Stacia, Nothing-to-See-Here (
credit_not_blame) wrote in
nightlogs2023-12-28 07:15 pm
Entry tags:
Comfort In; Dump Out
Who: Stacia and Dan
What: Giving and receiving emotional support while grappling with trauma.
Where: Dan's room at the Pole
When: Not too long after Halloween, specifically after Dan and Stacia's encounters with Elle.
Warnings/Notes: Discussion of trauma and dismemberment
Stacia's nerves are jangling like a box of silverware being thrown down a flight of stairs. She keeps grinding her teeth and flexing her fingers and she wants to bite something over and over again until it stops moving. She's broken into a sprint several times, in her shoes, in her bare feet, and with paws; but none of those have helped her shake this feeling. Though to be fair, she hadn't expected it to help. She'd tried to run from the trauma when it happened and she hadn't been able to do it then either. Because she hadn't had -- no, shut up, shut up, shut up! Brain! Shut up!
Yeah, this isn't something she's going to be able to shake on her own. She's not a creature who finds comfort in being solitary. This situation calls for cuddles.
It doesn't take her long to reach Dan's room after she's reached that conclusion. She hopes he's awake, and not engaged in any canoodling. She'd feel bad for waking him up, or cock-blocking him.
What: Giving and receiving emotional support while grappling with trauma.
Where: Dan's room at the Pole
When: Not too long after Halloween, specifically after Dan and Stacia's encounters with Elle.
Warnings/Notes: Discussion of trauma and dismemberment
Stacia's nerves are jangling like a box of silverware being thrown down a flight of stairs. She keeps grinding her teeth and flexing her fingers and she wants to bite something over and over again until it stops moving. She's broken into a sprint several times, in her shoes, in her bare feet, and with paws; but none of those have helped her shake this feeling. Though to be fair, she hadn't expected it to help. She'd tried to run from the trauma when it happened and she hadn't been able to do it then either. Because she hadn't had -- no, shut up, shut up, shut up! Brain! Shut up!
Yeah, this isn't something she's going to be able to shake on her own. She's not a creature who finds comfort in being solitary. This situation calls for cuddles.
It doesn't take her long to reach Dan's room after she's reached that conclusion. She hopes he's awake, and not engaged in any canoodling. She'd feel bad for waking him up, or cock-blocking him.

no subject
"Alright, well, do the werewolves in your world have their own version of Rat Screw? I can teach you what the ones in mine have." Once they're playing cards, he'll ask if she wants to talk about it.
no subject
"If there's a werewolf-specific Rat Screw in my world, no one has told me about it and I shall be cross with them," she says grandly, settling onto the edge of the bed. Though she pets the rat shifters have a version of it. "Show me, show me."
no subject
"Alright, the goal is the same as the usual, getting all the cards for yourself. We each lay down one card at a time, alternating, and if you see certain patterns you slap and claim the cards in the pile. You can claim on any chain of seven and four, since the moon cycles every twenty-eight days - so seven and seven, seven and four, four and four, four and seven - and if you slap without one of those pairs you give your opponent seven out of your hand. If you ain't got at least seven in your hand you lose by default."
Dan grins, laying out the first card on the bed, a jack of hearts, Dan's personal favorite card. "The secret goal is to break each other's fingers."
He waggles his ring finger on his left hand, which sits just a little off-angle under his wedding ring. "That's how this finger got fucked up."
no subject
Maybe she should get him to teach her to shuffle cards later. It's looks cool, and it's probably good for sleight-of-hand tricks -- you know, for the times when magic bullshit just doesn't cut it.
She pulls her pile closer and flips the top card on top of Dan's jack: three of diamonds.
"I've never actually played a lot of card games," she says. "Mostly because of the willing-to-break-fingers thing. Even before I found out I was a werewolf, I was competitive."
no subject
"I ain't never been competitive. Used to throw the game all the time when I would play with my siblings so the younger ones got to win a few." He doesn't usually talk about his family, not because he doesn't trust other people with knowing about his background, but because talking about it is hard - he feels like he's burdening Stacia. He feels like because he can't move past them that he's plunking their memory down right in front of Stacia like a hurdle, like an obstacle to slow her down too. He regrets it as soon as he says it. "Probably I'd benefit from a little bit of your competitive spirit, but we'll see how this goes."
They're on the bed, so it'll be harder to break each others' hands.
no subject
"I think Nicky and Mila threw a lot of games for me when I was little, too," she says, picking up that nugget of information about Dan and squirreling it away for later reference. Not that it's particularly surprising, given what she knows about him, but she also knows that he doesn't usually talk about his family at all. So it counts as a treasure and she's keeping it. "They were a lot older than me, so any games that I would have been able to play would have been really easy for them. And even as competitive as I am, it's not really fun to win things unless there's a chance you could lose, you know?"
She flips a ten of clubs over into the pile.
no subject
"You got to have the appearance of stakes, if nothing else. But when I play with younger folks my stakes are whether they're enjoying themselves, not whether I'm winning."
Dan flips another card onto the pile as he talks, a four of clubs. He already knows where his seven of diamonds is, having sneaked a look at the edge of the card while he was shuffling, and he floats it up to the top of his deck with an subtle and lightning-fast cut of the deck, and so when his turn comes around again he's able to slap and take the pile almost as soon as he plays it.
"Did you catch how I did that?"
no subject
"No, I did not," she says. "I was caught up in the conversation. Show me again."
no subject
"Alright, I did three things here. First, I cheated my cards when I shuffled so I could scan for the next card I wanted." He shows her how he shuffled, then slows it down so she can see how he peeked. "Then I floated it to the top."
He cuts the deck and holds it out to her.
"Pick a card, any card."
no subject
She watches avidly as he shows her the shuffling trick, then selects a card, trying to cheat a peek at it the same way he just showed her.
no subject
He watches her attempt to recreate his trick.
"Almost. I caught you doing that." He winks. "It's rough when you're talking to folks, because most folks want to keep eye contact. You got to choose the right moment in the conversation where they naturally break eye contact to take a peek by following when their gaze starts to drift. You're going to be lethal at this once you get the hang of it."
no subject
She preens under his praise, though she doesn't let it distract her from the actual advice. Praise is nice, advice is useful (and, when adequately applied, results in More Praise).
"Okay, yeah, I follow that," she says. "I'll have to remember not to get competitive-brained and stare a hole through their eyeballs while I'm waiting for them to look away."
Her smile softens a bit. "Thanks Dan, this has really helped. I feel a lot better."
no subject
If he does it first, it stings less when others do it. Time-honored technique for the inadequate.
He smiles back, accepting her gratitude without words before going: "well, what's stopping you? Go get some eyeliner."
no subject
She flashes him a grin and hops off of the bed. "Be right back!" she calls over her shoulder as she dashes off to collect her box-of-makeup-for-other-people.
no subject
Dan waits for her patiently, a smile playing at the corners of his mouth, sitting on the bed with his chin turned up expectantly so Stacia can work some magic.
no subject
"So, there's several different ways to do eyeliner," she begins. "I'm going to start you off on the one I think is the hardest to mess up, which is eye shadow as liner." She reaches into the box and pulls out an eye shadow palette and the Brush Containment Case, which is zippered and bright pink with a black damask pattern. "You can do this with the sponge-tip applicator that comes with a lot of eye makeup palettes, but I prefer brushes because I don't trust sponges near my eyes long-term. Sponges are harder to clean, and I've never heard of an eye-infection that makes you look cute or cool."
She gestures with the brush case for emphasis. If Dan boogers up his eyes using the skills she taught him, she will be sad at him. Don't even try her, Sagittarius. She then drops the case and flicks open the palette, revealing an array of jewel tone colors.
"Now the basic starting points for this sort of thing are black or brown, but we're doing this for art and fun reasons. Pick a color, any color!"
no subject
He grins enough to show that missing tooth. He isn't broke anymore. Bunny finds him veins of gold and rare orchids to fence, and now Dan has some deeply underutilized health insurance. He doesn't want to start seeing healthcare providers regularly, and having grown up without ever setting foot in a clinic, hospital or doctor's office, he really has no idea what sort of benefits they could offer him, so he doesn't go. He doesn't even really consider it.
"These two." He points to a hot pink and a cherry red, figuring that they'll contrast with his blue eyes and that Stacia will find a way to work those warm colors without making it look like he's got a rash.
no subject
"We're going to start with your upper lid, so go ahead and pick one of those two colors." She'd recommend the red, but this isn't about the colors right now, it's about the technique. "For this, you're going to need either a flat angled brush--" she pulls one out of her kit, "--or just a regular flat detail brush. Most people recommend the angle, I personally use the flat detail brush; it's really just a matter of taste."
She holds the two brushes out for him to pick one.