#one last chance

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We’ve received a few emails, comments and messages here and on Tumblr from folks who missed th

We’ve received a few emails, comments and messages here and on Tumblr from folks who missed the claims deadline. So we have decided to give people one last shot at a happy ending and offer the fandom a Valentine as the show ends. Who are we to stand in the way of something that’s meant to be? We will offer a 24 hour claim day for anyoneinterested in participating in this round, even if you didn’t sign up for the challnege. That means any and all are welcome to put in a claim for one of the remaining prompts. For those that have already claimed the maximum of two prompts and you think you could handle a third (but please be very sure you can handle it), you are also welcome to grab another and, of course, those who claimed one prompt are also welcome to grab a second. Open claim day will startr on Sunday, October 20th at 9 am EST. Hereis a clock to help you count down the hours. Prompts can be found hereandhere(if they have only been claimed for one medium, they will be marked accordingly; those struck through have been claimed for both). Info on how to claim can be found here. Please familiarise yourself with it. Bring on that Happy Ending! You know it’s meant to be!


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dycefic:

writing-prompt-s:

You find a girl crying next to a grave. “What’s wrong?” You ask. She cries harder. “Nobody came to my funeral.”

Night watchman at a cemetary isn’t the kind of job most people want. I’ve always liked it, though. It’s pretty peaceful, most of the time, which is nice. Sometimes I get to chase off teenagers or would-be occultists or obnoxious drunks, which is fun. There’s a lot of entertainment in a good chase, at least for me, and scaring the crap out of them is fun too.

Sometimes it gets sad, though.

It was my first walkthrough of the night when I saw the girl weeping beside the grave. It happens sometimes, and I never chase them. The cemetary is for the dead and the grieving. They’re always welcome here.

I went over to her, careful to keep the grave between us so I wouldn’t scare her. “What’s the matter?” I asked gently. “Is there anything I can do to help?”

She shook her head, still weeping. “No-one came to my funeral,” she sobbed. “No-one at all.”

I checked the stone. She’d been about seventeen. An age of strong emotions and fierce resentments. “I’m sorry,” I told her, and meant it. “That’s… always hard.”

“If they cared about me, they would have come,” she wept. “This means nobody cared at all.”

“Not always,” I told her gently. “Sometimes it means that something else happened. If you like, I can try to find out.”

“Really?” She wiped her eyes. “I’d… I’d appreciate that. I’m Lucy.”

“Stanley.” She couldn’t shake hands, so I gave her a friendly nod. “Come with me, Lucy. I’ve got a laptop in the watchman’s hut.”

She followed me, drifting silently, back to the hut. I brought her in, and made two cups of tea, offering her one. “I’m not solid,” she said, her lip quivering. “I can’t -“

I showed her how to take it, the ghostly echo of the solid cup, and told her I’d learned it from the day attendant over at the columbarium. She’s Korean, and knows a lot about hungry ghosts. She sipped her tea while I opened the laptop and ran the usual searches.

I do this a lot.

Sure enough, there’d been three major car accidents between the area she’d lived in and the cemetary. There’s almost always at least one - there’s this one intersection that no exorcism, ritual purification or cleansing spell has ever worked on - and it usually helps. A lot of spirits want to know why someone they loved didn’t come.

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