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#kyle broflovksi
lesliemeyers · 14 days
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babysitting
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sorta old sp teenagers art, also first real digital piece!
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sn33z3s · 2 years
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very much delayed k2 for a retrospring anon 
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spstylezine · 2 years
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Hi everyone - we're super excited to finally present the zine's front cover and title! This cover is illustrated by one of our organizers, @bunypark (with an accompanying back cover piece to come soon, too 👀) and the beautiful typography is by our project's amazing graphic designer @pononoin! 💙💚
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Only partially sick and demented in the brains I think
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Idk what's wrong with that bunny thing
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nightttdreamers · 1 year
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But I Thought They Burned the Hot Topic Down / Stan x Kyle
here is the last chapter of my vampire au style fic! sorry it took so long haha pretend it hasnt been almost a year. anyway, i hope you guys enjoy this angsty little read <3
Ao3 link | 11k words | 3/3
It's Kyle's graduation party and everything sucks. But it would suck way less if Stan decided to show up.
Kyle is 18. Stan is still 17. 
He’s sitting at his kitchen table, staring down at a sheet cake that definitely has freezer burn, reading “CONGRATULATIONS KYLIE” in garish green frosting. His mother is in the kitchen with his uncle, who is trying to talk the woman down from calling the Whole Foods and demanding their manager. Her shrieking overlaps with laughter coming from Kenny, Butters, but mostly Cartman, who’s wiping real tears from his eyes. Ike’s already taken plenty of photos of the cake, as well as Kyle looking miserable next to it.
He doesn’t care that the poor, probably underpaid, Whole Foods employee misspelled his name, or that everyone is being an asshole and either laughing at him or raging about the fact that he’s being laughed at. As he stares down at his name and the sickly sweet cake that is likely dry as cardboard, all he can think about is how much better he’d feel if Stan was there.
It’s his graduation party and his boyfriend didn’t even show up.
“Hey, hey,” shouts Cartman in between fits of laughter. Kyle knows what’s coming, he’s made this joke twice already. “Hey, Kylie! When are we gonna dig into this sweet cake?
“You shouldn’t cut it just yet,” Cousin Kyle pipes up from his seat beside Ike. Because if having a graduation party didn’t suck enough, his mom also had to invite his extended family. “If they made a mistake you might be able to refund it, custom icing is expensive you know.”
Kyle stares at the knife beside the cake and contemplates lobotomizing himself.
Before Cartman can say something anti-Semitic about Kyle Schwartz’s remark, Kyle Broflovski shouts to the kitchen. “Mom! I’m cutting the cake now!”
“Are you sure, Bubbeh?” Sheila asks as she pokes her head back into the dining room. “You won’t be able to cross out your name for good luck.”
Kyle lets out a sigh, looking back down at the cake. He sticks his index finger into the icing and smudges the “i,” just to appease his mother. “There, now it’s Kyle.”
Sheila raises her hands in surrender and calls (well, shouts) for the rest of the family to come in for a photo. In the clamor of summoning the relatives from the living room, Kenny leans in beside him.
“Your mom,” he whispers, right into Kyle’s ear. “She looked nice at graduation. How’re things with her and your dad?” Beneath the table, Kyle stomps down on Kenny’s foot as hard as he can. In response, Kenny clamps a hand down on his shoulder, giving a tight squeeze. “That’s not discouraging me, man.”
Kyle glares at him as Sheila corrals his relatives into the room. His friends step aside as the Broflovski clan files in behind him, each of them remarking on the shoddy craftsmanship of the cake.
“Mrs. Broflovksi, I can take the photo,” Kenny offers. It’s mesmerizing how his smile can look so innocent to Sheila, but turn completely smug when he glances at Kyle.
“That’s so sweet of you, Kenny!” His mother chirps, handing him her phone. “Kyle, why do you look so glum? Ike, stand closer to your brother.” She crosses the table, giving both her sons a pinch on the cheek.
“Give us a smile, Kylie,” Kenny says as he holds the phone up. “Lookin’ great, Mrs. B.”
Kyle flips him off quickly as he tries his best to put on a smile. There is an out-of-tune chorus of “cheese” as the picture is taken, and then everyone disbands for cake. Under the table, Kyle texts Stan.
K: We’re doing cake now so if you want to come we’ll be past the food part
K: Or you can keep ignoring my texts and not come at all. Whatever.
He takes an angry forkful of the slice his mother has placed in front of him and shoves it into his mouth. It tastes like shit.
Two hours later, he hears the ding from his phone. 
He’s lying on the floor of his room with Ike, who’s going through his graduation cards. Most of the guests left after cake, except his grandparents and the Schwartz family, who all flew in. Luckily, his parents didn’t want to deprive Kyle of a room when the party was for him, so his extended family will be sleeping in Ike’s room and on pull-out couches and air mattresses. 
“Your phone went off,” Ike announces as he tears open another card. “Dude, Aunt Helen gave you fifty bucks. Shouldn’t it be fifty-four?”
Kyle breaks his streak of being face-down for the last thirty minutes to look over at his brother.
Ike looks down at him, holding up the cash. “Increments of eighteen. For good luck. Whatever, fifty is still pretty good.”
“Can you hand me my phone?” Kyle asks, rolling onto his side. They’d agreed that Ike would hold on to the device since Kyle couldn’t stop compulsively checking it for a reply from Stan.
Hesitantly, Ike hands it over, watching his brother’s face as he opens the notification.
It’s from Stan.
S: i suck i know
S: lets go for a walk? im outside
“What did he say?” Ike asks, gathering all the money he’s collected into a neat pile on the floor.
“He’s outside,” Kyle replies, sitting up. He rubs his eye with the heel of his hand and tucks his phone into his pocket as he stands up.
“Oh, cool. He sleeps over like every single night but he’s four hours late to your graduation party,” Ike says, leaning back against the bed.
“When did you become my relationship guru?” Kyle asks as he grabs a sweater from his closet. 
Ike rolls his eyes. “Rude. I’m taxing you for that,” he says, pulling a $5 off the top of the pile.
Stan is hunched over, sitting on the curb when Kyle steps outside. Even though it’s June, he’s layered up in a hoodie, jacket, and beanie, looking like a dark, misshapen lump in the dim street light.
Kyle watches him for a minute, just staring at his back. It’s a lot easier to be pissed at him over text, not when he can see just how small he looks, waiting outside for him. He walks closer to him, hands shoved deep in his pockets.
Fuck, he should’ve expected the puppy-dog eyes when Stan turns around.
“Hey, dude,” Stan says as he stands up, a soft smile coming to his face.
“They spelled my name wrong on the cake,” Kyle responds, brows knit together as he looks at his boyfriend.
“What?” Stan glances towards the house, then back to him.
Kyle exhales, then repeats himself. “They spelled my name wrong on the cake. They wrote Kylie. Everyone thought it was hilarious. And Kenny was hitting on my mom, the freak. And Cousin Kyle was there. It was the worst party ever.”
Stan looks at him with a sympathetic expression. “Kyle-”
“And you fucking missed it,” he spits out. It’s so hard to stay mad at Stan, but Kyle has to force himself for a moment. He can’t let him think that he’s okay with how tonight went.
“I know,” Stan says, reaching a hand out. “And-”
Kyle steps back. “I don’t want to hear it, Stan. I don’t want your stupid excuses, I don’t care! You could’ve at least texted me back.”
“Babe, come on-” Stan tries to speak again, and Kyle has to turn away just to avoid that sad look on his face.
“Don’t babe me right now, not after ignoring me all day.”
Stan pinches the bridge of his nose, mumbling something under his breath. “Look, Kyle,” he begins, then lets out a sigh. “I’m sorry. Like, seriously so fucking sorry, I’ve been the worst today, I know. I just… I really don’t want to fight with you right now.” He places a tentative hand on the back of Kyle’s arm, gently turning the redhead back towards him. “Please?”
Kyle’s expression scrunches up for a moment as he takes a deep breath. “Fine, okay,” he says, which brings a smile back to Stan’s face. He shrugs Stan’s hand off of him, then takes it in his own. “I’m really not happy with you right now, though. But, whatever, we don’t have to fight.”
“Walk with me for a bit,” Stan says, giving his hand a squeeze.
The two of them head off like that, wandering around their lame old town with no particular direction in mind. It’s late enough that they can walk hand in hand without fear of running into someone. Kyle’s not too worried about that anyway, since he knows that he’ll be off to school across the country come the fall. Stan graduated too, just barely. They’re both pretty sure the district just didn’t want to spend the money on holding a student back, especially if the student performed at a steady mediocre rate. It’s not something they like to talk about much, though.
Kyle laments about the party and Stan offers his commentary on the cake debacle, how he would’ve slapped Cartman upside the head, and how glad he was that he didn't come in the window like he usually does, since Ike is staying in Kyle’s room tonight. He’s not sure how long they walk for, but eventually they make their way to Stark’s Pond.
“Shit,” Kyle murmurs. “It’s kinda cold right next to the water, right?”
And, because sometimes he actually is a good boyfriend, Stan immediately slips his denim jacket off. He even drapes it across Kyle’s shoulders for him, a gesture that Kyle finds insanely romantic. “Better?”
Kyle slips his arms into the sleeves, nodding. “Thanks.”
Stan gives him a small hum as a response as he walks over to one of the benches next to the pond, Kyle following behind him. The two sit down, and Kyle can’t help but notice the distance Stan’s put between them.
In the moment of silence between them, Kyle has plenty of time to overthink about the fact that Stan’s been avoiding him all day, took him out on a late-night walk that they never do, and is now trying to sit as far as he can from him.
“What are we doing out here, Stan?” Kyle asks, feeling his chest begin to tighten up.
Stan keeps his gaze on the water, idly twisting his hands together in his lap. “I’m really sorry I didn’t come tonight, Kyle.”
“Yeah, I thought we were done talking about that,” Kyle responds tersely.
“I know. I just, I dunno, I’ve been thinking a lot about graduation and being done with school and everything.”
“Do you,” Kyle starts. They’ve both taken turns trying to talk about this for the last few months, but the conversations never get too far before one of them changes the topic. Though the subject has been weighing on him, it was nice to ignore it for as long as they could. “Do you know what you want to do?”
“I have to leave,” Stan says, though he doesn’t sound too convinced of this. “I know that I have to. My mom’s already asking if I’m malnourished, I can’t keep walking around looking like this.”
Kyle frowns, knowing just how much Stan resents being stuck in his seventeen year-old body, never being able to grow out of it. “You could stay for a bit longer? No one will really question you for a few years, maybe you could…” He lets himself trail off as he watches Stan. There’s a hollowness to the other’s expression that tells Kyle he’s not really listening.
“I really hate this,” Stan mutters. He leans forward, resting his head in his hands. “I hate everything so fucking much. I’m so tired of being like this.”
Kyle moves in closer, lifting a hand to rub Stan’s back. “I know, Stan. I get it-”
In an instant, Stan is on his feet, still turned away towards the pond. “Do you really, though?”
“What?” Kyle asks, hating how small his voice sounds right now.
Stan turns to him, wearing a resentful expression that Kyle doesn’t recognize on him. “You don’t get it, Kyle. You can’t. You could never possibly get what I’m going through.” Stan’s voice begins to waver as he speaks, the way he strains to try and cover it up is audible. “My life is over, Kyle! Fucking literally,” he remarks with a scoff. “I’m dead. It’s actually over. I’m never getting older, I can’t see my family anymore, I can’t go to college or get a job. Fuck, I’m never going to be able to get into a bar, because I’m stuck like this!”
“Can you stop yelling at me right now?” Kyle asks, fighting every urge he has to shout right back at him.
“I’m not-” Stan cuts himself off, then looks down, almost self-consciously. When he speaks again, he’s quiet. “I didn’t mean to yell. Shit, this isn’t,” he sits back down on the bench, right beside Kyle now. “This isn’t how I wanted this conversation to go.”
“I don’t pretend to know what you’re going through, Stan,” Kyle says, taking his turn to stare out at the water as he speaks. “I know that I don’t get it. But I’m trying, always fucking trying just to help you.”
“I know you try.” Stan reaches out, placing his hand atop the fist that Kyle has balled in his lap. Slowly, Kyle laces their fingers together.
“Why don’t you just come with me?” He asks, turning to look at Stan. “In the fall, come to school with me. Everything can stay the same. Except, I guess we’ll be dealing with our parents way less. But, no one will know you, if you keep a low profile you can probably stay for a while, and then, I don’t know. I don’t know, but we’ll work it out.”
It’s something that’s been on Kyle’s mind for a while, and probably the reason they’ve never gotten far with the post-graduation talk. They aren’t just some high school sweethearts, their bond is so much deeper than that. The thought of being away from Stan, especially since they only just got back together after all those years, might actually be the worst thing Kyle can imagine. He’s entertained the fantasy of Stan coming with him for a while now, though he hasn’t found the courage to actually mention it until now.
But, Stan is quiet. The tight feeling in Kyle’s chest grows stronger, making its way up to his throat and then higher until his eyes start to sting. Stan’s hand feels like a stone in his.
“Please, Stan,” Kyle says softly, unsure of what he’s even asking for.
“Don’t look at me like that,” Stan says, his grip on Kyle tight. “Don’t make this harder than it already is.”
“Just come with me,” he pleads, and it feels almost degrading. He’s begging his boyfriend to stay with him, but he doesn’t even care. “I told you I would help you figure this out. Come, and we’ll keep figuring it out.”
“Be realistic, Kyle-”
“None of this is realistic!” Kyle nearly shouts. “You’re a fucking vampire, Stan. This entire situation is not real. But we’re dealing with it, right? Just stay with me, keep staying with me. You can feed on animals and I’ll always be there to clean you up. You won’t even have to sneak through my window anymore.” Kyle reaches out and grabs Stan’s wrist, pulling him in so they’re fully facing each other. “Tell me you’ll stay.”
When Stan turns his face towards him, there’s tears streaking his cheeks. Almost immediately, it triggers Kyle’s eyes to water too. The silence between them is all the answer he needs.
“Kyle,” Stan breathes out. “I can’t keep living like this. I’ve-” His voice gets caught in his throat as he holds back a sob. “I’ve hurt people.”
He feels himself shift, body stiffening up. His voice is tight when he asks, “What do you mean?”
Stan looks at Kyle’s chest as he speaks, his head dipping down. “In the woods, when I go out. Sometimes, in the middle of everything, I can’t even tell what I’m doing, all I know is that I’m so fucking hungry.”
“What did you do, Stan?”
Stan shakes his head, the motion almost frantic, like he’s trying to deny everything he’s confessing. “There were these hunters, t-they mistook me for an animal. They tried to attack, and before I even realized it, I-I drained one of them.”
It’s easy to forget what Stan is. Rather, it’s easy to ignore it, let it fade into the background. But as he speaks, Kyle can feel just how cold Stan’s hands are in his.
“The other one,” Stan continues. “He got away. I don’t think he told anyone, who would believe him that he saw a teenage boy fucking maim his buddy?”
Kyle lets go, standing on shaky legs. He supposes ignoring the fact that he’s dating an undead immortal with a thirst for blood this entire time hasn’t been the best idea, as he’s having quite a hard time processing what he’s just heard.
He hears Stan come to his feet behind him, but they both know better than to initiate touch again right now. “Kyle, that was it, I promise. I’ve been trying so hard to hold myself back. I-I never wanted to hurt anyone. But, I know that I can’t go on like this much longer. I’ve never felt more… I don’t know, it was like I was finally awake. The more time that passes since him, the less control I get over myself.”
Kyle stares out at the water, colored black in the moonlight. It feels almost right in a twisted kind of way, just when he finally has the boy he’s wanted his entire life, something has to pull them apart. They stand in silence for a while, and though Kyle has a million things he wants to say, solutions, apologies, pleads, he knows what’s going to happen.
All those stupid vampire movies they watched were complete bullshit.
This can never work.
“You can’t stay with me,” Kyle says, trying his hardest to keep his voice steady.
“You know I wish I could,” Stan replies, taking a tentative step towards him.
Kyle begins to turn to him, gaze focused on the ground. “Not just when I leave for college. This is-” He can’t help it, the tears begin to fall. “This is it, isn’t it?
Stan nods solemnly. “When I go, I can’t come back. I need to figure this out on my own, learn how to control myself. I-I can’t risk hurting anyone, especially you.”
“It doesn’t matter how hard I try to help you,” Kyle says, mostly to convince himself. “You can’t just hide in my room forever.”
“I’m doing this to protect you,” Stan insists. “You can still live a normal life. Go to school, meet new people, get the fuck out of this stupid town. I can’t- I can’t hold you back from that.”
“It’s not fair,” Kyle says, shaking his head. “I don’t want a normal life. I don’t want a life without you. It’s not fucking fair!”
They both seem to fall into each other, wrapping their arms as tight as they can around the other. He grips Stan’s hair as his face crashes into the crook of his neck, clinging to him with sheer desperation. Kyle lets himself sob. He cries so hard he starts to get dizzy, letting the embrace of Stan against him become the only thing he can feel.
The dark-haired boy presses his lips against him, the top of his head, his temples, in touches that aren’t quite gentle enough to be considered kisses. In between each, he whispers apologies.
Every time Kyle thinks he might be done, pauses to catch his breath, he starts crying all over again. He doesn’t care how long they stand there for, because he knows why Stan is holding him so tightly, knows it deep in his heart; This is their goodbye.
It’s Stan who pulls them apart, just enough so that he can look down at Kyle. He opens his mouth, but nothing comes out. Instead, Kyle speaks up. “I wanna be with you,” he says. “One more time, please.”
They come together again for a kiss, and Stan places a gentle hand on the hem of his shirt and drags him back towards the woods.
Their walk back to town is silent.
Kyle’s head hurts from crying, and every part of his body is sore from lying in the woods, but these sensations all feel numb to him. He tries to focus on the feeling of Stan’s hand in his own and drown out everything else.
When they approach the Broflovski household, their movements both slow. But, there’s only so long that they can delay the inevitable.
“I love you,” Kyle says, somewhat blurting it out. “I wish-” he pauses, feeling like he might cry again. “I wish it was different, Stan. I’d do anything to make it different.”
The soft smile on Stan’s face is an image that Kyle knows he’ll never forget.
“Thank you for trying,” Stan says sincerely. He takes a step back, their hands still connected between them. “I love you. I’ve loved you my entire life, and that’s never going to change.”
“This sucks,” Kyle says, the infectious smile on Stan’s face finally reaching his own.
It earns a laugh out of both of them. “It sucks so bad. Can you just,” Stan squeezes his hand. “Promise me that you’ll go and live your life, okay? And, this is kinda selfish-” The expression of guilt on Stan’s face is so childlike, Kyle thinks back to that night when they were twelve, kissing for the first time in the middle of the street. “Can you promise me you won’t forget me?”
It’s not living if you’re not there. I could never forget you, Kyle wants to say, but he just nods, leaning forward to place one last kiss on Stan’s lips.
“Goodnight, Kyle,” Stan says, and Kyle decides to pretend like this is just a normal night, and that when he wakes up Stan will be there again. He’ll kick Ike out of his room and fall back asleep against Stan’s chest, the two of them ignoring everything else in the world.
“Goodnight,” he replies, voice barely even a whisper.
The feeling of Stan’s fingers slipping out of his is torture. He watches the love of his life turn away and walk into the night.
Epilogue
The letter is placed in his mailbox. No postmark, no return address, just “KYLE” written across the front.
Dear Kyle,
I think its been like, maybe 6 years since my last letter? Jeez you’ve gotta be 36 or 37 by now. It’s starting to get hard to keep track of time, which is something I’ve heard happens. Anyway, you’re super old. I was thinking the other day about you (I mean I think about you like every day but this was a specific thought), wouldn’t it have been so weird if we stayed together? Youd be this old dude and I’d literally be 17. That’s not even legal! I hope enough time has passed where I can joke about this. If not, sorry lol.
Things are cool over here in Stan land. I found another person like me, probably about a year ago. She was cool, we hunted together for a few months, but decided to split. Shes only the third vamp Ive met but it seems like everyone agrees its best if we dont stick together for too long. Its really nice to know theyre out there, though. She was telling me how she likes to pretend shes drunk at bars, lets guys takes her home, and then drains them. I thought youd think that was pretty cool, and its probably the most ethical way to select victims Ive heard so far (like theres such thing as ethically choosing victims- I shouldnt decide who lives or dies I literally dont even know how to pay taxes). Im sparing you details, but I am letting you know that im sustaining myself the best I can.
You know what I also thought about the other day? You still have my jacket! You asshole!!!! That was literally my favorite jacket I miss it!! Whatever you can keep it. You looked cute in my clothes anyway. Well maybe not now in your gross old man body (loser). 
Im just passing through your neighborhood on my way to somewhere Im not disclosing, but I probably wont be back for a while. If you dont hear from me, I’m not dead (thats not happening anytime soon), but Im going to try and explore a bit more. Random thing, I picked up a guitar and started busking? Its actually pretty fun, I forgot how much I missed writing songs. Its pretty easy to forget about those kinds of things, but I thought youd appreciate that Im rediscovering old passions. I guess thats why I decided to write you.
I hope youre doing well. I really do. Im sorry I cant give you this in person. Maybe some day, but not yet. I get that its not really fair to write to you and not give you a way to get back in touch. Sorry if this is immature (dont forget im only 17), I just miss you. I cant lie and tell you that Im not doing so much better since I left south park. Yeah the first few years were rough but for the first time in a while Im kind of hopeful. I dont know, something feels different. Maybe its me. But I know that I owe so much of who I am to you, so I wanna say thank you. For helping me and being kind and patient and slapping sense into me when I needed it. And most importantly, thank you for loving me. I still love you too.
God that was SOOOO GAY. Im imagining you reading this and laughing at how fucking gay this letter is (btw, when the fuck did people start getting tolerant? Where was this shit when we were together????). Okay Im being stupid again. Ill stop this now. Guess i'll talk to you again soon? Whenever that ends up being.
Your super best friend forever and ever,
Stan
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nosebridgepinch · 2 years
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I didn’t realize I forgot to plug this one. I was excited to see it on @type1diabetesinfandom
Title: 3rd and 10
Fandom: South Park
Rating: T
Summary:
“I just feel.” Kyle unzipped his jacket and shook it to let air in. “I just got hot and kinda dizzy when we got out here. Maybe I’m over-excited. I mean this is the actual Broncos stadium.” Kyle shook his jacket again, heart pounding in his ears.
Kyle is making Stan slightly worried now. “Well, if you want to sit in the shade somewhere we can. it’s cool we’re here but I don’t want you passing out on me.”
“I’m not going to pass out...I don’t think.” Kyle heads over to the shade and slumps down unsteadily. “I’m going to check something really quickly. I know you won’t like it.”
“Um, okay.... check what?” Stan goes to sit next to him.
“Blood sugar.” Kyle zips open his backpack.
“Blood-aw dude! No!” Stan Immediately looks away now. “Are you sure you need to now? Can’t it wait?”
Kyle grumbled and turned his back to Stan. He pulls out a little black kit and picks up his pen, poking his finger and squeezing a drop of blood out of it. He put his finger to the reader, eyes on Stan while he waited for the result. He was feeling like crap but was more worried about Stan. If Stan got upset the situation would get worse.
Notes: Written with my best friend MadamRoseMarsh based off this fan art she found. If anyone knows the artist let me know.
Also I started a fic about Scott, Sophie and Kyle in Detention but I need to finish it.
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my5tics · 8 months
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i love the main 4 🧡
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wgo-southpark · 1 year
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first | next | prev | all
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lesliemeyers · 2 months
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indie music fans will literally be like
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The E-Boys as South Park Characters
ImAllexx-Kyle Broflovksi
James Marriott-Stan Marsh
WillNE-Eric Cartman
Memeulous-Kenny McCormick
Inabber-Butters Stotch
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spstylezine · 2 years
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Hi, all! Applications are now OPEN 💞 the Google Form can also be found on our carrd and in our Tumblr bio. Please contact us if you experience difficulty accessing the application or if you have any questions. This form will be available until 11:59 U.S. EDT on June 5th.
We ask that you keep in mind our schedules; we are both adults with full-time jobs and may not be able to respond extremely promptly, but we will do our best to provide answers as soon as possible!
Also, the two of us are closely monitoring the list of countries not currently accepting shipments from USPS and will update future contributors and donators with any essential changes. Thank you!! 
(Announcement art by @bunypark)
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Why would I do this
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nightttdreamers · 1 year
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Someone Still Loves You | Stan x Kyle
new style fic lets goooooo! it's going to be little snapshots of them growing up and figuring themselves out and also being in love. hope u like it and feel free 2 read on ao3!
AO3 Link | 6k+ words | Chapter 1/3
It's the summer before sophomore year. Kyle just got his braces off and Stan's palms are sweaty, for some reason.
Kyle has a nice smile , Stan decides, and the thought feels like it was beamed to him by aliens.
“What?” Kyle asks mid-laugh, still grinning at his friend.
Stan scrunches his face up, suddenly self-conscious of how Kyle can notice everything. “What?”
Kyle cocks his head, raising his brows expectantly, like Stan would ever explain what just went through his head. The two exchange expressions, and Stan hopes that if he just pretends Kyle’s acting odd too, the whole thing will just drop.
“Whatever, weirdo,” Kyle says, rolling his eyes. Stan lets out a small sigh of relief, slumping back against the wall. “Anyway, we’d have these practice debates, and then we’d do them at night in the dorms, but with stupid topics.”
“Yeah? Like what?” Stan asks, feeling a bit more comfortable staring as Kyle continues his story. He rubs his hands along his thighs, sitting cross-legged on the floor just across from his friend. There’s a strange, tingly sensation in his palms that just won’t go away. It’s been there all day, only getting worse once he actually entered the Broflovski household after eagerly waiting all day. Maybe it’s puberty.
The two boys haven’t seen each other in a month, which is the longest they’ve ever gone since they were in kindergarten. While Stan’s been stuck working on the farm all summer, Kyle has been at debate camp in California (Which wasn’t even a real camp, apparently. It was hosted by some fancy college and they stayed in the dorms . But it’s not like Stan cared).
Excited didn’t begin to describe how Stan had felt all day, it was more like electric. They only had two weeks before they started their sophomore year, and Stan was eager to get Kyle up to speed on what he’d been up to.
What he didn’t expect, however, was for Kyle to come back with stories of his own fantastic summer, the new friends he’d made, and how much better things were outside of South Park. It also doesn’t help that Kyle had gotten his braces off just before camp, and apparently smiled a whole lot more without them.
“-And they had like actual college students in the dorms too to, like, watch us. And they would get so pissed if we were being loud, which I would be too, but it was so funny.” Kyle sits back down on his legs, having gotten up on his knees as he told the story. “Maybe it was a you-had-to-be-there kind of thing.”
“No, no,” Stan says, shaking his head. “It’s funny. You and your debate friends would go wild and stay up all night debating each other, sounds crazy.”
Kyle scoffs, shooting Stan a harmless glare. “Shut up, dude. Like you did anything crazier.”
“Me and Kenny would go on joyrides,” Stan boasts, not even trying to hide the smug smile that comes across his face at Kyle’s expression.
“No fucking way,” Kyle says, jaw hanging open. Stan simply shrugs, pretending like he hasn’t been waiting to tell Kyle this for weeks. “In whose car?”
“Kevin got a new truck. Well, not new new, it’s a piece of shit, but he let us borrow it sometimes. Kenny and I would drive out until there wasn’t anything for miles around us and we’d just start doing donuts.” Now, it was Stan’s turn to get up, rising to his knees as his hands mime driving the car.
“Did you drive it?” Kyle asks, leaning forward.
Stan wanted to. It took some convincing, but Kenny had let him behind the wheel even though Kevin had explicitly said only his brother could drive it. But, Stan only made it about 50 feet before he had to stop, absolutely terrified that the moment he started driving they’d get caught.
“Kevin wouldn’t let me,” Stan says, shaking his head. It’s not a complete lie, but there’s no way he’s telling Kyle that he chickened out.
“Holy shit. I can’t believe I missed that,” Kyle says, shaking his head. Stan feels a small warmth in his chest, accompanied by a slight pang of guilt. It’s not like he wants Kyle to feel jealous or left out, but it does feel good to show the other that he doesn’t have to leave South Park to have a good time.
“We’ll probably try and go again,” Stan offers. “We still have, like, two weeks before school starts.”
Kyle lets out a groan, laying back on his floor. “Don’t remind me. God, my mom’s already talking about when we’re going back to school shopping. I haven’t even been home a day!”
Stan holds back a chuckle as he watches the other, waving his hands dramatically while he speaks. He knows better than to laugh at Kyle when he’s complaining. “Dude, she wasn’t even gonna let me come over tonight.”
“What?” Kyle exclaims, turning his face to look at Stan. “Why not?”
“I was calling her and asking when you were gonna get back, and she kept saying how she wants you to be with family tonight, how she had a whole dinner prepared, how she hasn’t ‘gotten you’ all summer. I was like, no shit, Sheila, I haven’t ‘gotten him’ either!”
Kyle lets out a laugh, looking back up at his ceiling. “Sounds like her. I think she’s mad I didn’t  write her back enough.”
“How many letters did you send?” Stan asks.
“Uh, I think it was two or three to her. She would send me these letters that were just pages of family news and drama at the synagogue and updates about Ike. I didn’t have anything to say back.”
Stan smiles, knowing that he and Kyle wrote back and forth at least once a week, and that no one got as many letters as he did. At a certain point, Kyle would just add a section to Stan’s letters that he could tell Kenny and Cartman, rather than writing the two on his own. “I feel like my letters were just pages of the same random bullshit.”
Kyle shakes his head. “No way, yours were at least relevant to stuff I care about. I actually wanted to read them, even though you conveniently left out how you did donuts with Kenny.”
The statement is a little pointed, but leave it to Kyle to call Stan out for something like that. “I just didn’t think words on paper could capture the, uh,” Stan stammers, trying to come up with something dramatic to say. “The spirit! The spirit and the thrill of the drive! You know, the open road, the blazing sun, the wind in your hair-”
His monologue is cut off when Kyle throws a pillow right at his face, which Stan quickly catches. When he turns to look at Kyle, the redhead is already sitting back up, eyes daring Stan to continue. “Sorry, were you saying something?”
Stan throws the pillow right back, but Kyle catches it with ease. “I thought you wanted to hear about my joyrides?” He asks, pretending to be offended. “It’s hard to put them into words you know.”
“So you chose to do spoken-word poetry instead of handwritten?” Kyle asks, cocking his head to the side.
Stan snickers, shaking his head. “Can you imagine me sending you poetry? How fucking gay.”
Kyle laughs after a moment, like it took him a beat to get the joke. Stan notices his hands twisting together, one picking at the other, but before he can mention something about it, Kyle is rising to his feet. “I have so much shit to unpack.”
Stan watches from the floor as Kyle gets up, walking to the suitcase on his bed. “Do you have to do that tonight?” He asks, tilting his body so he can look at Kyle’s face, which is turned away from him.
“I probably should, you know,” Kyle says, in that voice Stan absolutely hates. It’s his I-have-a-ton-of-homework or my-mom-wants-me-back-soon voice, meaning he wants Stan to leave, but is too polite to just ask outright.
“Shit, okay,” Stan mumbles, standing up. “I can get out of your hair.”
Kyle finally turns to look at him, his lips pressed together in a firm line. His eyes dart around Stan’s face for a second before he speaks. “Actually, do you want to just sleep over tonight?”
The question is a bit jarring, partially due to the complete shift in Kyle’s attitude, and partially because Stan hates the phrase “sleep over” with a passion. Their friends already give them enough shit for how much time they spend together, they don’t need to sound like babies who have “sleepovers” too.
Kyle, of course, picks up on the distasteful expression Stan has. “It’s fine if you don’t want to. I’m just kind of jet-lagged and I’m probably gonna stay up and I know it takes you a while to get over here so,” he trails off, idly picking at his hand once more.
“I’ll stay over,” Stan says, causing Kyle to grin. Looking at his friend’s smile, whatever unease was building in him settles back down. “I was gonna ask you, anyway. My dad keeps making me wake up early to work with him.”
Kyle offers a sympathetic groan, opening up his suitcase. Stan sits down on the bed beside it, folding his legs under himself to leave the other room to unpack. “Are you still working every day?”
“Pretty much, yeah,” Stan says with a nod. He wrote to Kyle a bit about working on the farm for the summer, but after his first few letters, there wasn’t much to say. It was the same thing every day, waking up at the crack of dawn, heading to the fields to plant or harvest, sometimes packaging their products, whatever Randy told him to do. “My dad wants to get everything out super early in the morning because he’s selling to restaurants and shit now, so the work needs an early start.”
“Is…” Kyle begins, pausing his unpacking to look at Stan. “Is your dad okay?”
Stan looks away as he speaks, fidgeting with the hem of his pants. The question is simple enough, but never something that’s easy to answer. Kyle likes to ask about his dad with simple questions like that, which Stan appreciates, because Kyle doesn’t ask is your dad still starting shouting fights with your mom every day or has your dad stopped getting wasted and cursing you out the minute you come home ?
“Yeah,” Stan says in a small voice, then adds, “The farm’s been busy all summer, so he has something to do, I guess.”
Kyle nods, turning back to the clothes on his bed. “That’s good. Any developments on the Shelley conspiracy theory?”
Stan smiles at the question, glad Kyle knows better than to dwell on a topic like Randy for long. “Dude, we have to be right, right?”
“I think so. She’s not really the generous type.”
Kyle is referring to a common topic in their letters, which is how Shelley has been driving Stan into town over the last month. Normally, she doesn’t have a choice in the matter, as their parents make her take Stan to school with her. If he wants to go into town, he either has to beg his mom or try and get a ride with Tolkien. But, his mom’s usually busy, and Tolkien’s been at his vacation home all summer, so he thought he’d be stranded.
However, over the last few weeks, Shelley had been showing uncharacteristic kindness and offering to drive him to Kenny’s house. Stan waited for the catch, like she wanted gas money or him to do her chores, but it never came. 
When Kyle heard about this, he quickly declared it a mystery that he wanted to solve. After going back and forth on various ideas, the two concluded that Shelley probably had a crush on Kevin McCormick. Since then, they’ve been seeking further proof of their conspiracy theory.
“She doesn’t even complain about driving me anymore. Usually, she’s like,” Stan clears his throat, doing a Shelley impression that is far more gravelly and deep than her real voice. “‘Ugh, whatever, I’ll drive you, but don’t talk to me or touch my CDs for the entire ride.’ But the other day I asked if she would take me to Kenny’s and she just said ‘whatever,’ nothing else.”
“Does she even see Kevin when she takes you?” Kyle asks.
“Barely,” Stan responds. “If he’s outside, she just tells me to get out and drives away. She doesn’t even try to talk to him. Girls are so weird.”
Kyle snorts, turning his face away when Stan looks up at him. “Sorry, it’s just funny hearing you make fun of her, like you wouldn’t do the same thing.”
“What?” Stan replies, sitting up a bit. “No I wouldn’t.”
“Yeah you would,” Kyle says, continuing to empty his suitcase as he speaks. “You’re both total chickens when you like someone. Even if you’re dating them.”
Stan feels his face heat up, especially when he sees the smirk Kyle is trying to hide. “That’s so not true.”
It is, of course, completely true, and Stan knows it. Even with Wendy, who he’s dated on-and-off since they were basically kids, he can never bring himself to make the first move. She gets frustrated with him often, since she has to tell him to ask her to school dances or to hold her hand on dates. He’s not sure why his nerves haven’t gone away after their years together. Sometimes, he still gets nauseous when she wants to kiss.
No one knows about this problem, though. So, hearing Kyle poke fun at him about it makes Stan squirmish. “Like you’re any better,” he adds, though the statement is pretty baseless. He’s not sure how Kyle is when he has a crush, as the redhead rarely shows interest in anyone.
Kyle keeps his gaze down, and Stan can see a mix of emotions cross his face. He wants the other to defend himself just so he can point out that Kyle hasn’t had a real girlfriend, or even asked a girl out since they were ten. But, instead, Kyle just shrugs. “Yeah, guess not,” he concedes.
Again, Stan feels an unease between them. He rarely feels unsure of what to say to his best friend. If they’re not speaking, the silence is usually comfortable. This one, however, just hangs in the air, and Stan feels a sense of guilt for it.
Kyle starts to move his clothes back into his dressers, his suitcase empty now. Stan just watches him for a bit, trying to figure out if Kyle feels just as off as he does. He settles on, probably not, you’re just being weird and defensive and making things weird because you’re weird.
“Wanna borrow pajamas?” Kyle asks, bringing Stan out of his thoughts.
“Huh? Oh, uh,” he takes a second to look down at his current outfit, just to gather himself. “No, thanks. I’ll just sleep in my boxers.”
“Are you sure?” Kyle asks. It’s a trait he and his mom share, asking someone if they want something, then insisting that they do if they refuse. It’s part of their know-it-all nature, but Stan finds it kind of endearing. “I have stuff that’ll fit you.”
He knows he’s better off just accepting Kyle’s offer, so he nods. “If you think so.”
“I definitely do,” Kyle says, rummaging through his drawers. “We’re not that different, you know.”
“Maybe if you stopped having stupid growth spurts,” Stan says, knowing that the topic annoys Kyle. They’ve always compared heights, constantly on their tip-toes or marking doorways for each other. There were a few years in elementary school when Stan could boast a few extra inches on Kyle, but that ended when the redhead shot up in middle school. They haven’t been able to share clothes as easily lately, especially since Stan’s been growing into the stockier build his dad has, while Kyle stays stick-thin and lanky.
“If I could, I would,” Kyle says, tossing a pair of sweatpants over to Stan. Unlike Stan, he doesn’t like being the taller of the two, constantly complaining about how his old clothes don’t fit him, and his new ones don’t look right. “Those should be good, though.”
“I forgot your mom keeps your house fucking freezing in the summer,” Stan says as he gets off the bed. He slides off his jeans, pulling the faded pair of sweatpants on. “My mom doesn’t even use the AC most nights, just has us sleep with the windows open.”
Kyle is facing away from him, pulling out his own pair of pajamas from the dresser. “She complains about hot flashes or something, I don’t know, I don’t really listen. I’ll be right back.” Before Stan even finishes getting changed, Kyle’s already leaving his room. 
Stan knows he’s heading to the bathroom for his nighttime routine. Kyle always changes in the bathroom, taking his time putting in various hair products or acne creams, whatever products his mom has him trying that month. 
While Kyle’s gone, he slides the other’s empty suitcase off the bed to make room for himself. Just beside where the suitcase was is an envelope missing its top flap, near bursting open with its contents. Stan sits down as he picks it up, noticing that it's stuffed with polaroids. Before Stan can even think that he should ask for permission, he empties the envelope, looking through the photos. They’re pretty average, various snapshots of guys that he assumes to be Kyle’s friends from debate camp. There’s lots of pictures of them laughing, shouting at each other, and Stan can recognize locations like the dorms and quads Kyle told him about. There’s one specific boy that’s in almost every picture. Stan’s not sure why he notices him, besides his blonde hair and glasses, there’s nothing special about his appearance. Stan does notice, though, that this boy is next to Kyle in every single polaroid. 
When he reaches the bottom of the pile, there’s one picture that makes his stomach twist in a funny way. It’s close up, telling Stan that Kyle took it himself rather than having someone else do it. It’s just Kyle, beaming that brilliant smile, looking at the other boy, who’s grinning right back. The boy’s lips are parted in a way that makes it seem like he’s about to speak, or maybe he was mid-sentence when the photo was taken. They seem unaware of the camera, too caught up in their own laughter to look at it even though Kyle’s the one who pressed the shutter button. Stan holds the picture a bit too tightly, only looking up when he hears Kyle enter the room.
“What are you doing?” Kyle asks, standing in the open doorway. Stan watches as his eyes dart down to the photos, widening when he sees the one in Stan’s hand.
“Who is this?” Stan asks. Kyle told him about his friends in stories and letters, but no one seemed important enough to be in almost every picture.
Kyle crosses the room, taking the polaroid from Stan. He handles it gently, looking down at the picture as he sits on the edge of his bed. “He’s- He was my roommate,” he says, lacking the enthusiasm he usually has when talking about his debate camp friends.
“What’s his name?” Stan asks, knitting his brows together. Kyle hadn’t mentioned a roommate in his stories. At least, not that he could remember.
“Does it matter?” Kyle asks, putting the polaroid back into the pile with the rest. The action is a bit dramatic, and it feels like something Kyle would do if he was trying to prove that this boy didn’t matter.
Stan keeps his tone light, tempted to reach out to the other just to close the weird distance between them. “Guess not. It just looks like you guys were really close.”
Kyle turns to him suddenly, and Stan can see how red his cheeks are. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Nothing,” Stan replies quickly, throwing his hands up defensively. “What? You got a new best friend while you were at camp and you don’t wanna tell me about him?”
Kyle doesn’t seem amused by this joke, probably because he can tell that Stan’s not really joking. The redhead swallows thickly and Stan has to look away to hide the embarrassment on his face. He hadn’t even thought about the comment before he made it. 
Everyone knows Stan and Kyle are best friends. They don’t say it out loud often, opting to write it in birthday cards or save the words for special occasions. It’s not something that needs to be affirmed constantly, or even addressed for the most part. Still, Kyle knows that Stan gets insecure about his place in Kyle’s life sometimes. Stan would never admit that, of course, but Kyle knows because he can read him like a book. 
“His name is David,” Kyle says after a moment. He’s not looking at Stan, instead, shuffling the polaroids together into a neat little pile. “He’s not my new best friend, don’t worry.”
Stan lets out a puff of air, trying to show just how little he was worried, but it’s clearly forced. “So why didn’t you mention him?”
In the silence that falls after his question, Stan can hear how shallow Kyle’s breathing becomes. The same uneasy feeling starts in his gut as he watches Kyle adjust himself on the bed, nervously twisting his fingers together.
“David, um,” Kyle begins, looking just about anywhere but Stan. “He was kind of more than a friend.”
“What do you mean?” Stan asks slowly, even though he knows there’s no other way to interpret that. Kyle has a friend who is more than a friend. A more-than-friend who’s a boy.
Kyle looks right at him with those bright green eyes, welling with so much uncertainty. “ Stan .” He says his name like it’s a plea, his voice tight.
The entire room feels still, and the twinge of unease in his stomach turns into full-on nausea. Stan grips the comforter beneath his fingers just for something to hold on to. He opens his mouth, wanting to ask a million questions- Are you saying what I think you’re saying? Are you sure? But, he knows they’re all pointless. Kyle doesn’t need to answer anything for Stan to know exactly what he’s trying to tell him. 
“Really?” Stan asks, his voice barely a whisper.
Kyle just nods, his jaw clenched too tight to speak.
“So, you,” Stan starts, but the words feel odd in his mouth. “You… You like boys? That’s- that’s,” he stammers, choking on the word okay . He wants to tell the other that it’s okay, but he can’t. 
Looking at the boy sitting across from him, it feels like he has no idea who he is. Stan knows about gay people, he’s seen them on the news or in Shelley’s magazines, always talking about how we’re just like you! But, that image doesn’t fit Kyle. He’s not a face on TV, he’s Stan’s best friend, trusted with all of his secrets, hopes, and fears. But now, there’s this massive part of Kyle that’s just been hidden away, that Stan can’t even begin to understand.
“When did you figure this out?” Stan asks.
Kyle lets out a breath, shrugging his shoulders. When he speaks, his voice is uneasy, higher than usual. “I don’t know. Um, I don’t know. Like, I think I’ve always known? But I didn’t really want to know, or, I guess, want it to be true. It’s hard to explain.”
Stan nods, chewing on the inside of his lip as he stares down at the polaroid. The bright expression on David’s face feels smug to him now, like he’s taunting Stan, I know your best friend better than you do.
Still looking down, Stan speaks again. “Why didn’t you talk to me?”
“I wanted to,” Kyle says, quick in his response. “I really wanted to tell you. For a while, actually. I just didn’t know how, I didn’t know if it was real. And I-” His voice breaks, and when Stan looks up, he can see that tears have begun falling down the other’s face. “ Fuck, ” Kyle whispers.
“You’re crying,” Stan says, though it almost sounds like a question. He wants to reach out, his hand twitching to wipe away the other’s tears. But, he finds himself unable to move forward, an invisible wall between them.
Kyle slides the heel of his hand across his cheek, trying to catch the tears before they fall. “I’m sorry, I just-” he pauses, sniffling. “If you don’t want to be around me anymore, or something, just tell me, okay?”
“What are you talking about?” Stan asks. Kyle stares back at him, wide-eyed, and Stan feels like he can actually see the other for the first time tonight. A sudden clarity hits him like a bat to the head. “You’re my best friend, Kyle. You’re always gonna be.”
Kyle exhales, letting the tears pour down his face freely now. “Really?” He asks, and the soft smile that comes across his lips makes Stan want to cry too.
“Yeah, dude. Um, do you,” he looks over Kyle, whose hands are still shaking slightly. “You want a hug?”
Kyle doesn’t even respond, instead falling forward into Stan. The redhead wraps his arms tightly around Stan’s waist, quick to bury his face in his shoulder. He nearly knocks the wind out of Stan, who slowly wraps his arms across his back in return. 
Stan exhales, just holding his friend. He can feel his t-shirt grow wet with tears, and that Kyle is trying to hide his face from him. There’s lots of things he wants to say to console the other, this doesn’t change anything, or I don’t care if you like boys . But, that’s not true, there’s no way that things aren’t going to be different after this. Kyle will still be Kyle, his short-tempered smartass best friend. But, Stan feels like he’s been punched in the gut by dozens of unfamiliar, terrifying feelings tonight that he can’t even begin to sort out. The two of them will be okay, Stan is sure of this. But, he’s feeling less and less sure of himself.
After some time, Kyle pulls away, quick to bring his arms back around himself. “Sorry for the waterworks,” he says, still sniffling though it looks like he’s done crying.
“It’s cool,” Stan says. Awkwardly, he reaches a hand up to Kyle’s shoulder, giving it a squeeze. And, because he has no idea what he’s supposed to say now, he says, “I’m, uh, glad you told me.”
“Yeah,” Kyle exhales. He stretches his legs out from beneath him, laying back down on the bed in his usual comfortable position. His face is still blotchy, and Stan wants to reach out and wipe his cheeks dry. Instead, he just hugs his knees up to his chest, looking down at the other.
“Are you gonna tell anyone else?” Stan asks.
Kyle’s face scrunches up for a moment, the same way it does when he looks at a long homework assignment. “Not now. I feel like Cartman doesn’t need to know that the slurs he calls me are true.”
Stan nearly laughs, but falls quiet when he actually thinks about what was just said. How many times has Kyle had to stay silent when his friends were calling their classmates gay? How many times has Stan just listened and laughed at the jokes Cartman made about the two of them?
“Hey,” Kyle reaches out, tugging at the leg of Stan’s pants. There’s a soft smile on his face, but it feels bittersweet when there are still tear marks too. “You can laugh, dude, I was making a joke.”
Stan nods, putting on a smile back. “I know.”
Kyle chews on the inside of his cheek for a second, then turns his face away, staring at the ceiling while he talks. “I don’t really want people to know yet. At least, not the hicks that live around here.”
“What about your mom and dad?”
The question earns a scoff from Kyle. “My mom? Hearing that I’m never going to breed and make her dozens of little Jewish grandchildren? I think she’d faint.”
“Yeah, probably,” Stan says, picking at the lint on the comforter. “But, you’re really not gonna tell them? What about Ike?”
“I’ve thought about it,” Kyle replies, a frown coming across his face. “But, he’s only ten. He’s smart, but he doesn’t really get this kind of stuff yet. Did you even know what a gay person was when you were ten?”
Stan leans back against the headboard as he thinks. He’s pretty sure that, at ten, he didn’t really know what being gay was. In hindsight, his elementary school teachers or boy scout leaders that his dad would call “funny” were probably the first gay people he knew. “I guess not.”
“I think that if I told anyone, I would have maybe a week until the rest of the town found out. They’d probably bully Ike just for being related to me.” Kyle sits up on his elbows, looking over to Stan. “You won’t say anything, right?”
“Of course not,” Stan replies quickly. “I swear, dude. I’d never do that to you.”
A small, relieved smile comes across Kyle’s face as he sits up. “I know. I just, I dunno, wanted to check.”
Stan looks out the window to the mostly dark street, reminding himself that life exists outside of him and Kyle in this room. As far as he knows, there aren’t any out kids in their grade. There’s a few guys that his peers have decided are different, who get pushed around and shoved in lockers despite claiming to be straight. Thinking about Kyle getting treated like that makes an anger that he rarely feels blossom in his chest, and he has to clench his fists. But, when he glances back at Kyle, shuffling his polaroids back into their envelope, he feels a small sense of pride. He’s the only one in town who knows this secret, and Kyle trusts him to protect it.
He’s still not really happy about this David kid, and the fact that Kyle is still looking at his photo as he puts the others away. But, he’ll push that feeling pretty deep down.
“David’s out, at home,” Kyle says, just before tucking the polaroid into the envelope. “He’s from New York City. He says his dad wasn’t really happy about it, and he lost some friends, but he doesn’t regret it.”
“Yeah?” Stan replies, watching as Kyle places the envelope carefully on his nightstand. “Did any of the guys at camp know about you?”
“Not, like, explicitly,” Kyle responds. “They knew about David and they knew me and him spent a lot of time together. No one ever asked, but I think they connected the dots.”
Stan frowns. When their friends see him and Kyle off alone together, they’re quick to poke fun at how gay the two of them act. He can’t imagine how much worse it would be if Kyle was actually out. Thinking back, he understands why Kyle spoke so highly of camp and the new friends he had made.
“So, the two of you guys were together?” Stan asks, trying to keep his voice neutral. “You and David?”
When Stan turns away from the window, Kyle is already looking at him. They both look away quickly, and the tingly sensation in his palms return as he waits for an answer. “We were,” Kyle says in a quiet voice. “I had such a crush on him the first week. He was really smart, and funny, and not arrogant like a lot of the other guys. Do you-” Kyle looks back over at Stan, who’s very focused on staring out the window again. “Do you want to hear this?”
The question makes Stan’s face heat up. He thought he wasn’t being obvious with how uncomfortable the subject was making him feel. “I mean, if you wanna talk about it-” Stan starts, shrugging like it’s not a big deal to him. “I don’t know if I really, um, want details and stuff. N-not because it’s a guy, though!”
When he finally looks at Kyle, the redhead is smiling, trying to contain his laughter. Stan wipes his palms on his pants.
“What’s so funny?” He asks, unable to stop the smile that comes across his face now.
“Your face right now, dude. You look constipated.” Stan opens his mouth to protest, which causes Kyle to break and start laughing. “It’s okay if you don’t want to hear about him. I don’t like hearing about you and Wendy. It’s not a gay thing, it’s just, I dunno, cringey?”
Stan lets out a breath of relief, allowing himself to laugh along. “Fucked up that you never told me you don’t like hearing about Wendy, but, good to know it’s mutual.” He pauses, letting out a loud yawn. “Sorry, I was up at like 6 this morning, I’m beat.”
Kyle rolls his eyes, but Stan can tell that he’s getting pretty tired too. “I can, um,” he begins, glancing down at the space between them on the bed. “Do you want me to grab you extra blankets or something?”
“Why would you do that?” Stan asks, rubbing his eye as he leans back against the headboard.
Kyle takes a second to respond, in which Stan realizes just what he means. “I can sleep on the floor or something, if you don’t want to share. It’s really okay.”
Right . They’ve slept beside each other since they were toddlers, sharing a nap mat in kindergarten. The thought that they wouldn’t do that anymore didn’t even cross Stan’s mind at first, and knowing that Kyle was worried about it makes him feel terrible. “I don’t mind, dude.”
“Are you sure? It’s really fine-” Stan hadn’t noticed, but Kyle’s been keeping a distance between them, sitting at the end of his bed.
“You were gay the last time I stayed over, right?” Stan asks, and, after a pause, he can see the tension leave Kyle’s body.
The redhead smiles, moving over to the same side of the bed as his friend. The two of them don’t need to say anything as they slide under the covers, careful to leave enough room for the other. Stan stays against the wall, coming to lay down on his back just as Kyle flicks the lamp on his nightstand off. In the darkness, there isn’t anything to distract him, just the sound of Kyle’s breathing as he settles into the bed beside him.
They lay there for some time, both staring up at a black ceiling. Even though he was tired before, now that he’s actually laying down, he knows his thoughts are swarming too fast for him to actually get any sleep tonight.
Softly, he hears from beside him, “Stan?”
“Yeah?” He replies.
“Do you think I’m being a wimp if I don’t tell anyone else?”
The answer comes easily to him. “No, not at all.”
“I just- Fuck , it’s scary.”
Stan grips the blanket beneath his hand, because Kyle sounds just like he did when they were little, and all he wants to do is tell his best friend that he’ll be okay. But, Kyle would see right through that, so all he says is, “I know, dude.”
He hears Kyle shuffle beside him, and without looking, he knows the other’s face is turned towards him. “Thanks for coming over tonight.”
“Of course. It’s been a really shitty summer without you.”
“I guess,” Kyle starts. “Thanks for staying . After I told you.”
Stan lets out a breath, trying to exhale some of the weight on his chest. There’s a lot on his mind, and so many things he’s unsure of right now. But, more than anything, he knows he could never lose this , staying beside his best friend. He doesn’t quite know how to verbalize this, for fear of sounding too cheesy or insecure or needy. So, instead, he just looks over at Kyle, giving him a smile that he hopes the other can make out in the dark.
“So,” Stan starts, keeping his voice a whisper. “Do you think you can get your mom to make pancakes for breakfast?”
The question earns a small fit of laughter from Kyle, who starts to complain about how Stan only stays over for the luxury breakfast the next day. Stan turns over to face him when he retorts, and they fall into their usual ritual of whispering lame jokes and stories, which only grow more random and delirious the longer they talk. Eventually, their conversation will dwindle, and they’ll fall asleep facing each other, soft smiles on their faces.
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south-park-meta · 2 years
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uncle stan is easy to make fun of because he wears the same basic shit constantly (and has clothes at kyle's house. not because they have anything going on though, of course)
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nosebridgepinch · 2 years
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Title: The Violet Place: Oubliette Fandom: South Park Summary: Senior year: prom, graduation, college plans. Things can't be better for Stan and his friends. But when Stan collapses in class and lands himself in a coma, there's so much uncertainty among his loved ones if they'll be planning a graduation party or a funeral. Rating: M Pairing: Stan/Wendy, Stan/Hospital Bed, Kyle/Sophie, Kenny/Bebe
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