[ here's the problem. caroline knows, if she really had to, that she could make laura drink it. she could zoom over and tip the girl's head back and get that ounce of sticky liquid in her mouth and down her throat before anyone was any the wiser. but that's extreme.
and, truly, laura's right. caroline's overreacted, let the swell of bloodlust in her head give way to kneejerk reactions. this isn't life or death, and so of course laura's looking at her now like she's the craziest person in the whole world.
and maybe she is. she does drink blood to survive.
but she's really trying to avoid the overwhelming need to drink laura's right now, and if she knows anything, it's that the bloodlust seems to take a backseat when it's her own blood circulating in someone else's veins. maybe it's hardwired in her. 'if you care about this person enough to feed them your blood, you won't want to drink theirs.'
who knows. ]
I know it's weird...
[ and on the last syllable, as her tongue touches to her teeth to crisp off the consonant, control begins to slip from caroline's careful grip. canines, sharp and white, gleam in the space revealed behind her lips; darker webbing, too, begins to solidify under her eyes. she can try to fight it, but the embarrassment of being wrong roots her attentions elsewhere.
signs she missed before go past the point of ignoring now. teeth sharpen out as she opens her lips around the words, the color under her eyes... Laura's used to weird. she's just explained how used she is to weird, too used. but doesn't mean she doesn't experience some short thrill of fear as it becomes clear that this isn't wholly about her.
suddenly, a little bit of blood doesn't seem like such a big ask.
just like that, she reaches out, takes the offering, tips back her head and drinks it down. there's the immediate grimace at the idea of what she's doing almost before the stuff's even in her mouth, but down it goes all the same.
perhaps drinking the blood she's been offered shouldn't be the immediate response to what's happening here. isn't infection passed in blood? doesn't blood work most of the magical transformations in the darker fairytales?
but Caroline has been trying to help. she trusts her enough not to think it a trick, not to overthink it. so, for the both of them, the blood goes swallowed. ]
[ blood is blood, no matter how it's offered or given. it's the stuff of life and death, messy and complicated at best and dangerous at worst; even caroline's, with its impossibly expedient healing properties, carries danger and risk in its viscosity.
(don't die today, laura, or you'll wake up craving it too.)
but as laura downs the shot like it's no more than a thick serving of cheap whiskey, the blood does its work. it stitches up laura's hand, sweeps away open wounds and realigns bones, surging immortality through the woman's body with near-magical speeds. in its wake, the scent of blood fades out, and caroline breathes a sigh of relief.
she might be like a shark, triggered by the possibility of a feed, but she doesn't want to be. there's relief in the passing of the desire if it keeps her friend safe. ]
no subject
and, truly, laura's right. caroline's overreacted, let the swell of bloodlust in her head give way to kneejerk reactions. this isn't life or death, and so of course laura's looking at her now like she's the craziest person in the whole world.
and maybe she is. she does drink blood to survive.
but she's really trying to avoid the overwhelming need to drink laura's right now, and if she knows anything, it's that the bloodlust seems to take a backseat when it's her own blood circulating in someone else's veins. maybe it's hardwired in her. 'if you care about this person enough to feed them your blood, you won't want to drink theirs.'
who knows. ]
I know it's weird...
[ and on the last syllable, as her tongue touches to her teeth to crisp off the consonant, control begins to slip from caroline's careful grip. canines, sharp and white, gleam in the space revealed behind her lips; darker webbing, too, begins to solidify under her eyes. she can try to fight it, but the embarrassment of being wrong roots her attentions elsewhere.
not a great combo. ]
no subject
signs she missed before go past the point of ignoring now. teeth sharpen out as she opens her lips around the words, the color under her eyes... Laura's used to weird. she's just explained how used she is to weird, too used. but doesn't mean she doesn't experience some short thrill of fear as it becomes clear that this isn't wholly about her.
suddenly, a little bit of blood doesn't seem like such a big ask.
just like that, she reaches out, takes the offering, tips back her head and drinks it down. there's the immediate grimace at the idea of what she's doing almost before the stuff's even in her mouth, but down it goes all the same.
perhaps drinking the blood she's been offered shouldn't be the immediate response to what's happening here. isn't infection passed in blood? doesn't blood work most of the magical transformations in the darker fairytales?
but Caroline has been trying to help. she trusts her enough not to think it a trick, not to overthink it. so, for the both of them, the blood goes swallowed. ]
no subject
(don't die today, laura, or you'll wake up craving it too.)
but as laura downs the shot like it's no more than a thick serving of cheap whiskey, the blood does its work. it stitches up laura's hand, sweeps away open wounds and realigns bones, surging immortality through the woman's body with near-magical speeds. in its wake, the scent of blood fades out, and caroline breathes a sigh of relief.
she might be like a shark, triggered by the possibility of a feed, but she doesn't want to be. there's relief in the passing of the desire if it keeps her friend safe. ]
Your hand looks better.
[ does her face?? ]