#Ehsun
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Alright Ehsun I'm following your logic on this one... I agree. This is the journey I'm on.
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. . .
XVI - the tower | ŰšŰ§Ű±Ù | tarot
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ÙŰšÙŰȘ۱ ÙÙ ŰŽŰ§ŰźÙâÙ ŰČÙŰȘÙÙÙ ŰšÙ ŰŻÙŰ§Ù ŰŻŰ§Ű±ŰŻ ÙێۧÙÙâÛ Ű§Ű±Ű§ŰŻÙ ŰšÙ ŰČÙŰŻÚŻÛ Ű§ŰłŰȘ.
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7 sentences WIP meme
tagged by @punkascas hewwo
dropping it on my writing sideblog to reblog to my main blog because I like to needlessly complicate my life~
Ehsun had succeeded. The thought didnât quite seem real, somehow. Sheâd found Terror, and he was safer on her ship, under her protection, than heâd probably ever been in his life. Both of their children were within her reach, and there was no one left alive who would have either interest or opportunity in taking them away from her. She had a ship, she had credits, and she had the means to acquire more credits when she needed them. She had Sugi and Ouve, and now apparently also Shmi, to help her keep her family safe and cared for.
She had succeeded, but somehow, she still felt as though something were going to go wrong at any moment.Â
no I havenât forgotten about lost beneath the turning wheel, I promise uwu
no pressure tags: @thelastbattlecry, @carverly, @cacodaemonia, @pretzel-log1c, @reyiosa, @primarybufferpanel, and @littledumplingwrites
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Ehsun A. is an experienced math, physics, and computer tutor with a degree in chemical engineering. He is based out of Los Angeles and charges only $25 per hour.
â www.tutorz.com/tutor/617959
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all embarrassment aside Iâm just postinâ this thing cuz I like it and idk anymoreÂ
original fiction, super short, probably not gonna end up as more than this but it was just stuck in my head
---
Itâs been a good night. Â Not the normal kind of work party, not really. Â There were a lot of us. Â It had become kind of a cascade, people who got off at the same time inviting their friends who had gotten off earlier. Â We had to jam two tables together to fit us all in one place. Â It was fun. Â Always somebody to talk to, or some conversation going on, always laughter and drinks being passed around. Jenny and Ehsun had gone off to play darts halfway through and weâd all watched, cheering them on and jeering when they missed. Â Billy failed hard at pool, lost some cash to a guy heâd just met, and we all ribbed him as we covered his drinks. Â Even Liz put her phone away and started talking to people. Â It was nice to see her grin again, freed from all the bullshit in her family life. Â
Of all the people, I hadnât expected Roman to be there, though. Â He wasnât the sort of person Iâd ever imagined at a work outing, or, honestly, at a bar. He wasnât the kind of person who fit in with the salespeople; he was too tall, too awkward, too quiet. Â Though he was smiling and laughing with the others, he wasnât talking, not really. Just listening, appreciating other peopleâs stories. Â
It wasnât uncomfortable, though; it didnât feel socially awkward, or like people were purposefully excluding him. Â Even though I hadnât expected it - even though Iâm pretty sure nobody expected Roman to show up - Â it seemed like everything was fine, like he was happy just being there. Â Just listening. Â
I admit, I was watching closer than I shouldâve. I kind of had a crush on him, a secret thing I kept locked away from everyone. He wasnât the kind of person most people had crushes on, the same way he wasnât the sort of person youâd expect to be at a bar with a bunch of salespeople fresh off of shift.
Roman worked in the back of house. Â He wasnât a salesman; he wasnât maintenance, not like I was. Â He worked in the mail room. Â Before now Iâd only ever seen him there, working through piles and piles of mail, organizing endless stacks of things and humming to himself as music played from the little bluetooth speaker he kept on the highest shelf. Â
But he was sweet. Iâd heard him talking to other folks, people who had been there longer than I was, people he knew. He joked, too, softer jokes, gentle ribbing, like he was afraid to step too far and hurt somebody. Â He talked to the deliverymen who came and dropped off packages and picked up what was going out for the day, made smalltalk and smiled back whenever anyone smiled at him. Â When he started smiling at me, too, thatâs when it broke me a little. Â
We werenât strangers when my stupid crush started to grow. Â There had been a few times when things had been slow and my boss sent me to the mailroom. Â We didnât talk a whole lot, then. Â He asked me to deliver mail, and I did, wandering across the store to deliver things to the salespeople and HR. It was like a game. Â And when I came back heâd make little comments, or Iâd ask questions, and he was always kind when I didnât know something. Â It was good, and it grew. Â We worked with a lot of the same people. Â Heâd tell me stories, sometimes. Things that had happened before I worked there, and those made this stupid crush get worse. Â The way he smiled when he told me something funny, like he was trying to hold back laughter, the way he gestured when he tried to explain. Â And then the ways heâd come back to himself. Â It was weird. Â Maybe just because I had this crush, because I was watching him, I noticed the ways heâd fold in on himself. Â Hunch his shoulders, cross his arms, like heâd realized heâd been too open and wanted to hide away as quick as possible. Â
He had been doing that less and less around me, in the past few weeks. Â It really made me happy. Â The same way he smiled when he caught me looking from across the bar, and the little wave he gave me when he noticed. Â That smile on his face - there wasnât any way I could stop the smile I gave him in return. Â
We didnât get to talk, not then. Too many people in between us, the tables too loud. Â But it faded quick enough. Ehsun and Jenny peeled off not too long after that. Â They left, coats on, to head out for the night. Â That triggered a couple others: Sam and Briar, they split next, giggling amongst themselves as they did. Â Liz ran out after them not long after that. It got quieter and quieter, people leaving in ones and twos, and soon it was just Billy and Roman, Harriet and Emily, and me. Â
âLetâs go somewhere else,â Harriet says, frowning at her bill tab. Â âThis place is too expensive.â Â
I swear, my heart nearly falls out of my chest when Roman speaks up. Â
âI donât live too far from here,â he says, glancing around the table. Â âMaybe fifteen minutesâ walk, If you want to come by.â
Thereâs a part of me thatâs worried somebody is going to laugh at him. Â Emily might. Â I know she doesnât know him that well, and the way her brow arches when he offers says she thinks heâs trying to pull something. Â But Harriet grins, and I feel a little bit better, because I should know better. Â Harrietâs been working at the store as long as Roman has; she knows him, knows heâs sweet. Â
âIâm up for it,â Harriet says. Â âCasa del Roman? Â Iâve never even been there.â Â
That makes him grin, and maybe Iâm imagining it, but his gaze flickers over to me. Â It makes something hot flush up my neck, and I feel like a high school freshman with a crush again, soft and stupid. Â âItâs nothing to write home about.â
âYeah? Â Iâll be the judge of that. Â How much alcohol does it have?â Â Harriet asks, jabbing her pen at Roman. Â
âMore than enough to keep you busy, Harriet,â Roman teases, and it sets the mood a little easier. Â Emilyâs back to being okay with it, and Billyâs grinning as he goes to close out whatâs left of his bar tab. Â
Itâs when Roman glances back at me that I freeze like a fucking deer. Â âAre you coming too, Erika?â Â
âYes,â I say, maybe a little too fast. Â It makes that little smile on his face - too fucking cute, I hate it - grow a little bigger, and I scramble for something else, something thatâs distracting. Â âI mean apparently this offer is a rare one. Â Canât pass up.â Â
âYeah,â Billy calls from the bar, âgotta see where Romanâs luring us all. Â What kind of lair does the guy have?â
âEw! Â You make it sound so creepy!â Â Emily says. Â She picks up a cocktail straw somebody had left on the table and flicks it at Billy. Â
âThis lair has free booze, though,â Harriet says with a grin, and she gathers up her purse. Â âSo letâs go.â Â
When I stand to follow, thereâs a little bit of wobble in my step.  I probably shouldnât have done that last tequila shot with Liz before she left. I hold steady though, grabbing my hoodie as Harriet ushers Roman to the door.  Billy is teasing Emily again, and for a moment I feel like the odd one out.  I shouldnât be here, not really.  They all know each other, have been working here for ages.  I still feel like a new hire.  But Roman glances over his shoulder, his eyes skimming over Billy, and Emily, and then⊠me. Â
Odd one out or not, I feel like making a dumb decision tonight. Â I pull on my hoodie, which is a good plan; soon as we step outside Iâm buffeted by the cold, and I eye my car across the parking lot. Â The furthest space from the door, hiding out by the dumpster. Â We wait for a moment as Billy pulls out a cigarette and lights up, and Emily frowns at him with the hint of a smile at the corners of her mouth; sheâs going to fall to his charms someday. Still, Iâm staring at my car. Â In the dim light from the barâs exit sign, the old honda civic seems like a bad omen, that dent in the bumper from when I backed into a pole on a night a lot like this. Especially if weâre going to Romanâs to drink more, I shouldnât drive home. Â
Iâm still staring at it when I feel somebody wrap an arm around my waist, and I jerk out of my thoughts as Roman tugs me away from the door. Â His hand is on my waist, fingers curling around my hip, and the touch is like electricity bursting through me. Â I freeze, just for a moment, completely uncomprehending; I stare up at him, his soft eyes meeting mine. Â Why would he grab me?
But then the door to the bar behind me bursts open so hard that the rush of air from the swing plays with my hair. Â Two drunk idiots come stumbling out, and one of them is the guy Billy lost money to. Â They shout and wave at him, and Billy waves sheepishly back, and Romanâs pulling his arm from around my waist. Â It happens so quick, and itâs like nobody even noticed. Even without his touch, though, that electricity still dances over my skin, and now thereâs this infernal little secret smile on his face. Â Like heâs figured something out, or like heâs pleased. Â It feels like my cheeks are on fire, like my face is broadcasting it to everyone just what happened, but nobodyâs looking. Â Â
âSo, where to, Roman?â Â Harriet interrupts, and that is that. Â Romanâs attention is drawn elsewhere. Â He points north, across the street, and we all start moving.
The world still seems to wobble around me. Â Or maybe thatâs just me, tilting a little and thinking about that soft touch, the curl of fingers against my hip and how quickly that made my skin go hot. Â Itâs getting bad, this crush, and I am not equipped to deal with it.
I only sort of listen to Emily and Billy snipe at each other, and beyond that thereâs the low murmuring of Harriet and Roman at the head of the group. Â I slow down after we cross the street, lagging at the tail end. Â Iâm almost jealous, for a moment. Â They get to talk, nice and quiet at the front of the group. Â Emily and Billy have their will-they-wonât-they thing. Â And here I am, trailing behind like a lost dog. Â I stuff my hands in my pockets, remembering the promise of more alcohol, so at least then I can drink the anxiety away. Â
Itâs closer than fifteen minutesâ walk. Â More like ten. Â Itâs a little complex of condos, one right against the other, all painted brown and with their garage doors shut tight. Â I gaze at them all, glancing at the things on the porches and guessing which one belongs to Roman. Â Itâs not the one with the faded rainbow flag over the balcony, or the one with fifteen different potted plants that are trying to take over the front door. Itâs not the one thatâs empty of everything, although I linger at that one for a minute, wondering. Roman wouldnât be the type to have a whole lot in front of his place, but it wouldnât be blank, either, I donât think. Â Â
We come to a condo with a welcome mat and a cat statue that looks like it was sculpted by somebody who had never actually seen a cat, but had once had a cat described to them and wanted to give it a go.  It has wide, mournful staring eyes that look like theyâre facing opposite directions; its little mouth stuck in a perma-frown and its ears a little too low on its head, almost bear-like  Like a grandmaâs porcelain collection, but on the edge of nightmare-inducing.  Itâs about as funny as it is creepy.  I want to laugh at it, but Emily butts in first. Â
âWhere on earth did you get that?â Â she asks, some disgust in her voice. Â It almost makes me annoyed with her, just because Iâm close to drunk and Emily doesnât need to be so goddamn judgmental all the time.
Roman shrugs. Â If he hears Emilyâs disgust, he doesnât acknowledge it. Â âSomebody left it on my porch at my last apartment. Â I figured Iâd bring it with me.â Â
Itâs just outlandish enough that my annoyance with Emily vanishes and a laugh escapes me. Â Because of course heâd just bring something somebody left him; it would be too rude to throw it away. Â Emily gives me a look like I grew another head, and I shrug. Â âI like it. Â Guards the door. Â Keeps out evil spirits.â
âIâm just surprised nobodyâs broken it yet,â Emily says, though the tone of her voice says that she still thinks itâs creepy as hell. Â âWhere I live, the neighborhood kids would just kick it over.â
âGood thing Roman doesnât live there,â Billy says. Â âEmily, your place sounds like a shithole.â Â
âYouâre a shithole,â Emily mutters, shoving Billyâs arm as he laughs. Â Romanâs got the hint of a smile on his face as he unlocks the door to his condo, and Harriet is the first one in, flailing her arms in the darkened doorway and yelling for a lightswitch. Â Emily follows soon after with a toss of her head, and Billy follows like a dog. Â
Like itâs an afterthought, Roman leans in, flicking on the light. Â It makes Harriet cry out in victory, even though sheâd done nothing at all. Â
âAre you sure you want to let them in there?â Â The words slip out before I can think about it, and I feel like slapping a hand over my face when they do. Â Did I really just say that? Â Jesus. Â But it makes a smirk cross Romanâs face, and I am so glad heâs watching Harriet make her way through his house, because that way he doesnât see how Iâm staring at him. Â
âHarriet wonât do any harm,â he says, voice low and pitched just for me. Â Then he darts a look at me, almost mischievous, like weâre sharing a secret joke. Â âIâm not so sure about the other two, though.â Â
I am so fucking sure that Iâm red in the face but Iâm just tipsy enough that itâs a little easier to play along. Â âEmilyâs the one you really want to watch out for. Â Sheâs dangerous.â Â
âThen I hope youâll help me keep an eye on her,â Roman says, that mischief so fucking clear in the glint of his eye. Â He motions for me to step inside, and I do, thinking only of the way his hand had curled around my waist not ten minutes earlier. Â
Romanâs condo is about what I would have expected. The walls are still the same characterless beige that condos come with, but the living room is nice, clean and well taken care of. Â The couch is majestic to me, half drunk and already wondering how the hell Iâm going to make it home - itâs a plush, well worn leather, sitting in front of a television that looks massive from where Iâm standing. Â Billy has already walked over, staring at it with hands on his hips, and Emily is looking through the shelf of dvds next to it. Â I swear I hear her say something about who even has dvds anymore, but I leave it alone. For now. Sheâs getting on my nerves. Â
Thereâs a couple of family pictures on the walls and I donât look too close, mostly because I feel like it would be awkward to stare. Â I almost do, until Harriet emerges from what I assume is the kitchen, holding up a bottle of whiskey with a triumphant cry. Â
âLet me know if you need glasses, or ice, like a civilized human,â Roman says, though thereâs no animosity in his voice, just amusement.
âWhat, you donât want to go old school college and just pass around the bottle?â Â Harriet asks, flouncing back to the couch as she uncaps the whiskey. Â She sticks her nose in the neck of the bottle and makes a happy noise before knocking back a hefty slug. Â
âThe glory days,â Billy says with a grin. Â âMiss drinking frat boys under the table, Harriet?â
Emily doesnât join in with the teasing. Â She goes to Harriet, holding out her hand silently, and Harriet deposits the bottle in Emilyâs hand with a big stupid smile. Â The pull that Emily takes from the bottle is a lot longer.
âDo you want a glass, or do you want to take it straight from the bottle like the rest of these heathens?â Â I can feel the vibration of Romanâs voice and I nearly jump again. Â I donât know when he got so close, and I canât look straight at him. Â Looking at his shirt collar isnât any better, though - I can see his throat and just the quirk of his lips. Â Heâs smiling at me again, that same sort of smug smile as before, and my cheeks are hot. Â
âGlass.â Â I have to force the word out. Â âYou want me to share mouth germs with Billy?â Â
Itâs loud enough that Billy goes âhey!â from where he stands by the tv. Â
âItâs alcohol, itâll disinfect him,â Harriet says, blasĂ©.  It makes Roman smile again, and he brushes past me, into the kitchen. Â
God, I feel like a loser. Â I feel weak, and I can still smell whatever cologne Roman uses on the air, just a hint where heâd passed me. Â Swallowing hard, I try to focus on the room, try to focus on teasing back, because if I donât theyâll realize something is up and Iâm being such a dipshit. Â âDo I want to take that chance, though?â Â
âWhat, afraid youâll catch suave from me?â Â Billy asks, making some hand-sliding-through-the-air gesture that must seem suave to him. Â
Itâs too easy; Billyâs good at making himself a target, but hey, that means I can draw attention away from me.  âMore like that bad luck you had at the pool table, but sure, if thatâs what weâre calling suave nowâŠâ
Harriet gives an amused hiss, and Emily ooohs as Roman comes back into the room. Â When Roman reaches for it, Emily gives up the bottle without question, and he pours into two cups clutched in one hand. Â
I take the glass when itâs offered, and I donât mean to brush his fingers with mine but I do. Â How the hell is nobody else noticing this? Â It feels like the tension fills the air, like the tension is all there is. Â Admittedly thatâs probably just for me, because Roman doesnât look like he feels any tension at all. Â He just hands the bottle to Billy. Â
âHere,â he says, âif it keeps going the way itâs going, I think youâre going to need this.â Â
Billyâs âThanks,â is flat and sarcastic, but he takes a long drink anyways, giving me a look after he lowers the bottle. Â His eyes flicker back to the shelves that the tv is perched on top of, dancing up and down. Â âI canât believe you have board games.â Â
Roman shrugs. Â âA few. Â Theyâre entertaining, and they distract my niece when Iâm babysitting. Â If you want to play something, feel free.â Â
Iâd heard a couple stories about his sister and his niece, and I look at the board games shoved beneath the TV. Â There was a fair amount, enough that it would keep Billy busy for the next two days. Â
Itâs the first time that Emily perks up, and she looks at the pile again, her eyes jumping from the board games back to Billy. Â She points one manicured finger at Billy, her eyes going wide and serious. Â âI will trash the shit out of you in Candyland, salesboy.â Â
âThat is salesman to you,â Billy says, taking one last chug and shoving the bottle unceremoniously into Harrietâs hands. Â He practically dives for the Candyland box after that, and Harriet gives a hoot of encouragement. Â
I just take another drink. Â This is going to be a long night, and I need to be a little bit more drunk if weâre going to play Candyland. Â
---
Against all odds, Harriet is the one who beats the shit out of everyone in Candyland. Â Three games running, to the point where Billy quits and accuses her of cheating, and Emily canât stop laughing. Â Roman sits back and grins at it all, and then he helps Billy pick out something else that he thinks he can win. Â
Somewhere around the emergence of that second boardgame, I retreat to the furthest corner of the couch and curl up. Â I can feel my heartbeat from my head to my toes, and the world is soft around the edges, and I really should not have had as much as I did to drink. Â I close my eyes so things will stop spinning, maybe a little, and I listen to them argue. Â
They argue a lot. Â But I think, at least based on the noise, Billy wins a game. Â
It kind of blurs together. Â Murmuring and soft sounds, people talking, and somebody giving a sharp laugh. Â I donât know when I fall asleep, but I know when I wake up with a jerk, disoriented and scared because suddenly itâs gotten a lot quieter. Â
I nearly jump out of my skin again when Harriet comes over, kneeling in front of me. Â Somewhere along the way I laid down on the couch, sprawled out from armrest to armrest. Â Emilyâs standing with Billy in the corner, and theyâre both talking to Roman, and they both have their jackets on. Â
Panic erupts in my chest and I try to scramble up. Â Weâre leaving. Â I should be ready to leave. Â Iâm not - what am I going to do, pass out in my car by the bar until Iâm good? Â But Harriet puts her hand on my shoulder and I take a breath, a big gulping thing, staring at her. Â
The smile she gives me is soft and genuine, surprisingly nice all things considered. Â âHey, calm down. Â You donât need to run out with us. Â I can stay until youâre ready to go, but Emily and Billy are taking off.â Â
âWhat?â Â It comes out mealy-mouthed and stupid, and I want to smack myself. Â Instead I rub a hand across my eyes. Â âWhat time is it?â Â
That makes a little smirk cross Harrietâs face. Â âFour in the morning. Can you believe how late these assholes were playing board games?â Â
Oh my god. Â I drop back to the couch with a groan. Â âHoly shit, we were here all night?â
âRoman doesnât mind,â Harriet says, âthank god. Â But yeah. Â Do you need me to call an uber for us?â Â
I stare at the ceiling, dropping my head to the couch with a thump. Â For us. Â Harriet lives on the opposite side of the city, and itâs already so goddamn late. Â I shake my head. Â âNo,â I say, and then a little louder. Â âNo. Â If itâs cool with Roman Iâll just stay here until I get myself together enough to call an uber.â Â
âYou sure?â Â Harriet asks, arching her brows and giving me a searching glance.
I dare a look at Roman.  Heâs ushering Billy and Emily to the door, that same little smile on his face, maybe more tired than before.  I want to make sure itâs okay with him, I really do, but if I ask him directlyâŠ.  âCan you ask Roman for me?â  The words come out small, and I feel every inch a coward.
âSure!â Â Harriet pops up, too steady on her feet for somebody who had drank as much as she had. Â She flounces over to Roman just as Billy steps out the door with Emily at his heels, and she looks up at him, asking the question. Â
I freeze like a rabbit when Roman glances back at me. Â That look, though. Â That makes heat rush to my face, that look, soft and searching. Â But he nods, and he smiles, and he glances back at Harriet. Â
âOf course.â Â I hear it, soft even from across the room. Â âDo you need an uber too?â Â
Harriet shrugs, then nods, grabbing her phone from her pocket with a hum and pulling up the app. Â âIâll be out of here soon. Â Thank you so much for letting us come over.â Â
âItâs no problem,â Roman says. Â âBe safe. Â Let me know when you get home.â Â
âAbsolutely.â Â Harriet grins her sunny little grin, and she turns back to me to wave before she steps out the door. Â
Roman stays with her just outside the door, leaving it open. Â I canât quite hear what theyâre talking about, but I can hear the rise and fall of their voices, and I can hear when Harriet says something that makes Roman laugh. Â My pulse is jumping in my throat. Â I drop my head back to the couch and jam the heels of my palms into my eyes. Â
What the everloving fuck am I thinking? Â Iâm going to be alone with Roman. Â In his house. Â I am not prepared for this. Â Iâm going to become a blushy useless mess, and Iâm almost definitely still drunk, and I donât know what Iâm doing. Â
I hear it when the door shuts, but I donât take my hands from my eyes. Â God, I donât want to see him. Â I donât want to stare and see his face. Â Iâll turn red. Â
âAre you feeling okay, Erika?â Â His voice is soft, sweet, and it makes me want to sink into the couch and never speak again. Â
âIâm okay,â I mutter. Â Iâm not trying to sound sullen but I think I do anyways, which I hate. Â I donât want him to think Iâm upset about being here. Â
âWould you like water?â Â
Water is probably a good idea. Â I nod, the palms of my hands still ground into my eyes. Â I hear him step away, and thatâs when I pull my hands away, blinking away the blurriness. Â I stare at the ceiling, imploring some kind of act of god to save me. Â Nothingâs even happening and my cheeks are flushed. Â
Iâm alone. Â In his apartment. Â Of course Iâm blushing. Â I hate this stupid crush. Â
There is the distant clink of a glass, the soft hiss of a faucet filling a cup, and then Roman pads back in. Â It trembles through me, the surge of adrenaline, the hot flush of embarrassment, and he hasnât even done anything yet. Â Iâm drunk. Â Iâm going to say something, do something. Â Heâs not interested. Â Heâs not going to be interested. Â What am I doing?
While Iâm drowning in my own thoughts, he steps over, and he kneels next to the couch. Â That I donât expect. Â He gives me a soft smile, holding out the glass, and I jerk myself up into a sitting position, scooting back a little. Â
Heâs so tall, even kneeling on the floor Iâm not that much taller. Â And god, heâs not looking away. Â I want to dissolve. Â Before I can fall too deeply into self loathing, he holds out the glass of water.
I reach out to take it, and again, our fingers brush. My heart beats double time. Â The moment feels like forever, like heâs doing it on purpose. Â Or maybe I am, because Iâm not sure. Â His fingers are cool but not cold, and irrationally I wish he would put a hand to my face. Â I know Iâm flushed, too warm. Â I want to feel that cool touch. Â
âThank you,â I murmur before I take a long, long drink. Â Mostly to keep myself from saying anything stupid. Â I needed it, though; the water washes down my throat, reminding me that I hadnât been drinking half as much water as I should have been throughout the night. Â
âYou know, you donât have to go,â Roman says.  I nearly choke on the water.  He continues, I assume completely unaware of the vivid and sexy thoughts that rushed through me, made parts of me throb.  âYou can sleep it off on the couch.  I donât mind.  Donât you have tomorrow⊠well, today now, I guess⊠off?â Â
âYeah,â I mumble, nodding.  I donât think to ask why he knows my schedule.  âI always do.  Are you⊠do you really not mind?â Â
He arches a brow at me, and the smile looks more affectionate than I expect. Â The heat in my gut is still so, so warm, and the alcohol isnât helping. Â Fuck, I want to kiss him. Â âErika. Â Do you really want to spend money on a ride just to come back tomorrow to get your car from the parking lot? Â I donât mind.â Â
âIf youâre sure.â Â Itâs barely a murmur. Â
âI am,â he says, that little smile still there. Â âReally.â Â
âOkay,â I murmur, like a little kid being reassured by an adult. Â And then, of course, it slips out; âYouâre amazing.â Â
I swear I might as well catch on fire. Â But that smile on his face widens and he sits back, the softest little chuckle escaping him. Â
âNo,â he murmurs, âYou are. Â Let me get you a pillow before you go back to sleep.â Â
âThanks,â I say, more out of habit than anything else. Â Iâm still absolutely mortified. Â But he just keeps smiling, like Iâd said something incredible instead of just being a moron, and he stands. Â I stay on the couch while he putters around, curling up and wondering what Iâd done to get here. Â
Thereâs a part of me that feels like I should be helping, not that I could. Â What would I do, get in his way while he finds his stuff in his condo? Â But the boardgames are still sitting on the table, pieces scattered like junk. Â That, at least, is something I can do.
Iâm a little slow getting everything back in the boxes. Â It takes a minute to figure out which way the boardgame folds down, and then where to put all the pieces. The tokens and the actual player pieces got all mixed up, and I donât know why thereâs more than four dice. Â There shouldnât be, should there? Â But I get one halfway into the box before Roman gets back, a bundle of pillow and blankets in his arms. Â
âYou donât have to do that,â he says as he sets the blankets on the couch. Â He steps closer, and because the world is still hazy and soft with alcohol, it feels like heâs suddenly kneeling next to me. Â Our knees are bumping, and he reaches out, taking the figure I have in my hand. Â Itâs some weird little ghost character. Â I donât even know what they were playing, now that I think about it. Â It definitely wasnât something I ever played as a kid. Â
âI just want to help clean up,â I mumble. Â Again, I canât look at him, and my fingers burn where heâd touched me taking the figure. Â I clutch my hand to my chest, staring at the games. Â âI feel like I should do something.â
He tosses the little figure into the box, where it lands with all the other little plastic guys. Â âIt can wait until tomorrow.â Â
I do it. Â I canât help it. Â I glance up at him. Â
Heâs right here. Looking at me, soft, caring. Â Maybe a little flushed. Â Had he had more to drink after I passed out? Heâs right in front of me, so close, and that stupid drunk urge to kiss him is back. Â It wouldnât take much. Â Heâs taller, sure, but I can lean up. Â And he could lean down. Â I want to feel his cold hands touch my face, touch me, until Iâve cooled down and heâs warmed up and weâre the same. Â
I must be drunk. Â
And then I realize something. I realize heâs leaning in. Except he canât be, not to kiss me, thatâs my fucked up thought process. Â He canât be trying to kiss me, Iâm just some new kid from work. Â Iâm just a drunk girl crashing on his couch. Â Iâm nothing. Â I jerk back, sucking in a little sharp breath, my hands clutched tight to my chest, and he goes as still as a statue, something in his face going cold, scared, like he realized heâd done too much.
âDid I misinterpret?â Â He asks, half a sigh in his voice as he rocks back. Â
âWhat?â Â It escapes like a squeak. Â âMisinterpret what?â Â
âI thought--â he pauses, waving a hand, and then he shakes his head.  Heâs doing it again, the thing he does sometimes.  Heâs trying to make himself smaller.  He looks away, and his shoulders hunch, like he wants to fold in on himself. âI thought you were⊠interested.  In me.â Â
âWhat?â I squeak again. Â Not because heâs wrong, no - oh, my god. I wasnât wrong. Â The touches. Â Grabbing me by my waist, earlier, at the bar. Â Offering me a place-- oh my god. Â
âIâm sorry,â he says, and he moves to stand. Â âIâve been creepy, havenât I? Â Iâll get you a car--â Â
Oh my god. Â I fling out an arm, grab him before he can stand all the way. Â I donât know what Iâm going to do until Iâm pulling him over, and I am so, so drunk, because as I pull him down Iâm pulling myself up, grabbing his arm, his shoulder, a hand on the back of his neck as I pull him down to kiss me. Â
âErika--â he has enough time to get that out before my lips are on his, oh my god, my lips are on his. Â Heâs warm, and soft, and his lips are still moving mid-word but he realizes what Iâm doing and after a moment of shock his hand goes to my waist and the other to my cheek, cold fingers against flushed skin. Â And then he pushes back, kisses me again, a real kiss this time, not some awkward drunk thing. Â Gentle, from him, but Iâm so hungry for this. Â I nip his lip, gently, then bold and stupid I slip my tongue into his mouth and really taste him. Â
We both have to taste like that whiskey. Â I know I taste it on him. Â Smokey and sweet and I have my tongue in his mouth, what the fuck am I doing? Â I wonât stop. Â Canât stop, though. And he makes this soft noise I can feel in his chest, rumbling up through his throat, and he kisses back. Â
When I pull back Iâm a little breathless, and I just want to do it again. Â I want to kiss him again, taste him again, but the reality is sinking in a little - I just kissed him. Â Halfway to making out. Â God, I wouldnât mind if we made out on the floor of his condo. Â What was happening, was I sixteen again?
âWow,â he says, and thereâs the rumble of a laugh beneath his words. Â âI guess I didnât misinterpret, then?â Â
âNo,â I say, and I canât help it, I pull back a little to cover my face with my hands. Â âOh my god, no, you did not misinterpret at all. I canât believe I just did that.â Â
âWell, I was going to kiss you,â he says, some humor in the timbre of his voice. Â He takes the hand on my waist and loops it around, bringing me against his side, and yes, heâs tall, but it turns out I fit pretty well. Â
My hands are still over my face, butterflies warring with complete mortification. Â âIâm sorry. Â Iâm drunk. I--if I had any guts at all I wouldâve asked you on a date before I stuck my tongue down your throat--â
I can feel him laugh, the soft chuckle as he tightens his arm around my shoulders. Â âWe can still go on a date, Erika.â Â
âCan we?â Â Suddenly Iâm trying to imagine it, us out at a restaurant. Â And then like a snap Iâm worried about being caught by our coworkers, although I kind of donât care at all. Â I want to go on a date. Not like a restaurant with fancy tables and candlelight or whatever. Â A nice date, a quiet date, where I can just keep listening to him tell stories and watch him talk. Â âCan we go on more than one?â
âAs many as you want to,â he says. Â With his other hand he reaches over, tucking a finger under my chin and lifting my head up, and I want to melt like butter under his gaze. Â âBut I want to kiss you again first. Is that okay?â Â
âYes,â I say, the stupidest smile on my face. Â âPlease. Lots more.â Â
That makes him smile again. Â This soft, warm smile. Â The kind of smile that made me pay attention in the first place, and he leans in, and he does. Â
#original fiction#my writing#i want to hide under a rock tbh#but I also am hoping somebody will like it too
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I could swear I've shared this artist before, and maybe even this particular piece, but if I did it's been more than long enough to justify a second share, so go treat yourself to his wicked works. Some of his coolest ones in my opinion are his 'skulls' pieces, but as a general rule I prioritize corvid themed art, and I just like this one. If any of you have seen that raven that paints, I've practiced extensively to integrate similar strokes and pattetns into my art because why not, and this artist has unknowingly (I'm assuming) harnessed the blotted and bleeding, yet peaceful and ominous emotions of the raven. This is of course said in the most complimentary way. Mad respect for this guy. Go check out his other pieces and follow him if you like this style. . Piece is 'Nevermore' by @ehsun.sv, also Ehsan Safavi on ArtStation, DeviantArt and Pinterest, and Ehsun Sv on Facebook. . . . . . . #dark #darkness #goth #gothic #gothart #gothicart #surreal #macabre #despair #isolation #haunting #creepy #morbid https://www.instagram.com/p/B-ybTC_lqgs/?igshid=1gezi1fnaxjg
#dark#darkness#goth#gothic#gothart#gothicart#surreal#macabre#despair#isolation#haunting#creepy#morbid
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New England art exhibition shows another side of American Muslims - Religion News Service
BOSTON (RNS) â Next week, the Massachusetts State House in Boston will house a collection of artwork by 24 Muslim artists from the Midwest to Massachusetts.
The artwork is part of the annual art series âMore Than My Religion,â now in its fifth year, a project organized by New England Muslim artists to reflect American Muslimsâ multifaceted identities beyond their religious practice.
âWeâre focusing on American Muslims because their narrative has been the most hijacked,â said organizer Irum Haque, a pastel artist in Westford, Massachusetts. âWe want to reclaim who we are and tell our own real stories. And every art piece that hangs in the exhibition is the story of a human life as American Muslim citizens.â
The pieces debuted last month at the Cary Library in Lexington, Mass., and will be displayed at the State House until Nov. 3. Sen. Edward Kennedy and Rep. Mike Connolly will speak at the Oct. 28 public , which will also include a Q&A session with some of the featured artists.
Laura Weinstein speaks at the Cary Library opening of the âMore Than My Religionâ exhibition in Lexington, Mass. Photo courtesy of Irum Haque
This yearâs exhibition was juried by Laura Weinstein, curator of South Asian and Islamic art at Bostonâs Museum of Fine Arts, which re-opened its extensive Arts of Islamic Cultures gallery over the summer.
âThe works of art really speak not only to the diversity within Islamic communities, but also all sorts of connections within Islamic communities to other communities,â Weinstein told Religion News Service. âSome had a religion context but many didnât have that at all. It really dispels the idea of Muslims being isolated from the rest of American culture.â
The 39 pieces include photography, paintings, prints, Arabic calligraphy and other forms of art, featuring global landscapes, self-portraits and images of saxophonists, animals, whirling dervishes and colorful textiles.
Organizer Irum Haque speaks at the Cary Library event in Lexington, Mass. Photo courtesy of Irum Haque
The project started as a conversation about the portrayal of Muslims almost exclusively in religious terms between Haque and co-organizer Ehsun Mirza, a photographer and painter who works as the chief of medicine and director of the ICU at Kent County Hospital in Warwick, Rhode Island.
âWe wanted to do something proactive about all the negative rhetoric going on around Muslims,â Haque said. âInstead of always reacting when things are heightened or something happens, we wanted to do something on an ongoing basis that makes the American Muslim community more visible and puts the real lives of these citizens in the spotlight.â
Neither are formally trained as artists â Haque has a day job as an educator specializing in language-based disabilities. But the friends, both of whom are Pakistani immigrants, have long been involved in New Englandâs interfaith scene.Â
âWeâre making a platform to bridge people together rather than being afraid of the other and who the other communities are,â Haque said. âThis is a place for communities to come together and connect over art and really to be pleasantly surprised that there is so much in common.â
The groupâs first exhibition was hosted at Providence City Hall in Rhode Island, with the cityâs mayor, Jorge Elorza, speaking at the reception about the importance of such community art projects to combat Islamophobia.
Part of the âMore Than My Religionâ exhibition at the Cary Library in Lexington, Mass. Photo courtesy of Irum Haque
Since then, the show has been displayed at The Providence Athenaeum, the Multicultural Arts Center in Cambridge, Mass., and the Rhode Island Council of the Arts. Previous jurors include John Smith, director of the Rhode Island School of Design Art Museums, as well as Jill Brody, a prominent Rhode Island photographer.
Artists whose work is sold at the exhibition are encouraged to donate a portion of the proceeds to local charities.
In the future, Haque said, she hopes to launch an interfaith art exhibition.
âNo matter which background, race, ethnicity you belong to, ultimately human life and human values are shared,â she said. âUltimately itâs about bringing walls down.â
This content was originally published here.
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((Looks like someoneâs gonna get a big ol curse...))
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Sabaat OST Lyrics â Ali Sethi: Hum Tv Presenting you the Full OST of drama serial Sabaat. The Sabaat OST is sung by Ali Sethi and composed by Naveed Nashad. The Drama Sabaat OST Lyrics is written by Kashif Anwar, directed by Shehzad Kashmiri and presented by Momina Duraid. The Drama is Starring by Mawra Hussain, Osman Mukhtar, Ameer Gilani, Sarah Khan, Seemi Raheel, Syed Muhammad Ahmed, Jahanzeb, Abbas Ashraf Awan, Jaweria Kamran, Leyla Zuberi, Moazzam Ali Khan, and drama is written by Kashif Anwar.
Sabaat OST â Ali Sethi
Sabaat OST Details: Song: Sabaat OST Lyrics Singer:Â Ali Sethi Composer: Naveed Nashad Lyricist: Kashif Anwar Post: Apricot Post Editor: Liaqat A.Baltee D.O.P: Ehsun Kashmiri Director: Shehzad Kashmiri Producer: Momina Duraid Channel:Â Hum Tv
Sabaat OST Lyrics:
Zindagi Paheli Hai Zindagi Fasana Hai Geet Gaaye Koi Bhi Saath Gungunana HaiDar Gaaye Jo Raston Se Ghar se Kaise Niklo Gay Roz Inhi Raston pe Tum Ko Aana Jana Hai Zindagi Hai Ajnabi⊠Yeh Karhi Musafatein Hain Iss liye yeh soucha hai Hath Tham Tera Sath Chalte Jana Hai Bhut Jo Khud Tarashe Thy Ban Gaye Hai Sab In Ko Zair Karna Hai Ab Inhen Girana Hai Zindagi Hai Ajnabi⊠Zahn ke Dareechay Pr Soch Ki Yeh Dastak Hai Tum Ko Yad Rakhna Hai Ya ke Bhool Jana Tum Kabhi Jo Aao Tu Saath Mil Ke Baithenge Kya Se Kya Hue Hai Hum Yeh Tumhen Batana Hai Tum Badal Gaye Lekin Main Wahi Pe Thehra Hoon Tere Saath Bandha Jo Ehd woh Nibhana Hai Roze Meri Hasti Se Rakh Udti Rahti Hai Kho Diya Jo Tujhko Jo Aur Kya Gawana Hai Zindagi Hai AjnabiâŠ.
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XXâI - the world | ÚŻÛŰȘÛ | tarot
۳ۧŰȘ۱ÙŰ ŰźŰŻŰ§Ù ŰšŰ§Ű±Ù۱ÙŰ ŰźÙ۱ێÙŰŻ ۯ۱ ŰŹÙÙŰšŰ Ű§Ù
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New Post has been published on Ehsun-Valles Marineris-VRT072-WEB-2014-JUSTiFY RlsBlog.org | ReleaseBlog.org http://rlsblog.org/ehsun-valles-marineris-vrt072-web-2014-justify/
New Post has been published on http://rlsblog.org/ehsun-valles-marineris-vrt072-web-2014-justify/
Ehsun-Valles Marineris-VRT072-WEB-2014-JUSTiFY
http://rlsblog.org/ehsun-valles-marineris-vrt072-web-2014-justify/
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I could swear I've shared this artist before, and maybe even this particular piece, but if I did it's been more than long enough to justify a second share, so go treat yourself to his wicked works. Some of his coolest ones in my opinion are his 'skulls' pieces, but as a general rule I prioritize corvid themed art, and I just like this one. If any of you have seen that raven that paints, I've practiced extensively to integrate similar strokes and pattetns into my art because why not, and this artist has unknowingly (I'm assuming) harnessed the blotted and bleeding, yet peaceful and ominous emotions of the raven. This is of course said in the most complimentary way. Mad respect for this guy. Go check out his other pieces and follow him if you like this style. . Piece is 'Nevermore' by @ehsun.sv, also Ehsan Safavi on ArtStation, DeviantArt and Pinterest, and Ehsun Sv on Facebook. . . . . . . #dark #darkness #goth #gothic #gothart #gothicart #surreal #macabre #despair #isolation #haunting #creepy #morbid https://www.instagram.com/p/B-ya52YFm34/?igshid=1t1tm3wovw7hd
#dark#darkness#goth#gothic#gothart#gothicart#surreal#macabre#despair#isolation#haunting#creepy#morbid
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XX - judgement | ۯۧÙŰ±Û | tarot
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ۧۯ Űč۔۱ ۧÙŰČÙ۱ÙŰł ۧ۳ŰȘ.
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Ű±ŰŻÚŻŰ§Ù ŰšŰ±ŰźŰ§ŰłŰȘÙâۧÙŰŻ.
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