That sweet modest face as a reaction to "this is my brother Mycroft" đ
- Who are you?
- An interested party.
But like, what if there was an alternate universe with soulmates and when you come of age, your soulmate's name appears on your wrist. And the name 'Holmes' appears on Molly's wrist and when she meets Sherlock, she jumps to the conclusion that he's her soulmate. She's confused and hurt when he consistently rebuffs her advances. How can he be so cruel if he's her soulmate?
But plot twist--her soulmate is the other Holmes brother: Mycroft.
âI think the reason he says âyour loss will break my heartâ is because heâs been drugged up! No, he does mean it but he just never says things like thisâŚâ
- Mark on Mycroftâs expression of brotherly compassion [x]
Moths and a crescent moon.
Insects, their ways and means of living. 1930.
Internet Archive
They: But heâs so arrogant, callous and manipulative. Me: Yes! Isnât he adorable?!
Shame isnât guilt. Guilt says I did something bad. Shame says I am something bad. Itâs corrosive. It rewrites self-worth. And most of the time, it whispers, not screams.
â§Â Start with silence. Characters carrying shame donât confess it on page one. They avoid. They deflect. They joke. They become perfect. Shame thrives in secrets. Let it fester before it speaks.
â§Â Show the disconnect. They donât feel lovable, even when they are. Compliments bounce off them. Praise feels like a setup. They think kindness is a trick. Show them flinching at affection.
â§Â Give it a backstory. Shame doesnât appear from nowhere. Maybe they were told they were too much. Not enough. A mistake. Shame is always planted by someone else, then internalized. Find that origin moment and make it hurt.
â§Â Let them sabotage good things. They get a healthy relationship? They run. They succeed? They downplay it. They get seen? They shut down. Shame convinces people they donât deserve good things and theyâll act accordingly.
â§Â Body language matters. Hunched shoulders. Arms crossed. Averted eyes. Shrinking into themselves. Shame has a physical posture. Write it.
â§Â Watch their inner voice. Shame doesnât sound like âIâm the worst.â It sounds like âWhy would they care about me?âor âOf course I messed it up.â Itâs casual. Constant. Cruel.
â§Â Make healing slow and clumsy. Shame doesnât vanish after one pep talk. It takes safe spaces. Relearning. A lot of awkward baby steps. Let your character accept one small good thing and then panic about it later.
â§Â Let them rewrite their own story. Eventually, theyâll have to look at who they were and say, âEven then, I was trying. Even then, I deserved love.â Let them get there. Let it be earned. Let it feel impossible and then let it happen anyway.
This is just the cover for my fanfiction In Limbo lol. I saw @evadnegrand put one up for Threads of Trust and decided why not! I have killer writers block, plus I like my kindle to have covers for everything. (If you haven't already read her series, I highly recommend it!)
If you're interested in Mollcroft, here's the link to In Limbo as well.
Warning: It's saucy in the beginning lol
I've developed a fascination in Mollcroft a decade later than I should have, now everyone must suffer for it.
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