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#dark hannibal lecter
theredofoctober · 10 months
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MANNA CHAPTER 2: SUPPER
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Dark!Hannibal Lecter x Reader x Dark!Will Graham fic, TW for eating disorders, noncon, abuse, drugging, mild Daddy kink (it'll all make sense).
This chapter is chronologically 2nd in the series.
Keep reading after the cut
Blood in your mouth; you've bitten your inner cheek in your sedative state, auto-cannibalism under the eye of vague attendants. Both are male, featureless, moth-men with closed wings.
You glance from one to the other, grasping foolishly at memory, not yet finding its edges.
"Dad?"
The figure on the left ejects an awkward laugh.
"Which one of us is that again?"
"A moment, Will," says the other man, and through the ether of sleep you see his face, the etching of an aesthete, that which you have seen before.
Hannibal. Dr. Lecter. An enemy in the seat of a saviour.
"Give her time to wake," he says, "and to acclimatise to her environment."
"What's going on?" you ask, rubbing your hands across your face in an effort to rouse yourself. "Where am I right now?"
"You don't remember what happened?" asks Hannibal, his absence of brows arched. "You are in my home, where you will be staying for the foreseeable future, under my care. My colleague, Will Graham, will be assisting me in looking after you. I hope that while you are unhappy with your situation, you will be cordial to him."
A tableau— Hannibal trapping you against the door, your knee bruising his male sensitivity, intimate as newlyweds in the clinch of your rash violence—slows your thoughts with its artistry.
You remain too sluggish, yet, to fear Dr. Lecter as you did in his office. Every feeling seems performed by some spirit in your place, a girl who died here before you, leaving a breath of her sorrows in the walls.
"Are you a doctor?" you ask the man named Will Graham.
He blinks at you as though perturbed by the question.
"No," he says, shortly. "I lecture in criminal profiling for the FBI. Occasionally, I step in as a special agent on crime scenes. I'm here to offer my insights on your case, I guess. Haven't decided quite what they are, yet."
You sit up, frowning.
"But I'm not a murderer."
Will smiles, the curl of his mouth quite unpleasant.
"I know. Doesn't mean I can't get inside your head, though."
He is unfriendly, and oddly furtive, his expression dancing between moral objection and a grudging interest in you. Segments of his conversation with Hannibal pluck at you delicately: he is present only under duress, any curiosity a provocation on Dr. Lecter's part.
You glimpse an avenue for escape through the younger man's sensitivity.
"So... you're a cop?" you ask, carefully.
Will coughs out a laugh.
"Not exactly. Why, worried I'll arrest you?"
"No, but you should arrest Dr. Lecter."
Hannibal delivers you an amused look.
"I have no concerns with the legalities of your treatment. Will would not incriminate himself in any act that would be to your detriment."
You worry your lower lip with your teeth, wondering how much of the truth Will Graham knows.
"So... am I in trouble?"
"Why would you be?" Will enquires, but the question is directed at Hannibal, who coolly answers.
"She assaulted me in her efforts to leave my office."
You stiffen as Will's expression clouds with a new darkness.
"Are you hurt?"
"Fortunately not. I could have been, but I was prepared for resistance. A poor start to our relationship, nonetheless. I think an apology is in order."
Threat is inevitable in that statement; you look for windows, doors, any potential exit, knowing well that you cannot move fast enough to pass your jailers without intervention.
Will says your name, the suddenness throwing you like the recoil of a gun.
"Apologise to Dr. Lecter."
"She was frightened, Will," says Hannibal, generously. "Like a stray animal unused to human contact, she cannot help but bite in the terror that we mean her harm."
Yet he does mean you harm, means to play with you as an orca does a seal it kills, an inversion of his own metaphor.
Will shakes himself, turning from you in reluctance to meet your gaze.
"You said she has to learn," he says, through gritted teeth. "We need to reinforce boundaries with her. So either she apologises, or we have to punish her. That's the way this works, right?"
Fear opens your lethargy with a surgeon's precision.
"Punish?" you cry. "What are you talking about?"
Ignoring your interjection, Dr. Lecter says, "You are correct, Will. For certain plants, a framework is needed for them to grow. What trellis must we build to guide our clematis to its most majestic heights?"
Will regards his friend thoughtfully.
"What's your suggestion?"
"There are two options that occur to me," says Hannibal, watching as you claw yourself against the headboard with both hands. "The first is that we begin the initial step of her recovery with a hearty meal. I was informed by her family that she has not eaten since yesterday. It is not too late for me to prepare dinner. If she will not eat, then I have the means to encourage her to do so."
Dr. Lecter turns aside, allowing you to glimpse a feeding tube posed gracefully on a tabletop. You have long feared this tool, which even previous therapists have raised as a possibility for you, should you not end this starving strike. Never had you pictured a day this horror would find its becoming.
Terror licks at you as readily as a flame.
Starting forward, you grip Will by the wrist, unhinged in your desperation.
"Don't let him do that to me."
Will looks down at your hand with displeasure, yet he doesn't attempt to remove it, enduring your touch with grimacing obligation.
"And the other option, Dr Lecter?" he asks, thinly. "It's been a long day, and I don't know if I have the energy to step in as orderly to a violent patient without preparation."
"I am sure that you would handle her proficiently," says Dr. Lecter. "But perhaps there is another method we can consider, first."
He takes Will aside and murmurs to him; the fragments you discern sound as ambiguous as the language used aloud.
The younger man takes on a cornered look.
"I... can't do that," he protests, his posture sharp with discomfort. "That could open up a whole host of new problems for her."
"Or it could impress upon her the necessity to listen to her guardians," says Hannibal. "I will join you, if it will persuade you."
"Doesn't that go against the confines of your role?"
Dr. Lecter smirks, his fine-jawed features made truly handsome.
"I will enact discipline, also. But it will not be the first tool that I apply."
The two men approach the bed together, one on either side of you, apparently united in their purpose.
"What are you doing?" you cry, although by now you've a sense of it. "Stay away from me!"
"These are the conquences of resistance, little one," says Hannibal, closing the space between you. "From now on, I suggest that you comply."
You scramble backwards only to come up against Will Graham, his arms a cuff around you.
"Don't struggle," he snaps. "I don't want to hurt you any more than I have to."
"No! No!"
Child-like, you find yourself reduced to simple denial, fear snatching the very language from you. You are all trembling fragility beneath Will as he shoves you, face down, on the bed; you turn your head back to look at him, glimpsing a flash of clenched teeth, eyes with a bear's indifferent hunger, something sickly, and soulful underneath.
You think, this man is not well, then bark out a startled scream as he forces your head frontwise, a fisherman's rough hand on your scalp, oppressing you in its unthinking violence.
"Face him," Will barks, pushing you for emphasis. "He's the one you injured."
You comply, feeling on the very cusp of death.
The man on your back manoeuvres you on all fours to his liking, the stave of his hard want crushed against his jeans. His comrade holds your arms down, though you could not move them at the devil's request; stillness is your ally, submission where a fight would cut your throat.
Hannibal looks at you with the cruel serenity of an angel, in all his justice. He touches your tear-scaled cheek with solace stolen from husbands and fathers; when he tips your face to his, you know what he will take from you, have felt the omen of that kiss.
It is intimate, gentle, kinder than any touch you've known in years. You blink, dismayed by the lust that roots itself from gut to cunt in its tangling wisteria.
"What— why?" you stutter, the feel of his lips on yours a reverberation that long remains.
"A treatment from bygone times," says Hannibal, patiently. "Although widely frowned upon, sex was once implemented to allieve many ailments. I find value in it, still."
"No," you say, aware of Will's arousal at your entrance. "I mean, why did you kiss me? Why would you do that?"
"You ache to be cherished, and so you will be. Alas, it may be many months before you see me as the friend you crave."
"You'll never be my friend," you sneer, and regret the barb as Will thrusts against you, having unbuckled his jeans to free himself to your imprisonment.
There is an arc of sore horror as his cock bolts within, making butchery of you in his taking. Will's arms are either side of you, the bars that cage such a sow; he smells of sweat, and Old Spice, and dog hair, and now of sex. You sob drily as he ruts your vulnerability against the mattress, as he sucks the skin of your neck in his teeth and bites until a ring tattoos your throat.
That mark is a staple of sexual assault, you'd read that somewhere, a sigil of the taker's power.
Limp, you let him use you, fucking you in so harsh and primal rhythm that you can think of nothing but its pattern.
What ill of yours earned this brash causality? Why, of all patients, has Hannibal taken you up as his toy?
"Stay there," Will grumbles, as you arch your back in a spasm of gilded agony. "Don't move."
"I have her," says Hannibal, and he guides you up onto your knees, his chest flat to yours as Will ruins the atrium of his desire. "Teach her what she will endure, if she will not accept our aid."
You cannot stand to be torn apart like this, a beast between your legs, and another touching your breasts and waist as though your partner in a waltz, all courtly chivalry.
"Please, Will," you moan, but he has thrown aside his reason, swept up in this gourmand's pleasure.
"Hurt me the way you hurt Dr. Lecter and you'll really wish you hadn't," he says, and you shake your head in a frantic falsehood.
"I won't. I swear I won't."
Will is fire, and you are ash: he is pain and delight, a conundrum. He puts a hand to your neck, holding your head upright as he fucks you, and growls against your ear sharp threats that sell you to silence.
Hannibal stares at you in fascination. You feel it pour over you like tar, glazing you with the shame of your illness having made you his object.
Dr. Lecter is of an evil Will is not, setting you both before him to observe your every response.
Later, he will write notes about this; the hands that glide your body now will itch for the pen, to lay out all you are on paper, and memorialise your suffering.
Does he truly think that this will help you? You don't believe it.
This night is his experiment, that which he might take apart like a pig's heart to show its working to students of science. Will is Dr. Lecter's pupil, and he is moulding the man to be as he is, and though it is Graham that fucks you, it is Hannibal you hate the most, the God that set this all into motion.
Will's breath flutters at your ear, and he stills, only the part of him within you left flinching to a vicious end. Hannibal steps back from the bedframe, smoothing down his suit of creases with elegant hands. As Will struggles up to join him, you crumple forward, sodden and stammering, a headache starting to beat at your temple, the hangover of Dr. Lecter's drug.
Yet when the younger man places a hand to your jerking back, you accept the touch, wanting even so poor a substitute for love.
"Daddy," you whisper. "I want to go home."
Will jerks away from you, staring at his own hand with abject revulsion.
"What have I done?" he asks, and there is an undercurrent of awe to the words that you do not quite understand.
"You did what you had to," says Dr. Lecter, smoothly. "What was needed."
His colleague shakes his head, his gaze dropping floorwise.
"No. She's seriously ill. She should be in a hospital ward, and I— we—"
"Will."
You cannot stand the fondness with which Hannibal addresses the other man, grooming him to such extremities of evil. He lays a hand on Will's shoulder, and he relaxes into the touch, an unconscious softening of his inate angles.
They stand together as if alone in the room, Dr. Lecter's face almost in the crook of Will Graham's neck.
"She is quelled," he says, quietly. "Tomorrow, she will eat the breakfast I make for her with the memory of this correction, and in time, she will learn to thank you for it. Even to love."
Still, Will lingers in the doorway, watching you wind yourself into the coverlet to nurse the wound of his making.
"Is she going to be alright?" he asks, nervously.
Through sodden lashes, you see Dr. Lecter guide his colleague into the hallway, as a strict father might the mother that coddles an infant that screams to be held.
"Let her sleep," he murmurs. "Her dreams will be woven with our teaching. Soon we shall see what tapestry will be made."
They leave you there, descending into opiate darkness. You slumber, but you do not dream, only lie with your hand over the heat these heathens have struck in what was before a lampless under-earth.
Your hunger follows you down into the castles of sleep, loyal to its creator.
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becomingvecna · 29 days
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bebs-art-gallery · 8 months
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Collected Studies on the Pathology of War Gas Poisoning (1920)
— by Milton C. Winternitz, Robert A. Lambert
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suchawrathfullamb · 6 months
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(credit: @eliosu)
the real reason why we never saw the hypnosis sessions in detail.
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bebx · 7 months
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rocktheholygrail · 4 months
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2x08 || 3x06
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aphroditelovesu · 4 months
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Yandere Hannibal Lecter Headcanons (General)
''Nothing here is vegetarian." — Hannibal Lecter.
❝ 🍽 — lady l: I think it's amazing that my hcs become more and more extensive lol, but you like it, don't you? Hannibal is my newest fixation and I loved writing for him, due to his personality. I hope you like it and forgive me for any mistakes! It's four in the morning here 🤎🤍.
❝tw: obsessive and possessive behavior, cannibalism and murder.
❝🍽pairing: yandere!hannibal lecter x gender neutral!reader.
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Hannibal Lecter is decorous and very polite and he really appreciates that, politeness. He values ​​and is easily offended by people who are rude or who do not have the correct manners, especially at the table. In addition to being a perfectionist analyzer.
He believes that the way people behave at the table directly reflects their education and social status. Hannibal is meticulous in choosing ingredients, preparing meals and presenting dishes. The problem is that his food tends to be human flesh, but Hannibal doesn't consider himself a cannibal, since the victims he chooses are seen as pigs to him.
Hannibal is known for his distinct personality and his appreciation for elegance and refined etiquette. His impeccable education, combined with his exquisite taste, creates an intriguing and contradictory image, due to his serial killer side. He stands out not only for his intellectual abilities and his ability to appreciate high culture but also for his meticulous and artistic approach to his darker pursuits.
You must have his politeness and good manners, that's the least he requires, Hannibal doesn't like rude people and although he won't kill you, he would have to teach you to have good manners. He will be happy to do so, however.
When interacting socially, Hannibal is observant and analytical, evaluating people based on their behavior at the table and in everyday situations. His aversion to rude people puts him in a unique position where he feels compelled to correct these "lapses" in etiquette. The way he corrects these mistakes varies from murder to a class, in this case, that class would be just for you.
You would have to be someone who achieves these Hannibal decorums, or comes close at least, for him to become obsessed with you. He likes polite people and will be happy if you are one of them, but if you are not or don't know the correct manners very well, don't worry, he will help you.
Hannibal is a psychiatrist and is very well aware that his thoughts of you are not ''normal'' or healthy, but he doesn't care. He knows it's morally wrong to do what he does and does it anyway, so what are some dark thoughts about you? But these thoughts quickly become actions he committed in your name.
He will take notes about you and create your psychiatric profile and if there is something ''wrong'', he will offer therapy for you, that is if you were not already his patient. Always very observant and attentive, he will be keeping all the necessary information about you, so that he can use it to catch you later.
If you have problems with your family or friends, Hannibal will take care of it. He doesn't like the idea of ​​someone wanting to hurt you, whether emotionally or physically, and most likely he will kill them one by one and serve them to you. Of course, without your knowledge. He knows you're not ready to know that yet.
Hannibal will be very picky about your food, just as he is about his. If you eat poorly or incorrectly, he will correct it. He enjoys cooking for you and will be adamant about doing so, serving refined recipes and elaborate dishes using fresh ingredients. Hannibal is a bit too controlling.
He is not possessive, but rather obsessive. Hannibal doesn't like it when you get too close to other people, but he will be more uncomfortable if it's someone he has apathy or something against. But he will sort it out. He feels jealous, but he deals with it in his own way, releasing that feeling on other things... Or people.
Hannibal is quite protective of you and will be adamant about keeping you safe. He may try to convince you to live with him or will make regular visits to your home, work or where you study. He will always be around when he gets the chance, just to look out for you.
He will try not to completely succumb to his desires, as Hannibal doesn't like being controlled, and allowing you to have so much power over him makes him more than uncomfortable. At least until he is sure that you will let yourself be completely dominated by him, only then will he feel more comfortable in making his feelings for you clear.
Hannibal Lecter is very intelligent and knows very well how to get rid of evidence that could incriminate him. Besides being a psychopath who doesn't feel remorse or empathy for others, he becomes softer when he's with you. Although his feelings aren't clear or fully understood, he knows he cares about you, enough that he wants you to be his. And you'll be his.
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abominable-space-they · 10 months
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A thing I try to remember about Hannibal Lecter is that when he says god would drop a church on a room full of beloved grandmas and laugh about his abuse of power. What he means is, god would murder a little girl in the cruelest manner imaginable then feed that little girl to her brother. Her brother who was a stange little boy that no one understood. A little boy who had no human connections but that little girl. A little boy who as elder brother was supposed to protect that little girl.
He means he believes god did that, destroyed his sister, his life, future, and universe, not because god works in mysterious ways, but because God works in obviously cruel and capricious ways, because god enjoys the power of destroying the innocent and faithful. He's saying that he has looked at the world, seen the worst and best of humanity, and the only conclusion he could come to was that god thinks hurting his creations is funny.
He has a god complex not because he believes he is a god, not even because he believes he is capable of being as cruel and arbitrary as God.
Hannibal Lecter has a god complex because he believes that a god who would kill a child cruely, and deliver an even more cruel fate on another child for no reason but because he could, does not deserve honoring. He believes that any god that would do such a thing, should not be worshipped, that he should be unseated entirely.
Like Kronos, utterly destroyed for his cruelty to children
He defies god because he believes god should be defied. He worships Will in defiance of god because even as a flawed human who is vicious, vengeful, petty, and mistrusting, even with all his human flaws, Will Graham is more just then god, more reticent to kill then god.
He worships Will Graham as his own personal god of love, death, and war bc he believes Will Graham is more worthy of worship then god.
And that is one hell of a thing
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dirafames · 6 months
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honestly i'm both
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willgrahamscock · 1 year
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HANNIBAL + Text Posts 21/∞
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theredofoctober · 10 months
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MANNA FIC— CHAPTER ONE: PAPRIKA
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Dark!Hannibal Lecter x Reader x Dark!Will Graham fic, TW for eating disorders, noncon, abuse, drugging, mild Daddy kink (it'll all make sense).
Chronologically this is the first chapter in the series.
Keep reading after the cut
Later, when you reflect on your first meeting with Dr. Hannibal Lecter, you will marvel at the Sybilan apprehension that had wreathed the merest detail of that night: the oppressive colours of his office, grey and vermillion from window to wall, the very choice to have you see him at an evening appointment, penning you in by way of the darkness.
Yet, as you sit across from Hannibal in a low leather chair, you contain only a spiteful rancour, one foot jouncing testily as the doctor attempts to extract answers from you beyond a penchant for grudging monosyllables.
“I understand that you have seen therapists in the past,” he says, in a neutral tone.
You stare at the curtains in their dissected oblongs of red and ash, like bloodied teeth against the wall: anything but meet the eyes that seem to have already picked you apart in the mere minutes you have been before him.
“Yeah,” you mutter. “A couple of times. CBT stuff. I hated it. Doesn’t work for me.”
Dr. Lecter offers you a smile so imperceptible that he might not have moved at all.
“Understandable. Cognitive behavioural therapy is a better fit for anxiety and negative thinking— it has its place, but for patients with deeper trauma, their illness may prove too complex for it to be effective. Dialectical behavioural therapy would perhaps be more suitable, in your case.”
Shrugging curtly, you do not ask him to elaborate. There is no therapy in the book that you would warm to; you had set out tonight only to put an end to familial begging, in its absence of dignity.
You resent the nakedness of your secrets before this stranger, before anyone, your suffering made public domain. Like a brow-beaten captive, you are moved to defend your self abuse against all those who seek to extract it from you.
Hannibal watches you with a dry intensity, his gaze rarely straying from your face. He is a lean, polished figure in an impeccable red check suit, dark hair swept back from a face of meticulous and rather interesting beauty.
His brows are low, almost invisible, his eyes small, and as dark as tree flux, the nose—straight, and as debonair as the rest of him—leading down from two furrows that suggest an earnest and curious whimsy.
His air, thus far, has been both tactful and polite, unperturbed by your close-mouthed unwillingness to yield to quizzing in even the most inoffensive line. You should like him, you suppose, yet you have already branded him an enemy.
He is a man; how could you ever be expected to open up to him?
“How long have you struggled with your eating disorder?” asks Hannibal.
You cross your arms over your chest, barring him out, a theological defence against the vampire of such dreaded questioning.
“You’ve read my records. You already know.”
“Certainly, but I would like to hear your experience in your own words. Such documents may represent only the most objective truths, and reveal very little of you, or what you are feeling at any given moment. Besides, they are as fallible as the professionals that create them. If there are any inaccuracies, your answers will bring them to light.”
The implication that you may share, with him, an honesty that you have refused previous therapists bears a quiet arrogance that might have won you over, were you not set so resolutely in your hatred.
“Fine,” you say. “I’ve had it since I was a kid.”
‘IT’; the word may as well be in baleful capitals, the introduction to some eponymous beast. You will give your ailment no other name aloud, have never done so, except in clandestine internet entry, forcing the thorn further beneath the nail.
Dr. Lecter digests your simple answer, finding flavour in its enigma.
“You have no intentions of recovery without intervention. What served you in your formative years, you will continue to savour.”
“I don’t think I’ll ever get better,” you retort. “It’ll always be there, so what’s the point?”
The question had shaken previous professionals into stumbling objection; not so Hannibal Lecter, whose ambiguous calm nevertheless bears the same imperceptible threat as the night.
“Would you say the same to an alcoholic?” he asks. “Many live out their lives through a succession of losses and victories, and likewise, many emerge fulfilled and content in having struck out on the path of self-betterment. Yet, by your logic, you would condemn them all in their relationship to illness.”
“I wouldn’t do that,” you object; your foot bounces so violently over the arm of the chair that Hannibal glances at it, his focus unbalanced by the distraction. “It’s different for me, okay?”
“In what regard? What prevents you from regarding your own struggles with the same grace?”
“It’s... it's not the same. I don't want to talk about it.”
Panic makes you feel almost buoyant in the room, a kite with your string cut, to be devoured by the wind.
“You have not yet reached the point that recovery seems possible, or even desirable to you,” says Hannibal, across your distress. “That is quite normal. For many individuals with eating disorders, recovery can take up to ten years to achieve— a long and difficult road, yet while there is no permanent cure, there is still reward in that destination.”
This you have heard before, in other iterations; he loses you a little, a mistake that he seems to catch in your reply.
“You don’t understand.”
“If you mean that I cannot directly empathise, that is true,” says Dr. Lecter. “I do not share your struggles. Food is a great pleasure to me. Still, I comprehend the crux of your illness— that you once seized a handhold in a rock when you were falling, and still refuse to let it go when there is earth to hold you.”
You continue to jiggle your shoe in a pattern of agitation.
“You’ll never be able to hold me.”
Hannibal leans forward and places a hand upon your foot, guiding it soundly still again.
“That remains to be seen.”
Your breath peters in your throat. It apalls you that he has touched you without asking, that his hand—so warm through the leather of your sneaker—makes you imagine it within the wet turncoat of your cunt.
Suddenly you’re standing from your seat without acknowledging the motion that led you there, like a frame scratched from an old tape.
“I’m leaving,” you say, abruptly. “I’m sorry. This just isn’t for me.”
Hannibal looks up at you, and the still, smooth planes of his features alarm you in their lack of urgency.
“Please,” he says. “Sit down. You will not be leaving here today.”
He is so slim and unassuming in his tailored suit that you feel yourself the red-capped girl of fairy tale, entering an elder’s cabin to the appetites of a wolf.
“What are you talking about?” you whisper.
Dr. Lecter leans forward, speaking with a low and graceful regret.
“I must inform you that your parents have signed a written agreement for you to enter inpatient care, overseen by myself and a colleague.”
Betrayal breaks across you in a death bed sweat: how could they? What have they done?
“No!” you say. “You're lying.”
Dr. Lecter pats a folder resting on the arm of his chair.
“I would be willing to show you the paperwork, if you insist upon it.”
“I don’t care,” you say, your voice a shrill of indignation. “They can’t just send me away without my permission! It’s illegal!”
“As guardians to a vulnerable adult, it is entirely so.”
You don’t believe him, although your parents evidently did, pressed by their earnest desperation to reverse the agonies of time.
“Whatever,” you say, coldly. “I’m not staying.”
Hannibal tilts his head at an angle of frosty amusement, and suddenly you grasp that this is no ordinary intervention, but incarceration, for reasons yet unknown.
Terror snarls through you like thunder, and you run for the door, wrenching at the handle to find it locked against you.
“What the fuck?” you cry, though you had known in your most basic, animal senses that this man—this room—would be your undoing.
Dr. Lecter has gotten up from his seat and is striding towards you, seizing your arms at the wrists, as firmly as a father; you turn your head in a feral reflex and attempt to bite him, stalled by the wool of his jacket in your teeth. He turns your writhing figure towards him, your skirt bunched up to your waist in the struggle, his palm a blacksmith’s tool on your bare skin, a scarring heat.
His expression is scarcely altered by the struggle, his breathing slow, even. You are no threat to him; he has surely restrained patients like this before, a necessary training.
You will not go quietly, as perhaps others have, before you. You bring your knee into his groin until you hear him grunt in the desired pain, but he does not lose his grip upon you, only drives you back against the door, his eyes churning with a wild satisfaction.
“You will learn not to disobey, little one,” he says, and before you can absorb the threat there is a needle at your neck, and chemical night.
You half-wake some hours later to the voices of two men, one of them Hannibal, the other unfamiliar, speaking in a curt and cautious rhythm.
“This is her?” asks the unknown man— through fluttering eyelids you see him, all rumpled hair and scowling good looks, an image from some obscure Brontë novel. “The patient you talked about on the phone? What have you given her? She looks out of it.”
“A mild sedative,” Hannibal replies, “with some additional compounds. It’s alright, Will. She will revive soon, likely in a confused state. This will pass.”
Will hangs back, his mouth an angle of uncertainty.
“Forgive me, Dr. Lecter, but I’m a little confused as to what I’m doing here.”
“Your role will be paramount to the healing process,” says Hannibal, touching a hand to his colleague’s flannel sleeve with familiar tenderness. “Together, we will each be whatever our subject requires from one moment to the next. A healer, a father, a lover, a friend—”
“All while crossing the boundaries of what could be considered valid treatment into an inappropriate relationship,” Will cuts in, sharply. “Surely that’s only going to make things worse.”
Dr. Lecter approaches you, adjusting a pillow behind your head; you are too out of it to object, unsure whether it is a chair or a bed you occupy in your prone state.
“What is appropriate is not always the most effective method of healing,” says Hannibal. “This patient requires complex support. Decisions to be made for her that other professionals would not be comfortable making.”
Will shakes his head, grimly amused.
“And you are.”
“Certainly. Over the years I have seen results from the most unorthodox approaches. I have an interest in observing how she will respond to mine.”
You watch the two men exchange glances, and blearily wonder if they are merely friends, or something more.
“Dr. Lecter, I have no idea how to connect with her,” says Will. “And frankly the idea of trying isn’t something I’m particularly enthusiastic about.”
“Your discinclination to be involved may work to her benefit,” says Hannibal, smoothly. “While my part is to provide gentle guidance and compassion, you will offer the firm hand required to leash the chaos of her disturbed mind and behaviours.”
Will scoffs in disbelief.
“The good cop, bad cop routine? That seems a little obvious for you, doctor.”
“And yet it may be precisely what she craves. Stability. Discipline.”
At this, there is a certain change in the air of the room; one day, you will know it as hunger, so many appetites contained between two men.
“Well, which one is going to come first?” asks Will, relenting. “Stability, or discipline?”
“When she is fully awake, we will know," say Hannibal. "And we will deliver it.”
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the-soulofdevil · 1 year
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Hello, I have this request, the reader is Hannibals Pet, one day when Hannibal is away to get food, the reader escapes. The reader hurries through the woods but runs into Hannibal, they get punished hard, they’ve been a bad bad pet.
With pet play, Hannibal ( addresses the reader as a cat) rough sex, humiliation, anal ( if comfortable), crying kink, he suffocates the reader.
And I just realized this concept would also be very fitting for Will, but he would call the reader puppy.
Sorry for making you wait so long dear anon, I hope you enjoy the request.
HERE
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curiositysavesthecat · 2 months
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*this poll was submitted to us and we simply posted it so people could vote and discuss their opinions on the matter. if you’d like for us to ask the internet a question for you, feel free to drop the poll of your choice in our inbox and we’ll post them anonymously (for more info, please check our pinned post)
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artnarchistwitchcraft · 9 months
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made some fake hannibal (tv show) posters
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bebx · 6 months
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not to be a hoe or anything but I need the man I’m hopelessly in love with to be the Will Graham to my Hannibal Lecter
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craqueluring · 2 years
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will mimics hannibal swallowing his wine in 2x12! i couldn't believe it when i noticed this; he even makes a soft "ah" noise as if he swallowed wine too! (timestamp is 17:08)
his habit of mimicking body language/speech patterns is mentioned in the Red Dragon book:
"Often in intense conversation Graham took on the other person's speech patterns...Later Crawford realized that Graham did it involuntarily, that sometimes he tried to stop and couldn't."
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