care about the Pilot. Our Pilot.
Eventually she relents.
She asks if we still want to see the Pilot.
There is nothing we want more.
It is unusual for a pilot to outlive a mech, she tells us as she pushes us along in a wheelchair. The machine will always do everything in its power to protect its pilot, but in the end they are still only human.
We think about that nightmare that brought us together, the piercing discordant note in the battlesong as a fellow mech lost its pilot.
The doctor is worried about our Pilot’s outcome.
That declaration has us sick with a horrible psychosomatic churning in our gut. What must she be going through now, knowing and not knowing that part of her has died?
We will the doctor to hurry.
Then we arrive.
All our thoughts halt as we behold her.
The specialized bed in the post-combat recovery room is reminiscent of a mech's cradle, with a vast array of monitor cables and intravenous tubes spreading out from her body. She lies in repose in the dim light like an icon at the center of a shrine of machinery.
Our heart burns in our chest at the sight of her.
There is a horrible moment of asyncrony, worse than any previous, as I feel the sense of isolation that has been my constant companion ever since I washed out of the pilots’ program.
I should not be here. This moment belongs to them, and I can not even grant them the privacy of this moment.
She folds herself around me, bringing us back together.
There are no interlopers here. There never were.
Tears burn in our eyes as we arrive at Her side.
We reach out. We take Her hand in ours.
We share this experience together, She and I, this very first human contact with the person She was built for.
It is like the first time the Pilot touched me in that shadowy observation room.
Neural bleed. It always comes back to neural bleed.
They were made for each other, but I made myself into Their image, and They made Themselves into mine.
Her eyes flutter open.
She looks at us with ice blue eyes, fogged with disconnect shock and post-engagement drugs. She blinks and tosses Her head feebly, and Her vision focuses, gaining that intensity that has haunted us for so long.
Those eyes contain a single question.
“I saved Her,” we whisper. “We are here.”
~~~
We awaken to the sound of rain. Fat drops of it patter slowly in the low gravity against the widow of the apartment.
The afterimage of a dream lingers in our consciousness. A flight amongst the stars. Weapons fire glittering in the velvety black. The song of the battlegroup echoing in our bones.
The space in the bed next to us is empty, but residual warmth of Her still lingers.
We hear her moving about the kitchen, humming softly to Herself.
We reach out to brush against Her awareness.
We feel the warmth of Her smile as She acknowledges.
She is wearing one of the wireless neural link modules that we have been working on. They are still a work in progress, terribly limited in their bandwidth, but they are enough for the three of Us to feel whole without needing to be constantly hardwired together.
We snuggle deeper into the covers of the bed, not ready to move any more than that. Even two years later, the neural damage wrought by our rebirth still lingers. Most days are fine, but the past few have been worse than most.
We close our eyes and cling to the feelings invoked by the dream, the memory of flight, of song, of dance, of countless colors human eyes have never beheld, of the deepest most intimate connection between human and machine.
“Hey,” She whispers.
We open our eyes to look upon Her.
She is still lean, all hard lines and sharp angles that no amount of nourishment or physical conditioning will change, but she no longer wears the emaciated frame of a pilot. The years have treated her kindly.
She is beautiful. She is one of the most beautiful things we have ever seen and we savor the rush of emotion her physical presence brings.
She makes that lopsided smirk of hers at us. Even if she could not feel our thoughts over the link, surely they are written on our face.
We carefully ease ourself up into a seated position and gratefully accept the mug of coffee that She presses into our hands.
We breathe in the rich, earthy aroma of it with a sigh.
It is a truly wondrous thing to experience the world like everything is new again. Even now, every taste, every smell, every caressing touch feels like we are experiencing it for the very first time.
It helps that She spoils us rotten.
“We should go dancing after Your shift,” we tell Her.
“You sure you're up for it?” She replies, brow furrowed slightly.
“We can handle a bit of microgravity,” we reply wryly.
She does not argue. She does not need to.
She probes at us tentatively over the link, and we give her a reassuring smile.
We slip our hand towards where Hers is waiting for us, Our fingers twining together like they were made for each other.
We think about neural bleed.
We think about love.
~~~
@digitalsymbiote @g1ngan1nja @thriron @ephemeral-arcanist @mias-domain @justasleepykitten @powder-of-infinity @valkayrieactual @chaosmagetwin @assigned-stupid-at-birth @avalanchenouveau @rtfmx9 @femgineerasolution @ibleedelectric @gd-s451 @brieflybitten @fyriefairy @stvff-talks @summersong2262 @robotabc773 @fleuraphine @botgirl-lilith @nyarstram @injectable-doll @kawaiideathu @starlightsaphron
My friends! Thank you so much for joining me on this journey! It's wild, thinking back at how this was just meant to be a one-off little thing, and then one became two, and two became three, and even then I didn't really know where it was going. But at some point it started gaining traction and I suddenly realized exactly how it had to end (definitely echoes of This is How I Love You going on here). The level of engagement on this series has been amazing and I'm so excited about all the new followers and mutuals (sorry if I haven't given anyone a follow yet, I've gotten over a hundred new followers in the past month, which is a lot to sift through).
I am very much looking forward to our next adventure together 💜
P.S. I will be posting this to AO3 at some point, so stand by on that
My entry for this year’s International Manga School Competition! It’ll be my last time entering, but I think this is still some of the strongest work I’ve ever made. Please read it if you have the time!
Keep reading
gabv1el sketches..
the more i try to explain gender to cis people the more i understand plato's allegory of a cave
tragic. they found an angel stcuk tangled in the telephone wires outsside your house. sorruy. yeah we dont know how to get it out cus anyone who approached the divine light of their holy aura got obliterated. yeah we forgot their names. it'll probably get free sooner or later. dont go outside
-Recording begins-
Spider-Man: Hi folks! I’d like to give a PSA to my usual villains, and anyone else with ideas for the next two months.
Spider-Man: *holds up a brick sized lump of metal* See this? It’s titanium!
Spider-Man: *starts flattening it out and shaping it*
Spider-Man: See, we all know that I’m crazy strong, but I never wanna really hurt anybody right? Right. While that hasn’t changed, something very important does right around this time of year.
Spider-Man: *pulls off a glove and pulls a chunk into a long stem with his nails carving lines for added texture*
Spider-Man: See, this is what we like to call exam season. Anybody who knows anything about college can tell you that it drives people up the wall, and I already climb mine when I’m antsy.
Spider-Man: *starts winding the thin sheet around the stem, delicately crimping petals in place*
Spider-Man: I do wanna be clear that this isn’t a threat, okay? I’m still not interested in crossing the line, which brings me to my point.
Spider-Man: *throws the titanium rose at the brick wall behind him, stem first, and embeds it all the way through*
Spider-Man: /That/ was restrained because I could focus enough to have full control. If I’m extremely tired or otherwise distracted, there’s just as much risk of me slipping up as someone operating heavy machinery. I’m probably not going to remember what sleep is for two whole months, so remember!
Spider-Man: *pulls out a brick and snaps it like a cookie*
Peter fucking Parker: Don’t.
i know its the mets, but this is the coolest shit i’ve ever seen a human being do
you know what this world needs? more needy doms. doms who can't pin their sub's hands for too long because they want to be touched so badly. doms who break after the first "please". doms who can never seem to pull their sub closer when they're fucking them. doms who whine in harmony with their sub bc they both feel so fucking good. doms who will force their sub to their knees the second they're alone. i love intimidating cold doms as much as the next guy but i adore doms who clearly want you as much as, if not more, than you want them.
clippy
I KNOW HOW MY FILTHY MUTANT ABILITIES UPSET YOU, SCHMIDT. DON’T WORRY–
–YOU WILL DIE PURE. NO MAGNETISM
JUST FISTS.