……wanna be bullied by the BakuSquad soooo badly…..
They just push you around so much, disguise it as a little teasing and fun, even though you cry and whine for them to leave you alone. It’s apart of the game, they always tell you once they’ve cornered you into empty rooms, that’s the whole point of playing with such a pretty thing like you.
And you think Mina is better, doesn’t associate herself with those stupid assholes, that you can find comfort in a, hopefully, female friend. But she’s just as icky, as slimy as the rest. She asks you to join her, come spar with her so she can perfect this one move she’s been trying, only for all four boys to already be there in the empty gym.
They all push you around, stand over you and laugh when you sit there and cry, Mina pinching your cheeks when you blubber up to her that you thought she was your friend.
Friends give each other favors, don’t they? She’ll ask you, already slipping her leggings down, already pushing you flat on your back, already stuffing her cunt in your face.
Friends offer themselves up, because they always want everyone around them to feel good, don't they? You hear her ask when you're pushed on your knees and there are too many fingers stuffing your cunt. When there's a weighty cock slapping at your cheeks, a hand squeezing at your face until your mouth drops open. When she comes around and shows you the right way to take a cock down your throat, before she's shoving it down yours next.
Friends like to get used as toys, don't they? She asks you as she sits back to play with her cunt while watching you get used and tugged and manhandled. Like some doll that too rough boys play with and fight over, pulling you and your mouth and your hole every which way they can. You can hear Kirishima and Denki fighting over who gets to fuck your ass first, Sero telling them to just double stuff you as he lazily fucks your mouth, Bakugou snarling from under you that its technically gonna be a triple stuff.
Friends take it all, don't they? She whispers to you, cheek to cheek, as she holds your mouth open to catch the sticky white all the boys shoot on your face. She grins when you nod enthusiastically, attitude turned around and adjusted when you realize that she's right, that she only has your best interest at heart, that this is truly what friends are for.
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ok but can we talk for a second about druvis and vertin and their relationship. i think it is SO interesting how she is the person to take charge of what's happening in the foundation and i've heard some people say it comes kind of out of nowhere but i do NOT agree. druvis is in my opinion The Most Helpful Character during the entire chicago arc. not the most emotionally impactful or even the most directly connected but the most *helpful*. she gives vertin the invitation for the walden, a silent approval of whatever she's here to do, functionally giving her her blessing. she helps keep schneider alive and helps vertin find her albeit largely indirectly. she has clearly approved of what she's known of the timekeeper's plan from the second she met her, and her approval grows when vertin does several things that make her view her even more favorably. everything vertin says when she's talking to the manus while druvis is present is earning her more approval from druvis, because druvis LIKES her, and honestly probably sees something in her that she's still not ready to address in herself.
and THEN the whole thing in chapter 4 happens. and this is where druvis kicks that vision of what vertin could be into play. druvis sees her as a *leader*, more than arcana or forget me not and more than constantine. i find it hard to believe she ever really LIKED working with manus vindictae - i think for a while it might've been mutually beneficial, and as we see at the end of ch2 there's some evidence that forget me not has kind of been poking at the trauma she has over what happened to her family and estate, trying to push her buttons to motivate her to do what he says. i don't think she ever really liked him, and she probably barely knew arcana, but if her response to what happens between her and vertin is any indication, druvis doesn't like her either. and she sure as hell doesn't like constantine even before their face to face meeting - she's trying to massively restrict the freedom of not just druvis but everyone traveling with vertin, and druvis does not like the idea of being forced into a certain course of action and can't stand being pushed to do things a certain way (a major point of trauma from her!). the face to face meeting only exacerbates this, and this is where - with dr z's help - she formulates a plan to force the issue of the foundation giving them what they want. what vertin wants.
and the reason she is following vertin is, again, because she sees her as a leader. vertin's job description doesn't really have anything to do with leadership, it's all record keeping. but we know from canon that she's recruited *63* arcanists to the foundation personally, apparently a very high number, and we see in chapter 3 that she is great at mobilizing and motivating people to do what she thinks needs to be done. however, i wouldn't call her manipulative or bossy - she's clearly depicted as being willing to let anybody drop out of what she's orchestrating at any time (see: matilda not wanting to be a part of the breakaway plan), and she encourages people to speak their minds about her plans and solicits their input and opinions.
all of this culminates in the breakaway, though. and i think that causes vertin to lose some of her personal view of herself as a leader, as someone inspiring. she takes her timekeeper duties very seriously, even if she's not exactly recording *major historical events* (see: stories from random people she meets, the photo wall). but that job has removed her from a position of much leadership - the first person it seems like she's had much power over in a while is sonetto when she's appointed as her assistant, and that's not really *power*. so when the chicago thing rolls around, vertin is still very much in a position of not viewing herself as a leader or as someone who is capable of taking care of other people.
druvis doesn't care. she sees it. she makes a very clear mental note of it. and everything she does from that point onward is testing vertin's decision making, studying her thought process, and observing how she functions under duress. and when she's satisfied with that? she sits right next to vertin at the dinner, cementing herself as an ally to the same representative degree as *sonetto*, who has known her her whole life and is deeply loyal. but sonetto is loyal to the foundation still, and druvis is Not. so when druvis makes the decision to go with vertin, she does so while internally establishing that she will not be working for the foundation, she will be working for *her leader*.
because whether vertin realizes it or not she has a magnetic effect on people. she draws allies and agreement wherever she goes, because she is trustworthy, capable, and *kind*, and she cares about her allies as much as or more than she cares about the specifics of her ideas and goals. and druvis is maybe the first person to notice that in a while.
except constantine! and that's why she opposes her. constantine knows vertin is drawing support, and she tries to keep that support away from her so she can't... well, we don't know yet. but it's pretty clear that the foundation is also not a clear record "good guy" in the story, and there's more to their mission than is explicitly stated. constantine actively demoralizes druvis, referring to her by her last name and treating her like she's already her lesser, her *employee*, and then goes so far as to tell dr z that she doesn't like being called that. it's all a power play. that's all constantine ever does. but druvis is the first person since vertin to actively stand up to her (alongside dr z but in a very different way). and she's doing it *because of vertin*.
this is two revolutions in four years for the foundation. and both of them, directly or indirectly, have been led by vertin. just because she doesn't see it happen doesn't mean she isn't doing just what she did before - trying to put power in the hands of the people instead of some overarching ruling body. first it was the kids in chapter 3, and now it's the arcanists she's recruited since becoming the timekeeper. she's making big waves, and it's starting to look like those waves are a shifting tide.
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I love Steph's origin as told in the Secret Origins 80 page giant- I just overall think it strengthens her character by giving her a lot of pathos and adding to her heroism (which isn't something writers were focused on in her actual intro in detective comics #647 since she was just meant to act as a plot device back then) BUT there is one tiny detail in it i will begrudge, and that is the portrayal of her having a minor love at first sight moment for tim
Secret origins 80 page giant, ID in alt
(or well, technically this was their second meeting in that story (the brick was the first) so...love at second sight?)
Mostly because Stephanie showed no interest in her introduction and only showed romantic feelings towards Tim AFTER this moment here:
Robin (1993) #4, ID in alt
Straight up the progression here goes:
The adventure in 'tec where they first meet -> Tim investigating the same crime scene as Steph -> she beats him up not knowing it's him at first, apologizes but says he shouldn't have scared her -> he remembers her/the moniker she goes by -> they talk about plot for a few pages -> Stephanie starts flirting
Robin (1993) #4, ID in alt
Which...is so fascinating to me and says so much about Stephanie. She highlights the fact that Tim "remembered" her. Like. Steph. Girl. This is our bar? It's sweet but kind of speaks to how much Stephanie is ignored at home/how little and sporadically she's shown interacting with her peers (and rarely ever the same kids twice). Her idea of peak romance is just...being on someone's mind even when you're not there.
Kind of also adds layers to Steph's proclivity towards jealousy later on, a manifestation of her insecurity and loneliness (though don't get it twisted, she's not written this way bc Dixon and co think it's an interesting character flaw, they wrote it bc they think it's an inherent character flaw of (particularly young) women/girls, which is very apparent in how he approaches Ariana's character as well from what I've read)
Also the fact that Steph becomes so smitten for Tim almost immediately after this is (a few issues later she aggressively flirts with him during AN ACTIVE HOSTAGE SITUATION. WHERE SHE'S THE HOSTAGE) again is kind of a mixture of kind of funny and sad. One boy is nice to her once and she's fully ready to wife him. Girl you are deranged (affectionate) (concerned)
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