Becoming monsters is the creation of AiLovesToGrow, setting used with permission
This idea comes from Amethyst Dragonfly.
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Chapter 7: Laying Foundations
It was a fine Sunday morning. The sun was shining, children were playing in the park, and a young couple was having one of their first arguments while sitting on the bench.
"Justin, I JUST recovered! Please, I'm tired like you wouldn't believe, and can't regulate my form as efficiently as normal. I need time!" The blue woman was in light athletic wear, the late summer heat contributing to the light coat of sweat she'd picked up jogging here... and to the tempers that were slightly flaring.
Justin, for his part, was in compounding piles of misery. His coat of sweat was anything but light; despite the fact that he had been training himself and taking care of himself more the past weeks, his own jogging shorts and tee shirt looked more like he'd swam to this park bench. Even through his physical pain and fatigue, though, his mental one was worse. "I don't think it's my choice, Abbey. I'd be perfectly fine with what we've got! Seeing you hurt is... bad. It's just getting harder every day. Every random thought is going to that coin, and I'm having to catch myself twice a day from accidentally saying the words. What's the longest you've ever gone with someone holding it without making a Wish?"
"A week, tops." Her eyebrows furrowed hard. "Everyone always has something they want, and they take it out on me."
Those words stung, hard. "That's not fair, and you know it. Come on, after all of this, that's where your head goes?"
"I'm not the one talking about making another Wish. It royally sucks, Justin! It sucks being stuck bound to that thing! Never knowing when the person holding it is going to decide to impose their whims on reality." There were tears streaming from her eyes, mingling with the sweat on her face.
Justin couldn't get words out for a couple of moments, and so looked out at the playground they were near. The hospital was nearby, but there had been a monster attack here recently. Scorch marks decorated the ground where fire and lightning had danced. A strip of grass was cordoned off with a sign talking about possible magical contaminants in the vines that had sprouted there. And yet, the children still played. Two Beastfolk kids, a Rabbit and a Deer, were jumping around the playground equipment while a couple of long-suffering Human parents watched from a different bench.
It felt a lot like the inside of his head, really. Here he was, with his favorite person on Earth, enjoying the simple pleasure of her company... while also hurting in body and mind. The wreckage of what he'd gone through was still just out there, the strain of what was coming impossible to ignore. "Trust me, Abbey, I don't
want
to make one. The pressure is just... intense. Every abrasive customer I get, every news story, every book I read for class. All of them, every time, I have to bite my tongue so that I don't accidentally say the words to make something happen." He was hunched over, staring at the ground. "I really didn't want this to turn into our first fight. It's just too big. I... I'm not sure I can handle it. Not to make it sound like less than it is, these Wishes are the biggest exam of my life. No take backs or do-overs, and no way to know if I'm even studying the right materials. I could hardly focus on my homework yesterday, even with all you've been doing to help me."
"Then don't face it alone! You don't have to do that, Justin! Why didn't you tell me sooner?"
"I thought I'd be strong enough to be able to ignore it. I'm not, and it took me way too long to figure it out." He was breathing hard again, this time entirely unrelated to the jog. "I'm sorry, Abs, but I don't think I can hold out much longer."
"How long?" She found that she liked that nickname better than "Dee," at least.
"With how I'm going? Another day or two, tops, if we want to be safe... and I do. Past that and it's too likely to just come out of me."
It was her turn to sigh. "Okay, then. I know I can't breach your free will outside of a Wish, so I can't just remove the temptation... I could give you some ideas, maybe? You could... MMMPH!" Abbey's eyes shot open as her lips slammed shut. As hard as she fought, she could not force a single further word out of her mouth. With a frustrated look on her face, she took a deep breath. Her lips parted again. "Well, never mind that. Looks like it would be cheating."
Justin was more than slightly off-guard. "That didn't come up at all in anything I read. Like... just the opposite. A ton of Genies in the stories delighted in trying to convince people to make Wishes against their best wishes."
"That's the thing, I think this is a bit different. I can't make Wishes for myself. Even if I find an outside source of them, I just can't. Maybe the whole thing thought I was going to talk you into making a wish that I wanted? I don't know, it just isn't something that's ever come up." Abbey was joining Justin in frustration and misery. There were no good things in this conversation, no silver linings. She stood. "Come on, we need to get back before it heats up much more. I'll be fine, but I don't want you getting dehydrated."
She started jogging. Justin had to scramble a bit to catch up, since he was starting from seated, but got there before too long. A dozen minutes later, and the pair made it to the bus stop they came on. The one that served the Guild Hall, again, since the ones riding it wouldn't mind the smell of sweat. Their silence on the way back was perhaps a bit more strained than before, but despite everything the two still leaned on each other, both physically and literally. After all, they were both already covered in sweat, so it wasn't like either would be getting the other dirty.
Get home, get cleaned up, get changed. Part of the now-normal routine for those days together. He did more homework, she got to relax a bit. Maybe watch the Blues Brothers with an earbud in while calling out random study questions. Brittany had been oddly silent outside of work, recently. Abbey hardly saw her these days, and really didn't have other friends in the area (Justin excluded, but he was a recent development). Some might think it would be boring doing so little, but they'd be missing the point.
Despite the tension this time around? She felt better together with Justin than apart. These particular feelings were new to her, though. Even compared to the past weeks, they were new. As she distracted herself by watching a couple of guys on a mission, a small and secret part of her was interrogating herself.