#Magic Leap 2
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IA: El Cerebro detrás de la Realidad Virtual, Aumentada y el Metaverso
Introducción: Tejiendo Mundos Digitales Inteligentes con IA La Realidad Virtual (VR), la Realidad Aumentada (AR) y el concepto emergente del Metaverso están redefiniendo la forma en que interactuamos con la información, el entretenimiento y entre nosotros. La VR nos sumerge en mundos completamente digitales, la AR superpone información digital sobre nuestro entorno real, y el Metaverso promete…
#Apple ARKit#AR#Avatares IA#Decentraland#Google ARCore#Headsets AR#Headsets VR#HTC Vive Pro 2#IA#IA generativa#inteligencia artificial#Magic Leap 2#Meta Quest Pro#metaverso#Microsoft HoloLens 2#Motores de Juego#MR#Mundos Virtuales#Niantic Real World Platform#NPCs IA#Plataformas Metaverso#Realidad Aumentada#realidad mixta#Realidad Virtual#Roblox#SDK AR#Spatial#The Sandbox#Unity#Unreal Engine
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So minimal school spirits fandom that I now know exists, what do we think about the theory that this whole thing started bc of a science experiment gone wrong?
(I could be misremembering here so correct me if I am) Mr. Martin and Janet died in a fire in what is now the fallout shelter, and in one of the articles they found another student in the class was blaming Mr. Martin for starting the fire and bringing Janet in there with him.
what if
stay with me here
what if, they were doing some kind of research experiment together (hence the chemical formulas in the beginning of Janet's notebook, and the shorthand) that went wrong, and what they'd done of that experiment plus them dying in the room in the fire with it, trapped their souls there.
which raises the question, when Mr. Martin locked her in that room, was it with the watch? was she experiencing that freaking red room thing relieving that day over and over for months? is that what they were arguing about right before Maddie found them? was he making her relive that to try and figure out where the mistake was in their experiment, because he wanted to try and redo or reverse it and that's why Mr. Martin was trying to force her to tell him what she saw?
as far as we know date wise Janet and Mr. Martin are the oldest ghosts, they've been there longest, they could very well be the start of it all.
#this is mostly a joke btw#my brain got a bit caught of mr. martin's “don't pursue this i wish i never had”#and we could tie in the heartbreak theory with it being janets last year in school and her not being allowed to go to college#with her wishing she could just stay there forever and accidentally pulling off some weird science magic thing trapping her and Mr. Martin#idk that ones a leap#school spirits#janet hamilton#mr. martin#school spirits season 2#school spirits theory
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I haven't played the original Half-Life all the way through, but I played Black Mesa (the fan remake with updated graphics and whatnot) and apparently they cut the tedious parts of On A Rail down by quite a bit. It might be worth looking into if that's what made the game hard to get through! I really enjoyed it, personally ^^ I'm super excited to potentially see more Stanley Parable posts as well, since I got TSPUD recently and loved it! Congrats on the achievement!!
Oohh, sounds interesting :0 I'm a bit of a stubborn SOB when it comes to Games-I've-Already-Got haha, so I'll probably still try to see this version through, but thank you for the tip! Likely I'll need it if I ever want to subject myself to going back through to look for specific level details that YouTube videos simply will not pause long enough on lol
Congrats to you as well on getting to play Ultra! I still can't swing the price just yet, but I also refuse to engage in spoilers aside from quickly glancing away from thumbnails, darn algorithms knowing what I'm interested in, not giving a care about spoilers! Lol
But you can be sure to expect Stanley stuff, it's a game I love <3
#TSPUD is a funny acronym hehe#I haven't seen it initialized down until now but yes that is what it would be! It's very silly#I've got one of those mindsets of ''Well I have the game so I might as well beat it!'' haha#A symptom of not having that many games to begin with that has carried over#Even tho I have a lot more games now I still just want to beat the ones I've got!#There's also something to playing the original and then making the technological and story leap to 2 that I'm looking forward to :)#Even if currently it's frustrating XP I'm frustratinger! I'm stubborner! You won't best me game! Haha#If I'm wont to play Star Control II but for realsies at some point - hell I got frustrated multiple times at Deltarune!#But I still powered through!#It's part of the game experience I think :D I don't have to enjoy it but I do want to give it a fair shake lol#Anyway anyway lol ♪#Jelly to the people who've gotten to play so far! Ah!#I always feel a bit behind the curve haha but that's alright :) I've finally gotten the first main release back!#It's a game that I already know that I love so why wouldn't I want to play it again hehe#Lots of classics :) Like the Sims 2! Which speaking of in maybe a rather unrelated way lol -#I got my first magic lamp! I've never gotten one before! My cheat never worked so I was alway like ''What is this'' haha#I got one! And there's still mystery to it! After all these years I'm still seeing new things <3#The Stanley Parable#Half Life#The Sims#WPVG
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2025: #2 u are the main character of ur life

✒️.U.NEED.TO.GET.CRAZY.ABOUT.UR. LIFE .THIS is ur life. your story, your movie and You’re the main character of it . But here’s the problem—you’re sitting there, acting like you’re just an extra. Let me ask you something: when are you going to wake up? When are you going to stop living like someone else is writing your script? Because newsflash—nobody else cares as much about your story as YOU should.
N1 You’re Not Here to Be Average
Do you feel it? That spark inside you? The one that says you’re made for something bigger? Stop shoving it down. Stop telling yourself, 'I’m not special,' or, 'I’ll never be that person.' Because let me tell you something—you already ARE that person. The only difference between you and the version of you that you dream about? Action. Average is safe, but it’s boring. U NEED TO KNOW Being 'okay' is easy, but it’s unfulfilling. You weren’t put on this planet to blend in. You were born to stand out, to do something, to leave a mark. But first, you have to believe that. You have to take risks. You have to dare to be seen, to be heard, to be ALIVE.
N2 Get Obsessed with Yourself
This is the part where people get uncomfortable, but IDGASS . You need to fall in love with YOU. Not in a shallow, fake, selfie-obsessed way—but deeply, madly, passionately in love with the person you are becoming.Spend time with yourself. Take yourself out on dates. Sit in silence and listen to your thoughts. Who are you, really? What do you want? Not what society wants, not what your parents want, not what your friends think is cool—what do YOU want?Get crazy about discovering your passions. Throw yourself into books, art, music, whatever lights you up inside. Because the more you pour into yourself, the more unstoppable you become. You’re not just living life; you’re creating it. So why not make it something spectacular?
N3 Stop Waiting for Permission
Why are you waiting? Waiting for someone to tell you you’re good enough? Waiting for the 'right time'? BRO WTF Let me tell you something nobody is coming to give you permission. Nobody is going to hand you your dream life wrapped up in a bow. You have to go out there and TAKE IT.Stop looking for signs. Stop waiting for everything to feel perfect. It’s messy, it’s chaotic, and sometimes it’s downright terrifying—but that’s the beauty of it. The magic happens when you stop overthinking and just DO. Take the leap, even if you don’t feel ready. Life isn’t about being ready—it’s about showing up, again and again, until you create the life you can’t stop dreaming about AND THIS IS DISCIPLINE
N4 Reclaim Your Power
Let’s get one thing straight: you are powerful. Not in a vague, 'manifestation vibes' kind of way, but in a real, tangible way. Every decision you make is a choice. Every habit you keep is a vote for the kind of person you want to be.But here’s the catch—every time you let someone else control your narrative, you give away a piece of that power. Every time you shrink yourself to fit someone else’s expectations, you lose a little more. Stop giving it away. Own your voice. Own your choices. Own your life.You are the architect of your story. So start building something worth remembering. And if people don’t like it? If they don’t 'get' you? Let them go. Your life is not a democracy it’s YOUR kingdom. Rule it unapologetically.
N5 Romanticize the Hell Out of Everything
Here’s the secret nobody tells you: life is as magical as you decide to make it. Stop waiting for the big moments—graduation, the 'dream job'...—to feel alive. Start finding beauty in the small, ordinary, quiet things.Make your morning coffee an event. Cook ur dinner by urself. Write love letters to urself. Turn sunsets into poetry. Life is happening right now, and if you keep rushing to the 'next thing,' you’re going to miss it.Romanticizing your life isn’t about pretending everything is perfect. It’s about choosing to see the magic, even in the mess. Because when you do that, life stops feeling like something you’re just surviving—and starts feeling like something worth celebrating.
This is Your one life. Your one shot. So stop living like you have forever. Stop waiting, stop hiding, stop playing small. You are the main character of this story, and it’s time to act like it. Get crazy about your life. Get obsessed. Because when you do, everything changes.Now go out there and make something beautiful I'm proud of u 143
@bloomzone 📇
#bloomivation#bloomdiary#becoming that girl#glow up#wonyoungism#wonyoung#it girl#dream life#divine feminine#creator of my reality#it girl affirmations#love affirmations#this is a girlblog#tumblr girls#girlblog aesthetic#self growth#self love#self confidence#self development#self improvement#self healing#get motivated#goals#welcome december#confidence#jang wonyoung#dream girl journey#dear diary#study motivation#girl blogging
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Microsoft Mixed Reality Toolkit 3 (MRTK3):獨立於GitHub的新征程
Microsoft Mixed Reality Toolkit 3 (MRTK3):獨立於GitHub的新征程 Microsoft Mixed Reality Toolkit 3 (MRTK3): A New Journey Independent of GitHu
在最近的公告中,微軟混合實境團隊揭示了一系列重要消息,關於混合實境工具包3(MRTK3)的未來走向,這引起了開發者和合作夥伴社群的廣泛關注。 從創立之初,MRTK3計劃便傾向於橫跨各種平台並保持開放源碼,以造福廣大生態系統,而不僅僅是HoloLens 2所為。在他們看來,MRTK要真正成為一個跨平台工具包,能夠促進更多的第三方合作,必須從微軟的獨占管轄下獨立出來,成立一個獨立的組織,在GitHub內蓬勃發展。 這一轉變使MRTK3能夠擺脫以前的種種限制,這些限制曾使開發者難以引入其他端點並影響功能路線。現在,這種過渡不會影響微軟對MRTK3的投資,反而為他們提供了加大投入的機會,並創建了一個由其他主要行業參與者組成的指導委員會。 指導委員會的擴展亦成為本次公告的亮點之一。MRTK團隊驚喜地宣布,Magic…

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#虛擬實境#虛擬實境資訊#虛擬實境創新#虛擬實境技術#GitHub#HoloLens 2#Magic Leap#Microsoft#Mixed Reality#Mixed Reality Toolkit 3#MRTK UI#MRTK3#Qualcomm Technologies#Snapdragon#Snapdragon Spaces#SoC#vr#vr news#混合實境
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Getting Into the Mood
Billy loves customizing his character, aka Captain Marvel. It’s just so fun to see him (his dad) in silly stupid little costumes for special occasions.
Like when he had to go undercover as a butler at a gala:
Marvel: *pulls up in the butler fit with the mustache and monocle*
Alfred: “Ah. Mr. Marvel. It is a pleasure to make your aquaintance.”
Marvel: “You as well, uh…”
Alfred: “You may call me Pennyworth.”
Marvel: “Yes, you as well, Mr. Pennyworth.”
Alfred: “Indeed.” *passes him a tray of champagne flutes* “Please pass these around if you will. Also… Is that a mustache?”
Marvel: “Yes, Mr. Pennyworth! It is quite splendidly grown is it not?” *all proud*
Alfred: “Yes.” *has to hold back a little British chuckle* “It is. Quite wonderful. May I ask what gel you use for its swirls?”
Marvel: “None! It’s home grown with none of that artificial stuff.” *little wave before leaving to pass out the champagne*
Or when Batman had no one to go to (almost everyone he immediately trusted to be responsible was busy, Superman, Wondy, and Martian Manhunter just to name a few. So, he went with the most responsible out of the least responsible)
Robin!Dick: “Woah…” *blinking up at him in little kid wonder*
Marvel: *in the detective fit with the tobacco pipe and comically large magnifying glass*
Robin!Dick: “You… you look awesome!”
Marvel: “Thanks! Now, time to solve some crimes— Mr. Batman Sir is a detective right?”
Robin!Dick: “Yup, the best.”
Marvel: “Alright! Then time to solve some crimes!” *leaps off a building*
Robin!Dick: *looks down at him, shrugs, and then jumps off too*
Or when he was manning the grill for a party, the jail was having on a beach during the summertime. So he pulled up, looking like the uncle/dad who discusses grilling tips with the other dads but ultimately isn’t that good at grilling himself. Don’t worry though, Billy’s actually good at grilling though.
Marvel: *rocking the faded red tee, the khaki shorts, the sandals, and the apron while flipping some burgers*
Junior: “You look like an uncle.” *literally points and laughs* “Loser.”
Marvel: “Shut up! You can starve for all I care.”
Junior: “Hey!”
Mary: *building a sand castle with Robin!Stephanie, doesn’t even look up* “Marvel, you can’t starve Junior.”
Marvel: “Oh, come on!”
Mary: “You know why you can’t!”
Robin!Stephanie: “Cause he’s his kid?”
Mary: “What? No, cause Junior will complain and possibly try to trip him with his crutches a bunch times until Marvel buys him some food to make up for it.”
Robin!Stephanie: “He needs crutches?”
Or when he pulled up to some magical farmer’s market in the Sorcerer Mickey fit.
Magician 1: “Oh my days…”
Magician 2: “He’s showing his greatness!”
Magician 3: “I wonder which powerful magic user’s robes are those. He must’ve won them in a battle!”
Marvel: *whistling a little tune as he goes up to a stall* “Can I trade a pouch of pixie dust for a pouch of powdered Albanian newt?”
Trader: “Of course.”
Marvel and Trader: *trade*
Trader: *clears throat* “I must say, Champion, your robes are truly magnificent.”
Marvel: “Oh, thanks. A real hero of mine wore these once.”
Trader: “Really?”
Marvel: “Yes, unfortunately, he’s retired from the whole magic biz. I think anyways.”
Trader: “I see…”
That magic user was left wondering if this person was his mentor or not. Perhaps he was even previous champion? Who knows…
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10 Bad Habits to Let Go of for a Beautiful Life (Trust Me, You’ll Thank Yourself)
We all have those habits that hold us back — some sneakier than others. And while no one’s perfect, a little spring cleaning of your daily habits can unlock a happier, healthier life. Ready to drop the bad vibes and level up? Here are 10 bad habits to leave behind for good!
1. The Comparison Game — It’s Gotta Go
We’ve all done it. Scrolling, looking at someone’s perfect life, and feeling like we’re not enough. But honestly? Comparing yourself to others is a losing game. Focus on your own growth, and unfollow anything or anyone that makes you feel less-than. Your journey is yours alone, and it’s beautiful in its own way. Keep your eyes on your own lane!
2. Procrastinating Like It’s a Sport
We get it — that “I’ll do it tomorrow” energy feels good in the moment, but it’s also a trap. The more you put off tasks, the more they pile up and haunt you. Trust, the best feeling is getting stuff done now and freeing up your mind for the fun stuff later. Break it down, set a timer, and just start. You’ll feel like a boss when you’re done.
3. Saying Yes to Everything (Even When You Don’t Want To)
No is a full sentence, babe! If you’re constantly saying yes to things that don’t align with your goals or drain your energy, it’s time to stop. Overcommitting leads to burnout, and life’s too short for that. Start setting boundaries and prioritize what makes you feel good. Your time is precious, so treat it like gold.
4. Relying on Everyone Else’s Approval
We all love a little validation, but depending on it? That’s a recipe for insecurity. Your worth isn’t measured by someone else’s likes or approval. The only validation you really need is your own. So hype yourself up, celebrate your wins, and be proud of the progress you’re making, regardless of who’s watching.
5. Avoiding Your Finances Like It’s Scary
Finances don’t have to be terrifying! Ignoring them might feel easier in the moment, but getting a handle on your money situation is so empowering. Start small — track your spending, create a budget, and set a savings goal. The sooner you take control, the more stress-free your future will feel.
6. Holding Grudges Like They’re Trophies
Honestly, holding onto grudges only weighs you down. Letting go of past negativity isn’t about excusing people’s behavior — it’s about freeing yourself. Don’t let old situations control your peace. Forgiveness is for you, babe. The less baggage you carry, the lighter you’ll feel.
7. Talking Down to Yourself
Would you say those mean things to your best friend? Didn’t think so! So why do we let ourselves get away with it? Cut out the negative self-talk and replace it with something a little more kind and uplifting. You deserve better from yourself. You wouldn’t believe how much your mindset can change once you start being nice to yourself.
8. Expecting Everything to Be Perfect
Perfection is a myth, and chasing it will only leave you stressed and frustrated. Life happens in the in-between moments — the imperfect, messy, beautifully real ones. Give yourself some grace and celebrate progress, not perfection. A “good enough” life is often a perfect one in disguise.
9. Staying in Your Safe Bubble
Your comfort zone might feel cozy, but nothing grows there! Stepping outside of it might be scary, but it’s where all the magic happens. Whether it’s trying something new, starting a project, or meeting new people, discomfort leads to growth. Don’t let fear hold you back — take the leap!
10. Blaming Everything Else for What’s Not Going Right
It’s easy to point fingers and blame outside circumstances, but taking responsibility is where real change starts. You’ve got more control than you think! Instead of dwelling on what’s going wrong, focus on what you can change. You’ve got the power to turn things around — it’s all in your hands.
These bad habits? They’re not serving you, and it’s time to leave them in the past. Letting go of what’s holding you back will clear the way for bigger, better things. You’re already halfway there just by recognizing what needs to change. So let go, level up, and watch your life get a little more beautiful, one habit at a time.
#it girl#just girly things#academia#girlblogging#morning routine#tips#lifestyle#life lessons#understanding#self improvement#self help
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PAC: What does my life look like once I hit my full potential?
Hope I make it out of here.
ALL READING ON SALE (70% OFF) (BLACK FRIDAY OFFER)
PILE 1
Oh, bestie, I feel you on this. Balancing hustle and chill vibes is so important when you’re in that “level-up” era, especially with the Lovers card as your overall energy—it’s giving alignment and divine choices. Here’s the tea:
First, trust that this new career opportunity isn’t just a job; it’s a gateway to something magical. Your next lover is literally waiting for you on the other side of this. Like, how iconic is that? The universe is basically screaming, “This is part of your glow-up!”
But let’s keep it real: grinding too hard can mess with your flow. So, schedule your downtime like it’s a business meeting—whether that’s journaling, bingeing your fave show, or vibing out with a playlist that makes you feel main character energy. Chill time isn’t lazy; it’s necessary. You can’t pour from an empty cup.
When it comes to hustle, think of it like this: show up and give your best, but don’t overthink it. Be intentional, not overwhelmed. Remember, the Lovers card is also about harmony—so treat your hustle like a love story. Be passionate, but know when to step back and breathe.
And here’s the real plot twist: this opportunity isn’t just about meeting them. It’s about meeting the next, more evolved version of you. They’ll love that version of you, and so will you. So take the leap, but keep your soul soft. You’ve got this. ❤️
PREVIOUS READING
2) Wanna know the love story the universe has for you? 💫 In 8 parts, I spill all: first meet, first kiss, confession, sexy time, and more. Don’t miss out! 👀💖 (LINK)
3) ALL READING ON SALE (70% OFF) (Recent review 🎀)
PILE 2
Okay, imagine this: when you hit your full potential, your life looks like the perfect balance of confidence and rest. You’ve worked hard to know your worth and never settle, and now you’re living in a way that matches that energy. Think quiet mornings in a space that feels so you, reflecting on your growth while sipping your favorite coffee—unbothered and untouchable.
But here’s the thing: getting there doesn’t mean you’re grinding 24/7. You’ll learn that slowing down is the power move. For example, instead of saying yes to everything, you’ll get super intentional about what aligns with your long-term goals. If an opportunity feels off or doesn’t match your vision, you’ll confidently pass, knowing that better things are waiting.
That self-love you’ve mastered? It’ll make you a magnet for respect. People will see how deeply you value yourself and will match that energy—or they’ll fall off, and honestly, you won’t care. It’s like you’ll finally be surrounded by relationships, jobs, and opportunities that deserve you because you’ve set the bar so high.
Here’s the practical advice: stay open to adjusting your plans, even when it’s uncomfortable. Sometimes, what looks like a setback is actually setting you up for something bigger. For example, if one path feels blocked, don’t fight it—pivot. Trust that your ability to choose yourself will always lead you to the right place.
And don’t forget to rest without guilt. It’s okay to take breaks to recharge because that’s when your best ideas will come to you. Picture yourself booking a solo trip, splurging on the nicest accommodations, and using that time to dream even bigger while staying grounded in gratitude. You’re leveling up and protecting your peace, and that’s the ultimate glow-up. 🌱✨
PREVIOUS READING
2) Wanna know the love story the universe has for you? 💫 In 8 parts, I spill all: first meet, first kiss, confession, sexy time, and more. Don’t miss out! 👀💖 (LINK)
3) ALL READING ON SALE (70% OFF) (Recent review 🎀)
PILE 3
Alright, picture this: once you hit your full potential, your life is like a perfectly designed blueprint, executed flawlessly. You’re running the show—waking up early, knocking out your goals, and moving through life like you own it. Your schedule is tight but purposeful, and everything you do feels like a step toward something even bigger.
You’ll probably have this fire inside you to keep starting new projects—like launching that dream business or taking on leadership roles that actually challenge you. People will look at you and think, Wow, they’ve really got it together. But behind the scenes, you’ll know it’s because you’ve built systems for yourself that work. For example, you might have a weekly ritual where you plan every detail, from career moves to self-care, so nothing feels chaotic.
That being said, you’ll need to make space for the unknown too. Life won’t always go exactly as planned, and that’s okay. Think of it like this: when things feel uncertain, don’t freeze up. Instead, take a moment, check in with yourself, and adjust. For example, if a big opportunity comes up and doesn’t look like what you expected, lean into it—it might just be the thing that pushes you further than you imagined.
And here’s a practical tip: track your progress. Maybe it’s a journal where you write down your wins every day, no matter how small, or a calendar where you block out “me time” just as seriously as work tasks. The key is staying grounded while keeping your eyes on the horizon.
Your focus on success will still fuel you, but it’ll feel balanced. Imagine being so confident in what you’ve built that you can finally relax a little, knowing that your foundation is unshakable. You’re not just surviving anymore; you’re thriving. And it’s all because you created the structure to let your ambition flow without burning out. 💡
PREVIOUS READING
2) Wanna know the love story the universe has for you? 💫 In 8 parts, I spill all: first meet, first kiss, confession, sexy time, and more. Don’t miss out! 👀💖 (LINK)
3) ALL READING ON SALE (70% OFF) (Recent review 🎀)
PILE 4
Okay, so here’s the vibe: when you hit your full potential, your life is gonna feel like this beautiful balance of self-love and success. But here’s the thing—you’ve been carrying a lot, especially with your sibling’s struggles. It’s tough because you want to help, but you have to realize that in order to become the best version of yourself, you have to put yourself first. And I know that’s easier said than done, especially when you love someone so much and want to see them thrive.
You’ve been trying to fix things, trying to heal others, but you can’t keep pouring from an empty cup. You’ve been holding onto a lot of emotional weight, and that’s been draining you. It’s okay to step back and focus on your own growth. I promise, you’re not abandoning anyone by taking care of yourself. In fact, the more you work on you, the more you’ll be able to help them from a place of peace.
But it’s gonna hurt a bit—letting go of that guilt is a process. You’ll have moments where you feel torn, but trust me, your potential and your future are calling you to take care of you. Your dreams, your goals—they matter, and they deserve your attention. It’s about putting boundaries in place, even if it feels hard at first.
You might not have all the answers right now, and that’s fine. You don’t have to have it all figured out, but you’ll get there. Things will come into focus when you start giving yourself permission to live your life without guilt. It’s gonna feel so freeing once you realize that your own peace and happiness are the foundation for everything else to fall into place.
So take it slow. Focus on your journey, even if it means you need to step away from the chaos a little. You deserve to put yourself first, because the version of you that is fully healed, confident, and at peace is going to be the one that thrives and makes all those big dreams come true. Your success starts with you, and you’re worthy of every bit of it. ❤️
PREVIOUS READING
2) Wanna know the love story the universe has for you? 💫 In 8 parts, I spill all: first meet, first kiss, confession, sexy time, and more. Don’t miss out! 👀💖 (LINK)
3) ALL READING ON SALE (70% OFF) (Recent review 🎀)
#tarot#tarot reading#tarotcommunity#divination#tarot cards#18+ tarot#pac#pick a card#pick a picture#pick a pile#future lover#intuitive messages#intuitive guidance#intuition#divine timing#divine guidance#free tarot readings#free readings#free tarot#black friday
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Eldritchrune - Dreemurr of Demons
1 | 2 | 3
Story Setup Eldritchrune Masterpost
Asriel ventures back to Hometown while on the trail of trying to find out what happened to Kris, and stumbles across an unusual man who's all too excited to share his demon-warding knowledge! But it's unclear so far whether this knowledge will actually be of help to him...
Yaaay all done with this series back with the Dreemurrs! This one was definitely the longest, but also had some important info! What I'll tackle next is a mystery to me right now...
Alt text for these pages is under the read more:
Page 1 Panel 1: Exterior shot of a back alley in Hometown, with old barrels and boxes stacked behind medieval buildings. Asriel walks down the alley, wearing a striped shirt, glasses and scruffy blond hair, and carrying a large canvas bag over his shoulders. The annoying dog trots happily beside him.
Panel 2: The annoying dog drops his nose to the ground, sniffing at some interesting smell.
Panel 3: The dog bounds off ahead of Asriel to a haphazard collection of trinkets, boxes, jars and displayed charms, all partially covered with colorful cloths. A man is kneeling under one of the tent setups. Asriel walks to catch up with the dog, asking, "What's got your interest this time, dog?"
Panel 4: The man pops up from his odd collection and turns to Asriel with arms spread and a big smile. He has short curly hair, and is dressed in a medieval robe with a cape slung over his shoulders, and bone designs in his sleeve cuffs. He answers, "Just the finest assortment of handmade charms and magical meals made by yours truly, THE GREAT PAPYRUS!" The dog happily circles Papyrus, tail wagging.
Panel 5: Asriel is a bit taken aback by the introduction, but waves in greeting anyway, and responds with "…Oh! Howdy!" The dog sits in front of Papyrus, panting and wagging his tail.
Page 2 Panel 1: Papyrus leans down with a big grin to pet the dog and ruffle its face. "What a bright and clever fellow! Such a sweet face!"
Panel 2: "You're a good, good boy, aren't you?" Papyrus continues. However, the dog glances over to the side, as something has got his attention:
Panel 3: It's one of the charms Papyrus has on display: a large femur bone decorated with paint, beads and feathers.
Panel 4: The dog leaps up and snatches the charm in its mouth. Papyrus looks agape at this thievery, eyes cartoonishly wide. "Wh-HEY! That's my SPECIAL demon-warding charm!"
Panel 5: The dog goes running off further into the alley, the bone still in its mouth. Papyrus shakes his fist at it and yells after it: "You thieving scoundrel! I take back all the nice things I said about you!"
Panel 6: Papyrus quickly turns back to Asriel with a more apologetic look; even now he can't be too mean. He says, "I apologize, I didn't mean to yell at your dog. I'm sure he's normally better behaved!" Asriel waves off the apology with tired bemusement. "No, it's fine. He's not really my dog." Under his breath, he adds, "He just keeps following me around for some reason…"
Panel 7: Papyrus stands back up and gestures to his odd collection. "In any case, you at least are welcome to my little shop-in-the-works!"
Page 3 Panel 1: Papyrus leans in close to Asriel, observing him, and getting a bit into his personal space. "You look a little familiar, though! Are you perhaps related to Mr. Dreemurr?" Asriel nervously adjusts his glasses, and replies, "Heh, yes. I'm Asriel, his son."
Panel 2: Asriel holds up a hand and gives a little sideeye to the alley around them. "But, uh…I actually don't want my parents to know that I'm back in town, so I'd appreciate you keeping quiet about me being here."
Panel 3: Papyrus mirrors that sideeye, hands on his hips, as if recalling some recent incident. "Ahh…I know well the trials of avoiding family. Especially when they decide to try out some terrible new jokes."
Panel 4: Papyrus makes a lip-zipping motion with his hand and mouth. "Not to worry, my lips are sealed!" Asriel smiles back, and says, "Thanks, I appreciate it."
Panel 5: A wider shot of the two still standing within Papyrus's collection of tents and trinkets. Papyrus asks, "So, if it's not to see your folks, what brings you back around Hometown?" Asriel glances around them, and replies, "I'm looking for something. Or well…kinda hoping I don't find something here."
Page 4 Panel 1: Papyrus points up one finger, looking as if he's already solved this problem. "If you don't want to find it, then looking for it seems rather counterintuitive!"
Panel 2: Asriel looks a little taken aback by that logic. "Yes, well… Okay you have a point, but…"
Panel 3: Asriel keeps glancing behind him, as if expecting to see someone there. "This is kind of the next step in a trail of research I've been doing."
Panel 4: Papyrus puts a hand to a chest and puffs himself up, imitating his heroic poses from Undertale. "Well, if your research involves handmade charms and tasty foods both designed to ward off demons, evil spirits and the like… Then I'll be your most cited source!"
Panel 5: Asriel crosses his arms and raises his eyebrows, intrigued by this. "Really."
Panel 6: "You know a lot about demons, huh?" Asriel asks as he sits himself on one of the rugs within the tent setup. Papyrus keeps up his self-congratulatory pose. "I, the Great Papyrus, am a bonafide expert in such subjects! Sad that so few around here seem to recognize my talents."
Page 5 Panel 1: Asriel holds his hands up, willing to follow this strange thread wherever it might lead. "Well, I've got a question that all my research hasn't been able to answer for me, so perhaps you can…"
Panel 2: A pause as Asriel holds on to his thoughts, hands closed in front of his face. Papyrus sits down on the rug across from him.
Panel 3: Asriel lowers his hands, his face deeply serious. "How do you kill a demon?"
Panel 4: Papyrus looks back at him with an equally serious expression, then…
Panel 5: The seriousness is gone as he gives a casual shrug, and gives an answer. "Oh, that's simple. You don't!"
Panel 6: Asriel looks a little bit baffled, and disappointed. "…You don't?"
Panel 7: "No, silly. They're immortal, like angels!" Papyrus keeps up the casual shrug, as if this information is obvious.
Panel 8: However, Papyrus then seems to become aware of why this is being asked. He looks around the area frantically, his head whipping back and forth. "Why?! Are there demons around here that my detection flatbreads missed?!" Asriel offers an amused smile back. "Heehee… no, I don't think so."
Page 6 Panel 1: The seriousness returns to Asriel's face as he scratches at his nose, lost in worried thought. "I just…have this real bad hunch. I'm trying to prepare myself for all potential outcomes."
Panel 2: Papyrus ignores the seriousness of the situation, and just seems impressed. "Preparation! The hallmark of the truly intelligent!"
Panel 3: Asriel is still set on getting some information, and continues his questions. "Thanks. So, if you can't kill them, what do you do about them?" Papyrus holds up a finger again, happy to keep explaining: "Well, you got two options! First, you can banish them back to their own plane!"
Panel 4: Papyrus continues, "However, that's really only the ideal option if you're the one that summoned them in the first place. Otherwise it's a whole ordeal." In the background, Papyrus's point is illustrated with a little graphic of a cult member holding up a hand in rejection of a demon within a summoning circle. The demon looks confused and perturbed by the rejection.
Panel 5: Asriel says, "I see. What's the other option?" Papyrus continues his explanation across the two panels: "You bind the demon to something! Quickest and easiest thing to do is bind them to an object! Buuut, problem with that is, if your object gets broken or destroyed, now your demon's free and even angrier than before."
Panel 6: To illustrate his point, another background graphic shows a shocked human with a broken jar in front of them. A demon rises out of the remains of the broken jar, looking angry and ready to strike.
Page 7 Panel 1: Papyrus again continues his explanation across two panels. "Hardest and most time-consuming thing to do is to bind them to a place! Good option if you have the prep time, but then you can't really use that place anymore. Better pick a restaurant you hate and hope no one there minds you standing outside it chanting for three days straight."
Panel 2: To illustrate his point further, a scene (perhaps a flashback) shows Papyrus with his arms raised outside of a restaurant, supposedly chanting angrily at it, while another person stares back at him from the doorway, hands on their hips in annoyance.
Panel 3: Asriel watches as Papyrus finishes up the rest of his explanation: "Aaaand, last thing you can do is…bind the demon to a person! Which…"
Panel 4: Papyrus stops suddenly. For the first time, he looks actually disturbed and hesitant.
Panel 5: Asriel watches quizzically, waiting for him to continue.
Panel 6: When he doesn't continue, Asriel tries to prompt him on, tilting his head towards him. "…And?"
Panel 7: Papyrus quickly waves his hands in front of him, smiling nervously, clearly trying to dismiss the whole idea. "But you know, we don't need to go into the details of that!"
Panel 8: Asriel says nothing, but remains in nervous thought, one hand covering his mouth. It's clear that this is sticking in his mind the most.
Page 8 Panel 1: Asriel remains sitting with a hand to his chin in thought, but Papyrus has moved on to better advice. "But as I always say, an ounce of prevention's worth a pound of cure! You're much better off trying one of my charms or meals to-go!"
Panel 2: Asriel lets himself smile more at this suggestion. "Y'know? I'm sold. And also a bit hungry."
Panel 3: Asriel gets up, and drops a handful of coins into Papyrus's open hand, which Papyrus looks at in surprise. Asriel says, "Give me your best demon-warding meal."
Panel 4: Papyrus stares down at the coins in his hand, his eyes cartoonishly big and shiny, full of excitement. "WOWIE!! My FIRST ever sale!" he says with a big smile.
Panel 5: Papyrus leaps up and begins to rummage through some of the boxes and barrels around his collection. "This calls for my finest delicacy!" Asriel watches him from a few steps back, and mutters under his breath, "…First ever?…"
Page 9 Panel 1: Papyrus straightens back up, gesturing to a small sack that he is holding in one hand. He looks pleased with himself. "Spiced candied yam bites, from my home country!"
Panel 2: "Each one will purge you of evil spirits for a whole ten hours!" he continues. He hands the small sack off to Asriel, who takes it from him and says, "Sounds like a good deal." In the background, the annoying dog pops back up from behind some other boxes, holding something in its mouth.
Panel 3: Asriel hefts the bag over his shoulder again, and holds up the sack of treats in acknowledgement of the exchange. "Well, I know where to come if I need more info and good charms."
Panel 4: Papyrus stands proud, both hands on his hips, happy at being able to spout off his knowledge to a stranger. "Yes, yes! Tell all your friends about the fantastic advice and the culinary masterworks of the Great Papyrus!" he says excitedly.
Panel 5: Asriel heads off back into the alleyways, and waves goodbye to Papyrus. The annoying dog follows close behind his steps. Papyrus enthusiastically waves to the two as they leave, and says, "Safe travels to you and your annoying dog!"
Page 10 Panel 1: Papyrus turns back to his collection of trinkets and boxes with a determined look, hands on his hips. "And now to see where that criminal canine buried my special charm…" he says to himself.
Panel 2: While continuing on through the alleyways, Asriel opens the small sack and pulls out one of the candied yam bites.
Panel 3: Asriel glances back down at the dog, and notices that he's carrying something that's making a tinking noise. It's partially hidden from view. "Oh boy, what did you steal now?" he asks with a wry smile.
Panel 4: Asriel takes the yam bite and pops it into his mouth with a crunch…
Panel 5: …Only to then make a face, his eyes wide and his mouth scrunched up, as if tasting something indescribable.
Panel 6: "What IS this flavor?" Asriel asks to himself, although all but his back foot are off-panel. The focus is on the annoying dog, who is shown to be carrying a strange, heart-shaped metal lantern on a chain.
#lynx art#eldritchrune#deltarune au#asriel#papyrus#annoying dog#honestly a tough one to write since neither of these guys have actually shown up in canon DR yet#so uh! Hopefully pulling from what we know from UT is a good enough source!#but they are definitely fun to play off of each other#annoying dog what secrets are you keeping now
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c(alc)ulus ⤨ tsukishima kei
⨭ genre; hard 2 explain but there's a happy ending so u shld read (jk its a college!au, frat boy!au)
⨭ pairing; tsukishima kei x f!reader
⨭ word count; 9.7k
⨭ descriptions; you're the last person kei wants anything to do with, but not even he can deny it: he, and the entire frat, needs you.
⨭ warnings; frat boy levels of alcoholism, explicit language
⨭ a/n; i love math but love blondes more. i also love rly long fanfics with plot and pretty language and feelings, so hope y'all enjoy this super long mess of a frat!universe haikyuu with college-core drinking habits, calculus talk, and a whole lot of simping for kei <3
song i listened to writing this: 'risk' by gracie abrams
one.
Kageyama is failing calculus.
This statement wouldn’t necessarily be a big deal—after all, he had barely passed most of his classes his whole life, getting into college solely with his athletic skills and having zero intentions to stay in academia in the future. He’s in university primarily just to have something to fall back on, and he has made it exceptionally obvious that he does the bare minimum to get his degree by sleeping through his lectures and procrastinating his homework to the night it’s due. He doesn’t, and has never, cared much about school, and has somehow made it through life anyway, so really, in most circumstances, Kageyama failing a class wouldn’t be a big deal at all.
However, in this circumstance, Kageyama is also a brother of Kappa Alpha Rho, and therefore his grades reflect not just him but the brotherhood, meaning him failing a class has fully become Tsukishima’s problem, making this, in fact, a very, very big deal. He thinks he’s screwed.
And it’s completely your fault.
Tsukishima glares at the email notification sitting at the top of the screen, clenching his jaw so hard that he feels his back molars ache.
ASU Policy Update: New Funding Requirements for Student Organizations
He’s already read it twice, but he clicks on it again anyway, as if the words would magically change now that it’s his third try. His fingers drum against the desk, anxious and annoyed all at once.
Effective immediately, all university-funded student organizations must maintain a collective GPA of C+ (2.3) or higher to remain eligible for financial support from ASU. Organizations failing to meet this requirement will be placed on academic probation for a select amount of time, after which, if under the minimum, will be denied funding for the academic year.
He exhales sharply through his nose and shuts his laptop a little harder than necessary. His knee bounces under the desk as he stares at the wall, running the numbers through his head. A D- average to a C+? That’s not a small jump. That’s a fucking leap.
And it’s because of you. But then again, of course it is.
Tsukishima doesn’t even know you personally, but he knows of you. Everyone at Furudate University knows of you. It’s honestly impossible not to.
Your name gets thrown around like a fucking urban legend: the math department’s golden girl, every professors’ favorite. The kind of student whose name gets printed in bold on the Dean’s List every semester, top of the class in every single way, looking down at everyone else from your haughty position up there.
You’re the poster child for academic excellence, and this is exactly the kind of sanctimonious, holier-than-thou rule someone like you would pass.
He can practically see you in his head, sitting in some committee meeting, smug as you argue for “higher academic standards,” completely unaware of the absolute nightmare you’ve just created.
He rubs his temple. He doesn’t have time for this. If Kappa Alpha Rho loses funding, they lose access to the house stipend, the event budget, the formal venue deposit—
“Fuck,” he hisses under his breath, already clicking through the chapter’s internal roster. He zeroes in on the worst grades. Not surprisingly (albeit disappointing nonetheless), Kageyama’s name jumps out immediately.
He has a 37 in Multivariable Calculus.
Tsukishima closes his eyes and counts to five. It doesn’t help. His laptop screen just glares back at him, the double-digits in bright red. He’s dragging the entire GPA down, significantly so.
So if Kageyama fails, they’re all fucked.
Tsukishima opens the frat group chat.
(11:42 AM) tsukishima: who here actually passed multi calc
It takes all of five whole seconds before the chat explodes.
hinata: LOL NOT ME yamaguchi: barely but yea? noya: i didn’t even know multi was real lmao
Tsukishima pinches the bridge of his nose. They’re useless. They’re all fucking useless.
(11:43 AM) yamaguchi: wait is this about the gpa thing? are we actually losing funding? tsukishima: we will if kageyama fails calc hinata: bro just make him pass it then tsukishima: do you think i control his brain (11:44 AM) tanaka: wait hold on. are you saying if we fail we’re actually broke?? yamaguchi: tsukki wouldn’t joke about this lol hinata: WHAT DO U MEAN BROKE. LIKE. BROKE BROKE?? noya: LIKE WE GOTTA PAY FOR KEGS OUTTA POCKET BROKE???
Tsukishima watches the messages roll in, each response growing increasingly more unhinged. He feels his blood pressure rising, ticking up with every single one.
(11:45 AM) tanaka: WE CAN’T LOSE FUNDING FORMAL IS IN 3 MONTHS hinata: NOOOO NOT FORMAL noya: NOOOOOOOOOO NOT FORMAL tanaka: WHO THE FUCK IS GONNA PAY FOR FORMAL
Tsukishima sighs, dragging a hand down his face. This is exactly what he didn’t want. The second these idiots realized the frat’s funding was actually on the line, everything was going to implode. Where’s the rest of the exec board right now? He misses them.
(11:46 AM) yamaguchi: okay but seriously what’s the plan tsukishima: kageyama needs to pass calc obviously tanaka: okay but like. how
Good fucking question.
Tsukishima leans back in his chair, thinking. Kageyama isn’t stupid—not in the traditional sense, anyway. He just doesn’t give a shit. If he had a decent tutor, someone to force the information into his thick skull, he might actually stand a chance.
(11:47 AM) tsukishima: does anyone know a decent tutor (11:48 AM) yamaguchi: y/n
Tsukishima physically recoils.
(11:48 AM) tsukishima: like… vpaa y/n??? yamaguchi: yeah?? she’s the best tutor in the math department hinata: wait isn’t she the one that profs never shut up about lol tanaka: bro we’d be paying for a 5-star tutor with beer money noya: u think she’d go for it tho?? hinata: tsukishima just bat your pretty little eyelashes and get her to help us 🤩 tsukishima: i will block you
There is no way in hell he is asking you for help. Absolutely not. Because if there’s anyone on this entire campus that would not hesitate to let Kappa Alpha Rho crash and burn, it’s you.
But then, Daichi—super convenient timing for the president to come in right now—sends the real kicker.
(11:49 AM) daichi: Text Y/N. Now.
Tsukishima grinds his teeth. His fingers hover over the keyboard. For a very, very long moment, he just stares blankly at the screen, until finally, he types.
(11:50 AM) tsukishima: someone send me her number.
And Tsukishima thinks, for not the last time, that he’s absolutely screwed.
two.
For someone who’s actively ruining his life, you’re surprisingly… okay.
At least, you were over text. You responded within minutes, and—without sarcasm, without question, without any needed negotiation—agreed to a tutoring session the next day.
Tsukishima thinks he should be wary of this. Surely you have some ulterior motive, something that’s meant to prove to him (and yourself) just how much smarter you are than everyone else.
Ah, yes. That’s probably it. You’re going to use the dumb frathlete to make yourself feel good.
After some contemplation, Tsukishima decides that he should be there. As idiotic and annoying as Kageyama can be, he’s still his brother, and Tsukishima isn’t about to let some pretentious academic just mock and insult him; Kageyama is shitty with words, so the least Tsukishima can do is be there to snap back for him.
Tsukishima is almost certain that you’re doing this solely to stroke your ego. After all, why else would someone like you agree?
That being said, twenty four hours later, sitting across from you at a library table, he’s forced to admit—begrudgingly—that you’re actually not… terrible.
Tsukishima watches you carefully, arms crossed over his chest, waiting for the moment you slip up—some trace of superiority, some indication that you think this is beneath you. But to his surprise, you don’t smirk, you don’t sigh in frustration, you don’t roll your eyes every time Kageyama gets something wrong.
You’re just… patient. Shockingly, infuriatingly patient.
“Okay,” you say, tapping the corner of Kageyama���s notebook with your pen. “Walk me through your thought process. How did you get to this step?”
Kageyama stares at his paper, scowling. “I don’t know.”
“Well, you got this part right,” you say, circling something in the equation. “So let’s build from here.”
Kageyama frowns deeper, pressing his pencil so hard that the lead tears a little hole—Tsukishima expects you to finally snap, to lecture him for not paying attention, but instead, you just tilt your head and try again.
“I think you’re having trouble with double integrals, so let’s break those down first, okay?” you say, not at all unkindly, before flipping open your notes and locating the respective chapter in the textbook. Tsukishima notices, with mild surprise, that you don’t even have to check the table of contents—you go straight to the right page.
And then, even stranger: your own notes are written beside the original text. Your annotations are precise but casual, breaking down the wordy explanations into clear, digestible pieces; your diagrams take up the margins, and where there’s extra blank space, you’ve doodled functions, arrows, sometimes little stick figures interacting with equations.
Tsukishima shouldn’t care. He doesn’t.
But something about it—about how thoroughly you understand this shit—sticks with him.
And as you start explaining, Tsukishima quickly comes to understand why they call you the best in the department.
Your voice is even, steady, and you don’t just read from the textbook—you reframe the concepts completely, breaking them down into comparisons, real-world applications, diagrams that actually make sense. It’s the kind of familiarity that takes years of experience and countless hours of practice, and you obviously have gotten to an incredible degree of expertise. And most importantly, when Kageyama hits a block or stumbles over the formulas, you don’t get irritated.
You just adjust.
Again. And again. And again.
Until finally, something clicks.
Tsukishima watches, arms crossed, as you do something no professor, no TA, and certainly no frat brother has managed before: you make Kageyama think. You make him care. Kageyama straightens slightly in his seat, gripping his pencil a little tighter; he scribbles something down, then nods to himself, like he actually understands.
Tsukishima leans back, exhaling through his nose.
He hates to admit it, but Yamaguchi was right: you really do know your shit.
three.
An hour passes like this. Slowly, but gradually, Kageyama works through his problem set, stopping every so often to ask questions. You answer every single one without hesitation, without even having to double check, with the complete confidence of someone who simply knows that they’re right.
Then, completely unprompted, you ask, “So, do you play volleyball?”
Kageyama pauses mid-writing. The question catches him off-guard—catches both of them off-guard, actually.
Tsukishima gives you a sharp look, but you just smile, amused.
“You retained information best when I used sports analogies to explain,” you continue, tapping the end of your pen against the table. “And when I used a volleyball as an example for triple integral applications, you corrected me on the radius in like, two seconds.”
Kageyama blinks. Then, looking somewhat sheepish, he mumbles, “Wow, that’s crazy. I’m on the university team.”
“That’s cool,” you say simply, clicking your pen. You doodle absentmindedly on an extra sheet of paper, this time drawing a little volleyball in the corner. “Our executive VP is on the team too. Sakusa.”
Kageyama hums an affirmation. “Yeah, we’re both starters.”
“As a sophomore? That’s really impressive,” you say. Tsukishima thinks that you’re pretty impressive too, considering you’re a sophomore just like them, but you don’t seem to be even thinking about that. “Why are you taking calculus, then? What’s your major?”
“Physics and kinesiology.”
“I didn’t peg you as a STEM guy,” you muse, still sketching in the margins. You’ve now switched to drawing a little banana.
Tsukishima, despite himself, huffs a quiet laugh.
Kageyama flushes slightly. “I, um, want to go pro after college,” he admits, ears bright crimson as he speaks. “So kinesiology felt right for an athlete. And for physics, well, I’m a setter, so I want to, um… I want to be able to calculate the velocity of the balls I send with more accuracy.”
It’s a ridiculous reason. Maybe even a stupid one. Definitely the stupidest reason Tsukishima’s ever heard for taking an incredibly intense and complex major like physics.
But you don’t laugh.
You just nod, smiling to yourself. “Thanks for letting me help you with your process, then.”
There’s a moment of silence, before Tsukishima bluntly remarks, “You’re weird.”
It comes off slightly ruder than intended, and you pause, your pen coming to a halt on the paper. He adds, quieter than before, “I mean, you notice things like that?”
Your nose and forehead scrunch up in slight confusion, expression so befuddled as if he were simply asking you if the sky was blue.
“Well, yeah.” You say this as if it's the most obvious thing in the world. “Everyone is different, with different interests and learning styles, and things get easier to understand when you break things down on their terms as opposed to yours. So of course I’ll pick up on things like that. I try to be observant of all the people around me.”
When your eyes meet his, he instinctively is on edge. Your tone is still light, but there’s something pragmatic about your eyes that makes him feel apprehensive, like he’s standing at the edge of a 50-foot fall and you’re watching to see if he’ll take the jump. It’s like you’re taking all of him in, like you’re taking everyone in. Like you see things other people don’t.
If Tsukishima is being honest with himself, this perceptiveness is something he lacks. He willingly disregards much of the people and the things around him; it's a defense mechanism he has perfected over the years. It’s easier to stay detached. It’s easier to keep to himself; it’s easier to be indifferent.
To be blunt, your astuteness unnerves him, and it’s a sensation he’s not used to grappling with. There’s a raw honesty in your gaze that feels almost invasive, peeling back the layers of his carefully constructed facade. You two had just met, but for a brief moment, he wonders if you can somehow see through him because despite your cheerful and carefree attitude, you are looking to understand people in a way he never has.
He quickly looks away, breaking the intense eye contact. “I guess that’s one way to look at it,” he mutters.
You don’t reply because your attention has already shifted back to Kageyama, with you leaning over his notebook and exclaiming, “See, you got this!”
Kageyama has solved the several problems you gave him, his work still amateur but complete. You scan his notebook, pointing out the few areas where he could simplify his work, but the overwhelming beam on your face is nothing short of proud, and it incites a completely new determination in Kageyama. Despite his usual stoicism, your encouragement has visibly boosted his confidence and Tsukishima watches as the boy smiles and nods along when you flip the textbook to a new chapter, declaring loudly, “Okay! Let’s move onto vectors!”
As you continue to explain, Tsukishima watches the two of you with a slight mixture of exasperation and something else he can’t quite put a name to. You are honest and true and it’s wholly unfamiliar, tiring in a way where he is overwhelmed. He’s not quite sure how to describe how he feels right now, sitting here with you together: maybe it’s a touch of admiration for you, maybe it’s just relief that someone else is dealing with Kageyama’s math woes for a change, but either way, at the end of it all, he finds himself settling back into his chair, a small, almost imperceptible amusement playing at the corners of his mouth.
Minutes turn into hours, and before you know it, the sun is dipping lower and lower in the sky, casting long shadows across the library floors. By the time the library's closing announcement echoes through the halls, you have made it through half the vector fields unit and Kageyama has filled several pages of his notebook with neatly written solutions.
“Well, let’s finish up. I think we’ve made some good progress today,” you decide, stretching your arms above your head. You begin to gather your things—if you’re not all out soon, the librarians will come and yell at you for sure.
“Thank you so much, Y/N,” Kageyama says earnestly, closing his notebook. “I think I’m starting to get it.”
“You are. Just keep practicing those problems, okay? You’ll pass this week’s quiz for sure if you keep at it,” you say cheerily. “Just text if you ever need any help. I’m always around.”
Your enthusiasm seems genuine, like you really do want to help Kageyama succeed. Tsukishima’s not sure what to do with this information.
He should be suspicious. Should assume there’s something in it for you—some academic accolade, some resumé boost, some smug satisfaction in proving you’re better than everyone else. But you don’t gloat. You don’t even act like this is a favor Kageyama—or, by extension, the frat—owes you for the rest of time.
You just offer your help like it’s nothing. Like it’s normal to give this much of your time, your energy, your effort.
It’s strange. It makes him uncomfortable.
“You’re always around?” he says, unable to stop himself. His voice comes out dry, skeptical. “Sounds like you have way too much time on your hands.”
You blink, then laugh, genuine and light.
“Not really,” you say, slipping your notes into your bag. “I’m just good at making time for things that matter.”
Your eyes flicker up to meet his, and for some reason, that sentence sticks in his brain.
Good at making time for things that matter.
Before he can think too hard about what that implies, Kageyama—completely unaware of the odd shift in atmosphere—stands, slinging his bag over his shoulder. “I’ll text you,” he says. “Uh. If I get stuck.”
“Good,” you say, satisfied. “See you both next time.”
And with that, you’re gone, stepping out of the library doors, the evening sun catching in your hair before you disappear down the hall.
There’s a brief silence.
“…She’s nice,” Kageyama says, stuffing his hands into his hoodie pockets.
Tsukishima sighs, shaking his head. “Don’t be weird about it.”
“I’m not.”
“You sound weird about it.”
Kageyama scowls but says nothing, already distracted by whatever thought process is rattling around in his thick skull.
Tsukishima, however, lingers.
He doesn’t want to admit that today went better than expected. That you weren’t condescending, that you didn’t treat Kageyama like a lost cause, that you were actually kind of impressive to watch. That there’s something about the way you carry yourself—the way you see people, notice things, care about things—that makes his stomach twist in a way he doesn’t like.
He exhales sharply. Nope. Not going there.
Instead, he shoves his hands into his jacket pockets and starts toward the exit, brushing off whatever this feeling is. After all, this is just the first session.
There’s still plenty of time for you to prove him right.
four.
After the fifth tutoring session, Tsukishima notices two things.
First: since you’ve started helping Kageyama, his calculus average has jumped dramatically from a 37 to a 60. Considering he has to catch up on the whole semester, this much progress in such a short amount of time is insane, and Tsukishima—who has spent years watching Kageyama be a stubborn idiot—is actually kinda baffled by it.
Second: it’s not that you look down on him, or Kageyama, specifically. You just look down on Greek life as a whole.
It takes him a while to realize it. At first, he assumes it’s personal—that you have some vendetta against Kappa Alpha Rho, some deep-seated superiority complex. But then, over the next few weeks, he starts paying closer attention.
You don’t sneer at Kageyama’s jersey. You don’t mock him for struggling, don’t look at him like he’s a dumb jock barely worth your time.
But when Tanaka and Noya come to pick Kageyama up after a session, still wearing their frat hoodies from some brotherhood event, Tsukishima catches the way your eyes flick to their letters. The way your lips press together, just slightly.
When Kageyama makes an offhanded comment about formal, you barely react—just a small exhale through your nose, something unimpressed.
And then there’s today.
You’re explaining another concept—Tsukishima isn’t really listening; Kageyama is nodding along, so he figures he doesn’t need to pay attention—when Hinata, of all people, shows up at the library. He bursts through the doors like a chaotic, overexcited golden retriever, completely disregarding the quiet study environment as he waves both arms above his head.
“Kageyama!”
Kageyama physically tenses. Tsukishima watches, vaguely amused, as he slowly turns to the orange-haired idiot now bounding toward them.
Hinata slaps a recruitment t-shirt onto the table. “You left it at the house, dumbass! Daichi said to bring it to you.”
Kageyama looks vaguely murderous. “Shut up.”
Tsukishima smirks. And then, he glances at you.
And there it is again: that brief flicker of something. That same exhale through your nose.
You don’t say anything, don’t react much at all—but Tsukishima sees it.
You hate frats.
And now, he wants to know why.
Luckily for him, it actually doesn’t take much to find out.
It comes up casually, in the way most revealing things do—offhanded, unguarded, something you don’t realize you’re giving away.
Kageyama is the one who brings it up. Not intentionally, obviously—he's never been intentionally insightful a day in his life—but between scribbling down an answer on his problem set, he suddenly asks, “Why’d you make that rule, anyway?”
You glance up, caught off guard. “Huh?”
“The GPA thing,” he clarifies. “You’re the VPAA, right? So it was your idea.”
Tsukishima watches as you blink, your grip tightening just slightly around your pen.
Then, after a moment, you exhale, setting it down. “It wasn’t just me,” you say. “It was a committee decision.”
“But you agree with it,” Tsukishima says, leveling you with a look.
Your lips press together. There it is again—that tiny flicker of something. Then, you sigh.
“It’s just frustrating seeing people waste their potential,” you say finally, voice careful, deliberate. “I mean, don’t you want to succeed?”
Ah. So that’s what it is: you think that all fraternity boys are idiots who only care about partying and drinking games. You think they don’t care about their futures. That they’re lazy, entitled, wasting the opportunities they have.
Tsukishima exhales slowly through his nose, tipping his chair back just slightly. He should be annoyed. He should be pissed off.
But instead, he just smirks.
“You think we’re all just dumb party boys, don’t you?”
Your eyes flick to his. You don’t answer, which, really, is answer enough.
So obviously, he challenges you.
“Come to the house,” he says. “See for yourself.”
Your expression shifts into something guarded, something skeptical and unimpressed. “Why would I do that?”
“Because you clearly don’t know what the hell you’re talking about,” Tsukishima says simply.
Kageyama, ever helpful, chimes in: “Hinata’s even worse at math than me.”
Tsukishima watches you pause, purse your lips, obviously considering. It’s a long pause, you staring down at the desk for a full minute, until finally, you sigh. “Fine.”
Oh, you’re in for a disaster.
five.
Walking into the Kappa Alpha Rho house for the first time, you’re not sure what you were expecting.
Whatever it was, it wasn’t… this.
The first thing you’re hit with when you enter the house is, simply put, noise.
The music is loud—too loud for a weeknight, you think absently, because there’s no way none of these guys have morning classes tomorrow. Someone in the kitchen is yelling indistinctly over the sound of clinking glass, and from somewhere deeper inside the house, there’s a resounding crash, followed by an enthusiastic, “It’s fine, it’s fine, don’t worry about it!”
Tsukishima watches as you visibly tense, shifting your weight from one foot to the other, fingers tightening around the strap of your bag. You’re standing near the entrance like you’re considering leaving, like maybe you’d rather walk straight back out the door than step even a foot further into this chaos. You wouldn’t be the first: he’s seen people walking into the house for the first time and immediately regretting every life choice that led them here. The frat is loud, messy, chaotic in a way that isn’t easy to handle if you’re not used to it. And you—pristine, calculated, Type-A to your very core—are definitely not used to it.
He watches you closely, waiting for you to scoff any second now, to turn around and walk out.
But then, you hear it.
“Integrate or drink, loser!”
As an applied and theoretical math double major, the sentence instantly piques your curiosity, and you can’t, in your conscience, just walk out after hearing that. So you square your shoulders, and saunter in.
And when you see it, you stop in your tracks.
The scene before you is, frankly, absurd. Kageyama is standing at the end of a beer pong table, furrowing his brows like he’s solving a differential equation rather than playing a drinking game, and Hinata, vibrating with excitement, looks one misplaced shot away from combusting. Around them, the rest of the guys are watching with varying degrees of amusement: Tanaka and Nishinoya are grinning like they already know something Kageyama doesn’t, Yamaguchi is stifling laughter behind his hand, and Tsukishima—leaning against the wall, arms crossed—is watching you.
You glance at the table. The setup is questionable, at best. The cups are unevenly spaced, some tilted at an angle that defies both gravity and common sense. The whiteboard behind them has the remnants of what was probably meant to be a scoring system, though it's mostly illegible thanks to a combination of bad handwriting and smeared marker. And then, of course, there’s the absolute nonsense of what just came out of someone’s mouth.
You shift your gaze to the ping-pong ball in Hinata’s hand, then to Kageyama, who still looks personally insulted by whatever just happened. You blink once, then twice.
“What,” you say flatly, “am I looking at?”
“The future,” Nishinoya says dramatically, throwing an arm around Tanaka. “The greatest intellectual drinking game of our generation.”
“That’s one way to put it,” Sugawara mutters. You didn’t even notice him and the other two, presumably, seniors, sitting lazily on a couch against the wall and supposedly monitoring.
“It’s simple,” Hinata says, barely containing his enthusiasm. “You make a shot, the other guy has to solve a math problem right, or they drink.”
Silence. You stare at him.
Kageyama’s expression darkens. “It’s stupid.”
“You’re just mad because I got the last one right,” Hinata shoots back.
“No, you didn’t.”
“Yes, I did! The integral of sine is cosine, dumbass!”
“The answer was negative cosine—”
“Same thing!”
“It is literally not.”
“You know what,” you interrupt, pinching the bridge of your nose. “Forget I asked.”
At this, Tsukishima makes a quiet noise—something between a laugh and a scoff—but you don’t look at him. You’re too busy assessing the catastrophe in front of you.
Because, to be honest, this is ridiculous. A complete mess of a game, poorly thought out and even more poorly executed. But…
You bite the inside of your cheek.
The concept isn’t terrible.
It’s just wrong. And you, for better or worse, cannot let a flawed system stand.
Tsukishima watches as something in your expression shifts. You set your bag down with purpose, stepping closer to the table, eyes narrowing as you take in the setup. Then, voice completely serious, you say, “You’re playing it wrong.”
The entire room pauses.
Tanaka, who has a ping-pong ball balanced on the tip of his finger, squints. “Huh?”
“You’re playing it wrong,” you repeat, arms crossing as you survey the table like it’s a crime scene.
Hinata frowns. “No, we’re not.”
“Yes,” you say, “you are.”
Tsukishima raises a brow, intrigued. You’re not mad at them for playing. You’re not disgusted by their antics. You’re just… offended by the execution.
“The whole premise doesn’t work,” you continue, gesturing vaguely at the cups. “You can’t just shout out an integral and expect them to solve it in two seconds. You need rules. A system.”
Tanaka exchanges a glance with Nishinoya. “Bro,” he says, in awe. “We don’t have a system?”
“We do have a system,” Kageyama huffs.
You promptly ignore him, already reaching for a marker. “Okay. If we’re going to do this right, it should work like this.”
And just like that, you take over.
In what seems like an instant, the frat house—which is usually ruled by sheer chaos and barely functioning groupthink—is now operating under your direction. You’ve got the whiteboard in a chokehold, a marker uncapped and poised between your fingers as you outline a system so airtight, so horrifyingly efficient, that even Tsukishima has to admit it’s impressive.
Suddenly, the game makes sense. Instead of random, impossible integrals, each shot now corresponds to a category—concepts from the last five chapters, ranked by difficulty.
And as if just to add to the disbelief, everyone is listening.
Kageyama, glaring at the rules with an unreal intensity, is following along, his brows furrowed like he’s mentally poking holes in your system but failing to find any. Tanaka and Noya are nodding like you’ve just changed their lives. Ennoshita, who had previously been lurking near the drinks table, is watching you rewrite the game’s structure with increasing fascination.
Even Sugawara nods sagely. “She makes a good point,” he says solemnly. “The game did lack structure.”
“Thank you,” you reply, as if this is a serious academic debate and not an impromptu beer pong overhaul.
Tsukishima can’t even be mad about it. Not when you’ve very quickly become the most interesting thing in the house.
And especially not when he watches you, against all fucking odds, join in. As if you were some god tier frat boy in a past life, you sink a cup with infuriating ease on your very first throw, the ball arcing perfectly without any slightest bounce back. You don’t even blink.
As if on cue, the whole house erupts.
Tanaka and Noya nearly combust on the spot, clutching each other in sheer exhilaration, while Kageyama’s jaw drops so fast you think it might actually unhinge. Even the seniors look mildly impressed.
And Hinata… well, Hinata looks very afraid.
“You—” he starts, pointing at you like he’s about to accuse you of something heinous.
But you don’t let him. You simply cross your arms, unimpressed, and say, voice smooth as ever, “Basic derivative. Give me an answer, or drink.”
There’s a split second of silence.
Then, absolute carnage.
Hinata scrambles for the marker like his life depends on it. “Uh—uh—five x to the—no, wait—”
You tilt your head. “Is that your final answer?”
“Shit, no—”
“You took too long,” you say, entirely unsympathetic. “Drink.”
Hinata lets out a strangled noise of distress as Tanaka and Noya dissolve into laughter. Even Daichi, who up until now has been observing like a wise elder, shakes his head in amusement as Hinata accepts his fate, downing his drink in defeat.
Tsukishima watches the entire thing unfold, eyes half-lidded, expression unreadable.
Huh.
He’d expected you to bail before even stepping past the threshold. Expected you to scoff, maybe say something scathing about how frat boys had the collective IQ of a teaspoon, and leave without looking back.
And yet, here you are, rewriting the rules of a drinking game with the kind of ruthless efficiency that would put actual math professors to shame. Even worse: you’re winning.
By the time you sink your third consecutive shot, the rest of the guys have gone from mildly entertained to genuinely invested. Even Kageyama, who Tsukishima assumed would be sick of math by now, is begrudgingly playing along, answering derivatives and integrals like his pride is at stake.
Tanaka and Noya have fully accepted you as one of their own, chanting your name every time you land a shot. Hinata, despite his earlier humiliation, is practically buzzing, clearly determined to redeem himself. Even Yamaguchi, who usually prefers watching Tsukishima verbally eviscerate people from the sidelines, has been sucked into the chaos, trying (and failing) to solve an integral before Kageyama can.
It’s a disaster. A ridiculous, mathematically-inclined disaster.
And you—poised, serious, utterly deadpan as you call out equations like you’re running a boot camp—are the reason for it.
Tsukishima doesn’t even realize he’s staring until Yamaguchi elbows him.
“You’re enjoying this,” Yamaguchi says, low enough that only Tsukishima can hear.
Tsukishima scoffs. “Please.”
But Yamaguchi just gives him a knowing look, then pointedly nods toward you.
Toward the way you command attention without even trying. The way you challenge their game without hesitation. The way your focus sharpens when you're confronted with something that, even in the realm of absurdity, still needs to be corrected.
Tsukishima exhales slowly, shaking his head.
Of course you’d walk into a frat house for the first time and immediately take over.
Of course you’d turn a drunken joke into an actual intellectual challenge.
Of course you’d be—
“Tsukishima.”
He blinks.
You’re looking at him now, one brow arched, an extra ping-pong ball in your hand. The room quiets just a fraction, the weight of attention shifting ever so slightly. “You haven’t played yet,” you say simply. Your gaze is intense, and it makes his stomach twist, his chest strangely warm.
Tsukishima stares at you for a long moment.
Then, very slowly, he pushes off the wall. Rolls up his sleeves.
“Alright, genius girl.” He steps up to the table, arms loose, completely at ease. “Let’s see what you’ve got.”
The room erupts once again.
And for the first time that night, you grin.
six.
After two months of knowing you, Tsukishima notices something else.
Your bag always contains not just the calculus textbook but several others as well. Every time he sees you on campus, you’re sprinting from place to place, dashing between study halls and libraries and the ASU building. Whenever Kageyama does need help, you’re true to your word and always there, but Tsukishima observes the way you rub at your temples when you think no one is looking, the way you blink a little too long, like you’re stealing micro-moments of rest in the middle of a conversation. The way your hands tremble slightly when you reach for your coffee, as if you’ve been running on caffeine and sheer willpower alone.
So one day, after Kageyama has already run off to his volleyball practice and it’s just the two of you in the frat house’s study room, Tsukishima finally asks the question he’s been wondering for weeks.
“Why do you do this?”
You still, your hands stopping midway as you pack up your belongings. You pause, looking up at him. “What do you mean? Tutoring?”
“Well yeah, tutoring, but also everything else—ASU, TA-ing… all of that. Why?”
You hum as you think over his question, a thoughtful look gracing your features. For a minute, it’s just silent in the room.
“I mean, do I need some grand reason to do it?” You decide after a moment of consideration, shrugging. “There’s a few reasons, I guess. But the biggest one is just that I genuinely like helping people. Like, being there for them and getting to see things click for them. That’s super rewarding in itself.”
“And the other reasons?” He watches you intently.
Clutching your laptop to your chest, you sigh, biting your bottom lip tentatively. It’s the first time he’s really seen you look vulnerable, now that he thinks about it. You’re always so calculated.
“Well– I guess it’s actually only one other reason. It’s also just… the only thing I’m really good for– sorry, at. But whatever, that’s kind of just–” you’re stumbling through your words before you cut yourself off mid-sentence, shaking your head. “At the end of the day, the only reason that matters is that I like seeing other people succeed.”
He nods slowly, sensing your discomfort and deciding not to push any further. “Yeah, okay.”
A small, wistful smile grows on your lips. “In the end, I’ll still be here. The time will pass anyway. I might as well spend it helping people find the happiness I find in math, you know?”
“So you’re tutoring him again tomorrow?”
You nod. “Mhm, from noon until two. I would go longer, but I think he has practice, so I’ll probably just do some work. I have a few policy briefs to go over.”
“Were you not busy enough today?” He drawls, gesturing to the sagging bag on your back.
You laugh with pink cheeks, almost as if embarrassed at the question; you slightly scratch the back of your head. “Um, well, I don’t know. I had a really early class and then I had TA stuff, and then two tutoring sessions, and then a committee meeting and then this. So a pretty packed schedule, I guess,” you admit. Tsukishima gives you a look, and you quickly wave your hands. “I’m good though! I like all of it, so it’s not like it’s bad. It’s a lot, but not the worst, so it’s okay.”
Tsukishima watches you closely, taking in your words and the lilt in your voice. He can see the fatigue etched on your face, the prominent dark circles ringing under your eyes, but there's also a light in your eyes that speaks volumes about your genuine passion for what you do. It’s the same look that sparks up when you watch Kageyama succeed at a problem, the one that makes your eyes look like they’re dancing with fire and sets that weird fuzzy feeling in his stomach going again. It's both admirable and concerning, and he can't help but feel a strange mix of respect and worry.
“You really care about this, don’t you?” he says softly, almost more to himself than to you.
“Yeah, I do,” you reply. Your voice is purely sincere, completely direct. “Even if I’m super busy and stressed out and tired, it’s all worth it because I get to be a part of someone’s life becoming even just a little bit better.”
He’s quiet for a moment, processing everything you’ve said.
He used to hate you. He deemed you pretentious for the GPA rule, assuming you were just another overachiever with a superiority complex, or someone who enjoyed making things harder for people like him and Kageyama. Even beyond you personally, he’d always mocked people like you for flaunting their overtly virtuous and self-righteous personas, always seeming to crave attention and recognition for their altruism.
But now, for the first time, their actions don’t seem self-serving: it’s a sacrifice, a genuine and earnest effort to make a difference that has nothing to do with personal gain. You don’t push people to do better because you think you’re above them. You do it because you believe they can be better. Because you care. Because, despite everything, you genuinely want to see people succeed. You dedicate all of yourself to others, to strangers unaware of your existence, simply because it’s the right thing to do. Simply because you can.
You’re standing there, shoulders weighed down by the sheer number of responsibilities you carry, yet still speaking with unwavering certainty. You don’t expect anything back—in fact, you barely even take credit for the work that you do. You are just kind for the sake of being kind; even when you’re exhausted, even when you have nothing left to give, you keep going. You work yourself to the bone for the sake of everyone else, and no one seems to notice—not your professors, not the students you tutor, not the countless committees that rely on you.
Except now, Tsukishima does.
And because he doesn’t know what else to do with this realization, he sighs and just says, “You should eat before you go.”
You blink at him, caught off guard. “Huh?”
“The house is making dinner.” He shrugs, shoving his hands into his pockets. “You’re here anyway. Might as well eat something before you collapse.”
You huff a quiet laugh, but there’s something warm in your expression, something soft. “I’m not going to collapse.”
Tsukishima raises a brow. “Yeah, well. You look like you might.”
You roll your eyes, but to his surprise, you actually consider it. Then, after a pause, you sigh. “Okay, fine.”
And when you follow him toward the kitchen, Tsukishima tells himself it’s nothing. That he doesn’t care. That he’s just making sure you don’t keel over in the middle of a lecture hall somewhere.
But later, when you’re laughing at something Yamaguchi says, plate balanced in your hands, that strange, unfamiliar warmth creeps up his spine again.
And he thinks, not for the first time, that he might be screwed.
seven.
Since the first day you had dinner with them a few weeks ago, you’ve come to spend more and more time at the KAR house.
And well, you admittedly didn’t see it coming, but you like the Kappa Alpha Rho boys.
They’re loud. They’re class clowns. They spend many, many weeknights drinking and blasting 2000’s pop at maximum volume, so much so that you can hear the telltale tunes of old Miley Cyrus and Britney Spears from halfway down Frat Row. They are, in many ways, exactly what you expected.
They’re also… really sweet.
They’re all extremely determined to help each other to succeed. They care about each other so deeply; they’ve opened their arms to you, too, without question or complaint. They’ve looked after you in a way that you’ve never been cared for before. They gifted you a frat hoodie—your initials stitched beside the KAR letters. You have a designated mug in their kitchen cabinet. They don’t even ask if you’re staying to slide a plate in front of you at dinner. Tsukishima watches you closely whenever you pick at your food, and you pretend not to notice when he scoops an extra helping onto your plate.
They’re driven too, in their own way: as if inspired by Kageyama’s improvement, they’ve all begun to care about school, even if their study methods always seem to include some variant of rage cage or beer pong. You’ve seen how passionate they’ve grown about it, celebrating each small academic win as if it were a final exam. The whole fraternity has been clawing their way out of academic ruin, grinding through assignments, struggling through tests, pulling their GPAs up one painstaking decimal point at a time, going from one of the organizations with the lowest GPAs to being so close to the C+ minimum.
They’re so close. So close.
But technically, the frat still falls under that 2.3 minimum.
You realise this, sitting at your desk in the ASU building, because the deadline for organizations on academic probation to get their GPA up is inching closer and closer. The deadline that you set. From the policy that you put into place.
You stare at your desktop screen, at the open PDF of the passed policy, unblinking. The text is sharp and unforgiving. Academic probation lasts one semester. Organizations must raise their cumulative GPA to at least 2.3 by the end of that period or risk losing university funding. No exceptions.
You remember writing that clause, steady in your resolve at the time. It was supposed to be fair. Cut-and-dry. The goal was to push organizations to take academics seriously—to ensure that no fraternity or club skated by on empty promises and minimal effort. But now, the words feel different. They feel wrong.
You click open the academic records, searching for Kageyama’s name. His grades appear on the screen in neat rows: a scatter of past failures, single digits that make your chest ache, then a stark and steady climb. He’s sitting at a B-average now, a remarkable turnaround considering where he started.
But as you do the math quickly (a habit at this point), calculating projected GPAs based on their current grades and the remaining assignments for the semester, you realise the bitter, indisputable results: no matter how hard they push, it won’t be enough. KAR’s overall GPA still won’t meet the minimum.
The weight of that realization settles deep in your stomach.
Your policy is flawed.
For the first time since writing it, you see its error clear as day: it measures results, but not effort. It punishes past failure while ignoring present growth. It demands perfection in a system that, by design, allows only for progress in small, slow steps.
Something about that feels deeply, fundamentally unfair.
You think about the very principles that allowed you to sit here in the student union building, to have earned the title of Vice President of Academic Affairs. Because you’re not a natural genius, either: you’ve put in countless hours of hard work and effort into your studies, pulled countless sleepless nights and worked through countless practice problems just to get things right. Your policy was meant to encourage others to do the same.
To reward hard work, and drive.
And you’ve witnessed it for yourself, out of a group of rowdy, rambunctious frat boys.
You inhale sharply and sit up, rolling your chair forward. The cursor blinks in the empty document in front of you, a quiet invitation.
Slowly, carefully, you begin to type.
eight.
The night before the deadline, the Kappa Alpha Rho house is unusually quiet.
It’s strange. Even with music thumping from the speakers, even with bodies packed into the living room and voices rising in conversation, the usual energy—the chaotic, unrelenting, borderline obnoxious joy—is gone.
The party isn’t really a party. It’s a wake.
They all know what’s coming. Without funding, they’ll barely be able to keep things running. They’ll have to gut their budget, cut out every major event, every tournament, every social they used to host. They’ll lose their momentum, their presence on campus. They aren’t naive; they know what happens to a fraternity that can’t sustain itself.
So they drink. They celebrate what they were while they still can.
Tsukishima stands near the kitchen, beer in hand, watching the scene with a quiet irritation that hasn’t left him in days. It’s not just the situation—it’s you.
Because you’re not here.
And you haven’t been, not for days. No texts, no calls, no sudden appearances at dinner. No slipping into the house with your laptop and a resigned sigh, no sarcastic quips over Tsukishima’s shoulder while he studies. He knew you’d take this hard—he’s watched the way you’ve thrown yourself into their academic comeback, has seen the way your eyes light up when someone passes a test or raises their grade.
But he never thought you’d disappear.
The realisation sits heavy in his chest, unfamiliar and unwelcome. It bothers him more than he wants to admit.
“Have you heard from her?” Yamaguchi asks, appearing at his side with a drink in hand.
Tsukishima exhales sharply through his nose. “No.”
Yamaguchi frowns, but doesn’t say anything else.
The thought festers in Tsukishima’s mind as the night stretches on. He should be angry at you. A part of him is angry at you. But mostly, it just doesn’t make sense: no possible explanation he comes up with does. You’re not someone who runs from responsibility; if anything, you take too much of it on yourself. But if you’re not here, if you can’t even look at them, then maybe you really do feel guilty. Maybe you really do think you failed them.
The idea makes something twist in his gut, makes the irritation curdle into something else.
He doesn’t know what he’s supposed to do with that feeling.
So he stands there, arms crossed, listening to the frat he’s come to love mourn itself in real time.
And then the front door opens.
The music isn’t loud enough to drown out the sound—the soft creak, the shuffle of movement as someone steps inside. Tsukishima looks up, and the irritation he’s been holding onto vanishes in an instant.
Because it’s you.
You look exhausted. Shadows hang under your eyes, and your hair is slightly disheveled, like you’ve spent too many hours hunched over a desk. But still, you’re here.
And in your hand is a folder.
You walk straight toward him, weaving through the crowd, your expression unreadable. His breath catches in his throat before he realizes he’s holding it.
You stop in front of him, holding out the folder.
“Here,” you say simply.
Tsukishima doesn’t move. He just stares at you, at the folder stamped with the massive, obnoxious university logo, at the way your hand doesn’t waver. Hesitantly, he reaches out and takes it, fingers brushing against yours as he pulls it open.
His eyes scan the page.
ADDENDUM TO THE ACADEMIC PROBATION POLICY
His heart stutters.
It takes a moment for the words to register. The fraternity’s cumulative GPA is still below the requirement. But this—this thing you’ve spent the last few days working on, the thing you’ve evidently been breaking yourself over—it changes everything.
Organizations that show substantial improvement will still qualify for funding. As long as they continue to raise their GPA, they won’t be penalized.
He blinks. Once. Twice. The words blur slightly as he rereads them, brain struggling to keep up.
And then he looks up at you.
“You did this,” he says, voice lower than he intended.
You smile, small and tired but real. “You deserve it.”
Tsukishima feels like the air has been knocked from his lungs.
For a moment, he can’t speak. He can’t move. He just stares at you, at the quiet certainty in your expression, at the exhaustion lining your face, at the way you’re standing here, in his house, telling him that they deserve this. He’s digesting the fact that you cared enough about them, that you respected their effort so much that you admitted your system’s faults to the entire university, published and notarized with physical proof.
Then, without thinking, without planning, without hesitation—he grabs your wrist.
The folder nearly slips from his grasp as he pulls you toward the center of the room, toward the rest of the fraternity. Someone notices first—Hinata, probably, judging by the sudden yell of surprise. Heads turn. Conversations still.
“What’s going on?” Kageyama asks, brow furrowed.
Tsukishima doesn’t answer. He just holds up the folder.
And then he watches it happen. The shift. The confusion, the realization, the moment the words sink in.
Kageyama’s eyes go wide. Yamaguchi’s jaw drops. Someone swears. Someone else shouts. And then, chaos simply erupts.
Because the next thing Tsukishima knows, they’re celebrating.
It’s different from before. This isn’t a goodbye party anymore. It’s loud, and wild, and joyful. There’s yelling and laughter and Hinata practically tackles you in excitement before you’re pulled into a flurry of hugs and cheers. Someone turns the music up. Someone else pops open a bottle of champagne that they were definitely not supposed to be saving for this occasion.
Tsukishima doesn’t join in.
Instead, he watches you.
Watches the way you’re laughing, exhausted but triumphant, surrounded by the people who care about you more than you realize. Watches the way they pull you into the celebration like you’ve always been one of them.
Watches the way you belong.
And for once, he doesn’t fight the way his chest tightens at the sight.
nine.
The party winds down eventually—not the joy, just the noise.
Most of the fraternity has either passed out in their rooms or sprawled out in various corners of the house, too tired (or too drunk) to make it any further. The music is still playing, but softer now, reduced to a faint hum that drifts through the open windows. Even the air feels different—lighter, easier, like the very house itself is breathing again.
Tsukishima finds you on the back porch, sitting on the steps, nursing a half-finished White Claw. He hesitates for only a second before stepping outside, letting the screen door creak shut behind him.
You glance up at him but don’t say anything as he sits down beside you. There’s no need to. The silence between you isn’t uncomfortable. It lingers, settled, like something well-worn and familiar, like you’ve known him forever.
It’s Tsukishima who breaks it first.
“Why?”
You tilt your head. “Why what?”
He huffs, staring down at his beer. “Why’d you do it?”
You blink at him, then let out a quiet laugh, shaking your head. “Because I was wrong.”
Tsukishima looks at you then, sharp eyes flickering with something unreadable. You don’t waver under the weight of it, and he remembers the way you look when you simply know something, that quiet certainty, that unshakable conviction. It sends a warmth through his chest, the same warmth he’s been trying to ignore for weeks now, the same warmth he always seems to feel when he’s with you.
“They deserved to have their efforts rewarded,” you continue, voice steady. “I wrote that policy thinking I was setting a fair standard, but all it did was punish people for starting at a disadvantage. They—” you gesture vaguely toward the house, where distant laughter still filters through the walls—“worked their asses off. I watched them do it. I wasn’t about to let that mean nothing.”
Tsukishima doesn’t respond right away, but he doesn’t need to. The way his jaw tightens, the way his fingers drum once against the step before curling into his palm—he gets it. He knew before you even said it.
“You didn’t have to kill yourself over it, though.”
You roll your eyes. “I didn’t.”
He levels you with a look.
You sigh, glancing away. “Okay. Maybe it wasn’t easy.”
That’s an understatement, and you both know it. You don’t admit just how much effort it took, how much red tape you had to cut through, how many meetings you had to schedule, reschedule, and push through just to get the addendum approved in time. You don’t tell him about the sleepless nights, about the pages of drafted revisions, about the quiet, gnawing fear that it wouldn’t be enough. You don’t tell him how you single handedly powered through academic records for every single organisation on campus, just to make sure this change gets written into law.
You don’t have to.
Tsukishima already knows.
He clicks his tongue but doesn’t push the subject further. Instead, he shifts, stretching his legs out in front of him, leaning back on his hands. “Tanaka and Noya are already losing their minds over events now that the funding’s secure.”
You snort. “I can only imagine.”
“They’re talking about a full house party lineup, a tournament series, and some kind of insane spring break trip.” He exhales sharply, something that vaguely sounds like a laugh. “It’s exhausting just listening to them.”
You smile softly. “Sounds about right.”
He hums in agreement. Then, almost offhandedly, he adds, “They mentioned formal, too.”
You nod, swirling your drink absentmindedly. “Makes sense.”
A beat of silence.
Then.
“…Can I take you to formal?”
You freeze.
It’s not like you haven’t been asked out before, but it’s different coming from Tsukishima. Maybe it’s the way he says it—not cocky, not casual, not even teasing. Just direct. A little uncertain. A little careful.
You don’t mean to hesitate, but you do. Just for a moment.
It’s a moment too long.
Tsukishima sighs, looking away. “Forget it.”
And that’s when you see it—so brief, so subtle, but there. The way his shoulders tense, the way his lips press into a thin line, the way his fingers twitch like he’s bracing for something. Like he expected you to say no. Like he’s already trying to convince himself that he doesn’t care.
Before you even think about it, you reach for his hand. Your fingers lace through his, warm and solid, and you squeeze lightly, grounding him.
“Yes,” you say. “I want you to take me.”
Tsukishima goes still. He stares first at your joined hands, like he can’t quite process the fact that you’re holding his. Then, slowly, his gaze flickers back up to yours.
His voice is quieter when he asks, “…Not out of pity?”
“Have I ever done anything out of pity?”
He considers that for half a second before huffing out something that’s almost a laugh. “…No.”
“Exactly.”
You don’t let go of his hand, and he doesn’t pull away. Instead, you shift slightly, moving just a little closer, lifting your interlocked fingers as you lean into his side. It’s easy, natural, like something inevitable.
For a moment, Tsukishima doesn’t react.
Then, slowly, hesitantly, he squeezes your hand back.
The porch is quiet, the sounds of the house fading into the background. Somewhere inside, Tanaka and Noya are still arguing about something, Kageyama is grumbling, someone bursts into laughter—but out here, it’s just you and Tsukishima, sitting in the soft glow of the porch light, hands entwined.
Neither of you says anything else. You don’t need to.
And in that moment, Tsukishima is certain that he’s screwed. But right now, with you curled up next to him, knowing you deeply the way you seemed to know him the first time you met him, remembering everything that has brought you two here, to this moment, he is equally certain about this: he will be there. He’ll keep noticing things about you that you think no one bothers to see, and he’ll be the support that you always offer to others but never ask for. He’ll let you—make you, if he has to—rest; he’ll take care of you the way you do for everyone else.
And above all, he’ll be the person to prove to you that you are incredible. Not just for being good at tutoring, not just for being good at math, not just for being good at school, but that he’s in awe of you and who you are.
He’ll love you how you should be loved.
He swears it.
⨭ closing notes; very very attached to this one bc i started it in 2019. yes, 2019. she's gone through an insane amt of rewriting and cuts, but i am super proud of this final draft and i rly rly love it. this is also 1/3 of my asu trilogy so look out for that!!! as always #comment #like #reblog i literally see them all and it keeps me going :') thank u all sm if u made it to the end!
#⨭ foreveia#⨭ fics#⨭ haikyuu#⨭ haikyuu fics#⨭ karasuno#⨭ tsukishima#⨭ fluff#⨭ angst#⨭ alcohol#⨭ swearing#⨭ college!au#haikyuu x reader#haikyuu#tsukishima kei x reader#tsukishima kei#haikyuu tsukishima#haikyuu tsukki#hq#hq x reader#tsukishima imagine#tsukishima kei x you#haikyuu x you#haikyu x reader#haikyuu!! x reader#slow burn#karasuno#anything for you#fanfiction#haikyu#haikyuu fluff
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The Hero and Hope (5/5)
(Part 1) (Part 2) (part 3) (part 4)
Last Time
The crack under the door lights with a sickly purple. The smell of ozone seeps into the manor. For a moment there is a silence so complete you think you’ve been struck. What was that? Magic? You’ve never seen magic before--
Screams rocket across the field. The Blacksmith’s screams. The Baker’s screams. Marie’s rage-filled howls.
“DEMON KING!”
Your Destiny burns.
---.
You have dreams the closer you get to turning fifteen. Dreams of a kingdom in the sky, a kingdom heard in the roiling clouds and in the cracks of lightning that splinter through them. This kingdom howls and chatters and hungers.
You dream that you are under these clouds. Your necks aches from staring up into them. You’re alone in a field of dead wheat and the stalks whisper prophecies whenever the kingdom above falls silent. Rivers will run with blood, flesh will lay torn across the streets, no child can hide—
In these dreams, you aren’t afraid. There is an answering snarl in your chest for every howl and prophecy you hear.
You won’t have your way. You won’t win.
I’m the Hero.
When the storm sends down a funnel of demon bats (or horned rabbits or screaming goblins or demon wolves), you leap to meet them.
------.
This isn’t a dream.
Your hands slide down from the door. Hera and Josiah are frozen in place, eyes wide and unseeing as the demon king’s presence steals the oxygen from the room. You take a step back. Then another.
All doors and windows are blocked on this level. But this manor has more than one floor.
The fighting resumes outside before Sarah realizes what you’re doing.
“Isla!” She has the strength of a mother when she grabs you this time. Your nearly choke as your collar is pulled taught against your throat by her grip on your sleeve. “Where do you think you’re going?”
“To fight,” you wheeze before you can think better of it.
“Absolutely not.” Sarah attempts to pull you back, but you’re braced against her now. She grabs your sleeve with both hands. “The knights have it handled—”
“Not this—”
“—you’re to stay here.” Sarah’s lip trembles and she squares her jaw to hide it. The younger kids are holding onto her skirts, eyes wide as they stare up at you. “Understood?”
Afraid. She’s so afraid for you, so determined to keep you safe this time. You can see that winter seven years ago like you never have before; when you held the door and lost your hope in heroes, she never once looked away from your narrow back.
You have never been alone.
“Take care,” you say as gently as you can. Then, as she draws breath to speak, you rip yourself from her grasp. Your sleeve tears and Sarah’s eyes fall to your arm.
She gasps. “Isla—”
You shoulder your way through the villagers and thunder upstairs. The grand staircase leads to a hall of doors and you throw open the one at the end indiscriminately. You get the impression of books, leather furniture, a black feather quill, but it all blurs when your eyes fall on the door leading to the balcony.
That will do.
You burst out into unrelenting sunlight. Shouldn’t it be storming? In your dreams, it’s always storming. The garden is a mess of turned earth and splintered party tables. The knights’ armor flash rays of sun and the orcs – great, fleshy beasts with hardly any neck and black-sclera eyes – undulate like mountains below. You can see that some orcs are down, their giant bodies strewn across the ground, but it hardly seems to make a difference.
Not when there’s a Demon King.
You climb up onto the railing to get a better look. He’s half-hidden by the fighting, almost lounging against the treeline. He’s more human than you expected with dark, shaggy hair, and a bored look on his face. Canines the length of your index finger poke over his thin lower lip. Without the fangs, he’d be a traveling merchant, one of the ones who turned up their nose when they realized that the home they were visiting was an orphanage and not that of an affluent family.
As you watch, that sickly purple magic crackles at his fingertips. You follow his gaze to where Ivan and Marie are fighting back-to-back. The Lord is standing defiantly behind them, his horse slain mere yards away. The Lord is staring a challenge at the Demon King.
This is my land. You can see his mouth form the words, but can’t hear him over the clashing of swords and the twanging of Marie’s bow. Did he lose his voice? His exhaustion drags at his face, just visible under his fury. Green power seeps from him and into the ground as he emphasizes his Lord’s claim. You won’t have it.
The Demon King smirks. His hand twitches and purple magic soars into the sky. It arcs over the orcs’ heads, ten feet, fifteen feet, ten feet, five feet—
Ivan catches the bolt on his shield, a cry leaving his lips as the magic splashes around the edges and tears at his skin. You can smell burning flesh and ozone. Ivan falls to one knee and Marie snarls as she blocks an orc’s blow with the curve of her bow. She manages to kick the beast away, but her distraction costs her. This time Lord Brennan has to block the orc swinging a mace down upon their heads. His connection to the land wavers and the Demon King’s smirk widens into a smile.
Something in your chest cracks and you see gold.
Your destiny is like a flame on your shoulder. It drips down your arm and into your hand. Golden light is burning there and with a barely a thought, it takes the form of a spear. You hoist the spear over your shoulder and hurl it with your full strength at the ground between the orcs advancing on Marie, Ivan and Lord Brennan.
The ground shatters. The orcs are thrown back. Marie, already kneeling at Ivan’s side, jerks her gaze up to you. You see her mouth form your name.
The Demon King is as loud as he is in your dreams. “HERO!”
The word alone strikes fear in the orcs. Stupidly, a few look up at you and fail to block the next blows from the knights. One squeals and turns to the forest. You barely notice the knights chase after it.
“Isla?”
“Don’t—”
“Go back inside, his magic is too--!”
The Demon King hisses a spell. It’s fast, not the slow and contemptuous arc of power he’d thrown at the lord. Without thinking, you swipe your arm. It’s still drenched with the golden glow of your power and the air rings when the Demon King’s spell connects. You feel the blow vibrate through your bones. The magic crackles and your own power rises to meet it, filling your view with sun-bright light that washes over everything.
When the light clears, you’re still standing.
“Impossible,” the demon king says.
On instinct, you lift a hand above your head. Something presses against your palm and you grab it, drawing it down in front of you. A sword drenched in a golden haze follows. Hero’s sword. You point it at the demon king in a silent declaration. Your destiny is choking you, but your message is clear.
His lips curl in a snarl. “Attack!”
You leap down from the balcony as the demon king’s army surges. An orc charges you the moment you land, his eyes filled with the demon king’s command. He towers over you, but you’re strong enough to haul a half dozen fence posts on your own. You catch the club he swings at your head and launch him back in the same motion. He falls back a dozen steps and you follow him, slashing at his throat with your sword of light.
You’re on to the next monster before his body hits the ground.
You are new to your power, but you aren’t alone. Knights scream their second wind and fall on the monsters’ backs when their master’s command stupidly makes them turn away. A corner of your mind shrinks at the smell of blood and worse, at the sight of bodies under your feet, at the sound of armor crunching under heavy blows, but your power blocks it out. You move through the battlefield with an overwhelming, single-minded purpose.
Demon King.
“Don’t understand—”
Who is that? Your senses tell you it’s not an enemy. You duck when an orc swings a meaty fist at your head and then blink when someone severs its arm before you can.
“It’s okay, Isla,” someone says. “We’re here.”
“--she’s fourteen—”
“Argue about it later, protect her now.”
“Right.”
The Demon King isn’t relaxed when you see him next. His lips are pulled back so far you can see all his teeth. He’s commanding his monsters to stop you, to kill you, to put their bodies between you and him. One orc is bigger than the rest, a vibrant red instead of fleshy pink. It plants itself squarely in front of its master and raises a mace the length of your body.
Your power won’t let you falter, but your mind balks. Can you catch that? Block it? Those spikes are as long as your arm—
An arrow sprouts from the orc’s throat. It blinks stupidly and the purple haze clears from its eyes. Another arrow finds its mark in said eye and the beast steps back hesitantly as if unsure if its okay or not. The third arrow lets it know it’s not.
“Keep your sword tip up, Isla.”
“You’re training her now?”
“On your left, Marie!”
The Demon King must be cocky because he doesn’t try to run until it’s too late. The orc falls and his eyes widen in surprise to see you still coming for him. You’re close enough to see the color of them now, a red as deep and terrible as what’s drenching your hand.
Purple magic crackles. It’s not a spell – he’s too afraid for that – but the destructive power is unreal. The earth splinters to either side of you, causing your allies to falter for a moment. You deflect the bolt aimed for you and it explodes overhead like fireworks.
“No,” the Demon King breathes. He stumbles back and tries to ward you off with hands drenched in power. “No, I do not fall here! I am King! I am ultimate! I am—”
You throw your sword. You never really learned how to use one and this motion is more natural. For a moment, you see your Hero’s sword like your sharpened stick, sailing into the throat of a horned rabbit. Then you blink and it’s the Demon King with your sword through his meck. Blood bubbles at the corners of his mouth. One of his long-nailed hands comes up to try and grab the hilt. You’ve pierced him through.
The Demon King falls like his orcs. Confused and unsure of his own demise.
You come back to yourself the moment you feel his power die. There’s crashing through the woods as the remaining four orcs turn to flee. Absently, you mark their paths.
If the knights don’t get them, you will.
The details of the battle filter back to you gradually, like the sound returning to a forest after a rockslide. The memories of each blow you dealt tremble up your arms and the smell of one orc’s fetid breath makes you suck in a breath. That of course drags new horrible smells into your lungs and you cough so hard you gag.
A warm hand pats your back. “There, there,” Ivan says. He sounds tired. “The first one is always rough. Vomiting is okay.”
Marie grabs your hand before you can rub your face. “Don’t touch your eyes. Orc blood is corrosive.”
You twist, blinking tears out of your vision. You tremble as the memory of battle becomes fresher and fresher. You croak, “I’m an orphan, you know.”
Ivan looks taken aback. Then understanding washes over his face. “We’re acting like your parents, aren’t we? We were going to ask you after the party.”
The nausea temporarily subsides. “What?”
“She’s in shock,” Marie scolds Ivan. She fishes a clean handkerchief out of her bodice and uses it to dab under your eyes. “We want to adopt you, Isla. If you’ll have us as parents?”
You stare at them. “I—” you clear your throat. “I just meant we don’t actually know when my birthday is. Because I’m an orphan. I might be fifteen after all.’
“Oh.” Ivan opens his mouth. Closes it. “Well, do you be our daughter anyway?”
“More than anything,” you say and then vomit right onto the demon king’s corpse.
---------.
Things are both complicated and not after that.
The questions you thought were coming never get asked. Sarah isn’t upset you hid your Destiny from her and neither are any of the kids. They’re just relieved you’re alive.
Hera buries her face in your stomach before dinner that night. The Bahrs have invited you all to stay over until the last of the orcs are caught. Hera smells like their bath oils when she says, “I held the door, Isla. Nobody got in.”
There’s a lump in your throat as you pet her damp hair. “You did. You were very brave.”
“I helped,” Josiah says. Unlike Hera, he eyes your arm from a distance. Your mark is covered in a fresh cotton shirt, but it’s like he can see it anyway. Finally he collapses into you. “It’s not fair. You’re our Hero. Now you’re going to have be everyone’s.”
You lean down to press a kiss into his hair. “I’m too mean to be everyone’s Hero. I’ll just be yours, okay?”
“Good,” Josiah says. Then, after a long moment. “Though you should be nicer to us now.”
“No,” you say fondly.
The complicated part comes when the Bahrs enter the dining room after Sarah has gotten you all seated.
Ivan’s arm is in a sling, but he smiles widely when he sees the spread Josiah, Annie and Sarah have cooked up. He compliments them on their efforts, thanks them, and takes a seat at the head of the table.
Marie pauses by you before she takes her seat. She lingers by your chair until you turn to look at her. “Isla.”
You swallow. “Marie.”
Is it just you or is Marie as nervous as you are?
“Would you…sit by me?” she asks. Her eyes flick to the seat just to the right of her side of the table. You may not be a noble, but you know what that seat means.
Your voice wavers. You’re suddenly very conscious of the kids looking at you, of the way Sarah’s pressed a hand to her mouth. In surprise? To hide her pleasure? “If—if I can?”
“Yes,” Marie says quickly. “Yes, if you don’t mind, I mean, if you’re able to be drawn away—”
Lord Brennan throws open the dining room doors with an astonishing crash. He isn’t dressed for company and his long sleeping robe is drenched with the water still dripping from his hair. “I am starving. Is there—” He catches sight of the table and his mouth drops open in surprise. “You were all about to have dinner? Without me?”
“You were in a coma, my lord,” Ivan says.
“I was taking a nap,” Lord Brennan corrects. His golden eyes catalogue the way Marie is standing over you, the three empty seats at the end of the table opposite Ivan. Rather than claiming the empty head of the table seat, he strides over to Ivan. “Up, up you get.”
“There’s another seat you can take!” Ivan complains. He guards his plate of food. “I just served myself.”
“Go sit with your wife and daughter,” Lord Brennan commands. He nearly sits on Ivan when the other man stands too slowly. He smiles charmingly at Sarah. “Director. Fancy seeing you here.”
Sarah flushes up to her ears.
“Daughter?” Hera asks.
Your stomach turns over. Oh god. It’s not fair that they asked you – you were too happy to think about it, but the other kids must be devastated—
But Hera doesn’t look sad. She’s staring at you for an answer, her eyes open and accepting.
“Y-yeah,” you say.
“Hell yeah,” Josiah says. “If the Bahrs adopt you that means I can read through their library right?”
Annie looks up at you. “And we can come visit?”
“Of course you all can,” Marie answers. Is her voice a little misty? “You all can stay here as long as you like.”
“Go sit with them,” Hera says. She smiles and pushes at you. “Go on.”
It’s the best meal you’ve ever had.
-----
(Part 1) (Part 2) (part 3) (part 4)
------------------
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Hello everyone! I'm back with another Merlin au! This time featuring a role reversal and Merlin getting yet another job that he never wanted! Enjoy! :D
EDIT: You can find part 2 of this au here!
This au takes places during the season four finale, when Arthur gives up on being king and tells Merlin that Camelot will have to find itself another king if they defeat Morgana, since Arthur no longer feels worthy of being king.
So, Merlin leads him to Excalibur and helps him draw the sword from the stone in front of the people of Camelot, successfully convincing Arthur to believe in himself and his place as a good leader.
That night though, after Arthur confided in Merlin about his worries of Morgana's magic being too powerful for them to fight, Merlin sneaks back into the castle in dosguise as Dragoon and plants the curse that will strip Morgana of her powers the next day. However, he gets caught in the act by Morgana, who of course immediately starts attacking her sworn enemy.
Merlin is put on the defensive, putting all of his efforts into shielding himself from Morgana's attacks and fending off Helios and his fighters at the same time. After a few minutes, his spell that disguises him as Dragoon fades, as all of his magical strength is poured into his fight against Morgana.
Merlin can see the exact moment that Morgana's eyes widened with shock, and it's then that he realizes what had just happened: Morgana knew exactly who he was now.
After the moment of shocked silence passed, Morgana started cackling, finding the situation hilarious. She taunts Merlin, asking if Arthur knows what he is. Upon seeing Merlin wince, Morgana offers him a deal: join her side and help eliminate Arthur, or he can burn in the courtyard like so many of their magical bretheren. Morgana sneers at him that he'd better accept her deal, as he'd burn on a pyre at Arthur's hand even if Merlin kept fighting at his side.
Merlin, predictably, rejects her offer and continues his attack, rebuking Morgana for her cruelty and violence. At this point, their fight had migrated all the way out into the courtyard, which gave them more space to use more destructive spells against each other.
Morgana hurled fireballs at Merlin, and he responded by throwing blinding arcs of lightning at her. Morgana managed to barely sheild herself against the attack, but Helios and his men weren't as lucky and were blasted away in the attack, all of them fatally wounded.
Seeing that her backup was now gone, Morgana redoubled her attacks, franticly throwing spell after spell at her prophesied killer. As Merlin desperately shielded himself, he had an idea. The very thought of it caused guilt to well up in his throat, but he saw no other way to survive.
As Morgana renewed her constant barrage of spells, Merlin didn't defend himself with a shielding spell. Instead, he powered all of his already diminished power into a redirection spell, attempting to throw Morgana's spells back at her.
Sure enough, as soon as Morgana's spells collided with Merlin's redirection spell, they were launched right back at Morgana, who didn't have enough time to dodge or shield herself from the blast.
Morgana's own spells hit her with all of the killing intent that she had aimed at her mortal enemy, and her spells accomplished their goal: killing their target.
Merlin both shocked and horrified as he looked down at Morgana's body, as he didn't intend to kill her, only subdue her so that she could stand trail and face Arthur's justice. However, it seemed like Morgana's own murderous fury had been too strong for even herself, ultimately bringing about her demise.
As Merlin silently held onto Morgana's fallen body, just as he did on that fateful day when he poisoned her and pushed her into Morgause's clutches, he saw the run begin to rise over the castle. He quickly jolted up at the sight, his heart leaping with panic, since he needed to be back in Arthur's camp in the woods before anyone noticed that he was gone!
Merlin ran out of the castle, quickly finding his way back to Arthur's camp, and planning out what he was going to say to hopefully explain his absence. Maybe picking medicinal herbs in preparation to help anyone wounded during the upcoming battle? That would work!
But... there wasn't going to be a battle, since all of their enemies were now lying dead in the castle's courtyard, unknown to all of the fighters preparing to give their lives to retake their home. Shit, everyone would start looking for answers the moment they set foot in the castle, how was Merlin supposed to throw them off his trail?!
Merlin was so preoccupied with these thoughts swirling around his head as he ran back to the hidden camp that he didn't notice the many eyes peering at him from a certain window in the castle, with the men inside having seen everything that had just transpired.
(When Morgana had taken over the castle, she had locked all of the lords and older knights on Arthur's council in an old meeting room, planning to execute them later. She didn't plan to rule with some useless council to hold her back after all!
It was truly an unfortunate coincidence for Merlin that the particular room that Morgana had locked them in had a perfect view of the courtyard below and the unexpected battle that took place on it that night.)
Merlin, luckily, managed to make it back to the camp just as Arthur was waking up, and no one else seemed to have noticed that he was missing that morning, too preoccupied by preparations for the upcoming battle. Merlin breathed a sigh of relief when no one commented on him being gone. Maybe this would actually go smoothly!
That morning, Arthur gave a rousing and inspiring speech to his people, ready to lead them into battle. With the light shining on him and Excalibur by his side, his people ready to follow him to the ends of the earth, Arthur looked every bit the king Merlin imagined he could be. Looking at Arthur, King Arthur, Merlin's heart swelled with pride and hope. And if he had to blink some tears from his eyes, then no one commented on it.
Still, the fact that Arthur was leading them into a battle that was already won had Merlin shifting his feet with nervousness. How would Arthur react? Would anyone discover that Merlin was behind Morgana's defeat? Would they question their unexpected boon, or would they simply accept it with relief?
Merlin's anxiety heightened with each step the army took towards Camelot. While the army, along with Tristan and Isolde, were going to try to storm the castle from the main entrance (which Merlin knew would be easier than anticipated, since Morgana's army was dead), a smaller group comprised of Arthur, Merlin, Gwen, Percival, and Leon were sent through the underground tunnels to launch a sneak attack on Morgana.
Merlin just put on a stoic face and nodded as Arthur outlined the plan, still trying to figure out how he could avoid suspicion after the army of Camelot realizes that Morgana and her army were already defeated.
Their small group easily makes to through the tunnels, which puts Arthur more on edge, as Merlin can see that he thinks that it's almost too easy, like they're walking into a trap. Merlin wished that he could allay Arthur's fears, but he couldn't at the moment, not without revealing that he knows too much.
When they reached the dungeons, Leon and Percival separated from them to go free Gwaine, Elyan, Gaius, and the other prisoners held down there. Meanwhile, Arthur, Merlin, and Gwen headed for the throne room, with two of them tense and ready for a fight against a formidable sorceress, and one of them tense under the weight of his own secrets.
When Arthur burst open the doors to the throne room, adrenaline rushing and ready for a fight to the death, he was ready to see his sister on his throne, mocking and tormenting him. Instead, to his shock, he found his entire council inside, alive and well and loudly squabbling amongst themselves.
Upon hearing the doors to the throne room crash open, they all froze and grew silent, turning to look at who was there. They all relaxed upon seeing Arthur, but tensed when they saw who was standing right behind him.
"I'm glad to see that all of you are unharmed, but what are you all doing here? Where is Morgana! We must defeat her at once!"
The lords' eyes grew wide as they started murmuring amongst each other in sharp tones. Finally, Geoffrey was pushed forward, seemingly appointed as the voice of the group.
"Welcome back, my lord. It is truly a blessing to see you back unharmed. However, we do bring troubling news to you. It is with a heavy heart that we inform you of these changes."
Geoffrey trailed off from there, his face grim. He seemed reluctant to say anything further, much to Arthur's frustration and horror.
"What do you mean news? What has happened? What has Morgana done?!"
Geoffrey sighed, looking every bit of his numerous years. After another tense moment of silence, Geoffrey spoke again.
"Sire, we wish to inform you that Morgana Pendragon is dead. She was killed in a battle in the early hours this morning. Her body still lies where she met her demise in the courtyard."
While Merlin grew pale and tensed even more, both Arthur and Gwen stumbled backwards with shock at Geoffrey's words, the breath knocked out of them both by the unbelievable news.
"What- How did this happen?! Who could have... how is that even possible?!"
"We," Geoffrey replied as he gestured to all of the lords and council members standing around him, "witnessed all of it from a room overlooking the courtyard. It was an unbelievable sight, one that I myself might not believe if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes. A lone sorcerer called lightning down on all of Morgana's soldiers, killing them in an instant. He then proceeded to battle Morgana to the death in a duel of magic. He managed to defeat her before leaving the citadel in a hurry."
Arthur stood, frozen, as Geoffrey's words swirled around his head, almost comprehendible. Many conflicting feelings- relief, grief, shock, horror- welled up in his chest, almost choking him with their strength. He was paralyzed as he grieved his sister, celebrated his kingdom's safety from her wrath, and feared this new, more powerful sorcerer who had single-handedly defeated his sister, the most power magic user Camelot had ever seen.
Merlin, meanwhile, stood completely still, his heart beating as fast as a rabbit on the run from a wolf. They saw him, they all did. But it was dark, so maybe they didn't recognize him? Merlin hoped with everything he had that they hadn't recognized him during the battle.
Grimacing again, Geoffrey cleared his throat, apparently having more to say. Merlin's heart leapt with terror as Geoffrey opened his mouth once more.
"Sire, it is with great remorse that I must inform you of this, but there is more news. As is law, Morgana took the throne through right of conquest, as your father did in his time. Morgana was, in the time she ruled Camelot with her forces, the rightful ruler in the eyes of the law.
However, this sorcerer defeated the the ruler of Camelot and conquered her entire army. By the laws of Camelot and by the right of conquest, he is the rightful king of Camelot. Therefore, unfortunately, unless you formally challenge him for the throne and win, we cannot reinstate you as king at this time."
If it was possible, Merlin became even paler at those words, feeling woozy and sick to his stomach. Had he just sabotaged his own efforts?! He did all of this to keep Arthur as king, not undermine him!
Gwen gave a loud gasp, a look of horror on her face, while Arthur's jaw clenched in anger and frustration.
"This is preposterous! Whoever that sorcerer is, he fled! He cannot become king, nor can I challenge him, if he isn't even here!"
Merlin took a staggered step back as Geoffrey's eyes landed on him. He had the grasp at the pillar next to him for support under the old librarian's gaze. He knew.
"The sorcerer did leave after his battle with Morgana, as I said earlier, but I'm afraid that he is here right now, sire."
Merlin felt like he was about to faint. Oh gods, was he about to throw up?
Arthur's entire body jolted to attention, his grip tightening on the sword as he registered Geoffrey's words. He forced one strained word passed his clenched jaw.
"Where?"
Geoffrey motioned one of the other lords on the council forward, and he stepped forward with the coronation crown and royal seal resting on a pillow.
"The council and all of Camelot's vassal lords feel that it is in Camelot's best interest to acknowledge and formalize the sorcerer's claim to the throne at this time, as we are yet unaware of his true power or the danger he poses should he decide to attack. We unanimously agree that it would be best to not give him any reason to retaliate against Camelot, as we fear he might if we do not acknowledge his rightful conquest."
Arthur's face fell, his expression ashen and devastated. His own council had turned against him? They had chosen this unknown and potentially dangerous sorcerer to place the lives of his people in?
Arthur, Gwen, and Merlin were all frozen with shock and dread, looking on in horror as Geoffrey took the coronation crown and royal seal from their cushion and stepped forward, approaching the paralyzed trio.
"It is with a heavy heart that we crown the new king of Camelot, ascended through the right of conquest over Morgana Pendragon."
Geoffrey moved past Arthur, looking at first like he was heading for the door behind them, but Merlin knew who he was actually walking towards. Merlin flinched backwards, trying to get away from Geoffrey and the crown he was carrying, but he was stopped by the hard stone wall behind his back.
"We, the council and lords of Camelot, do declare our fealty to the slayer of Morgana, the prophesized sorcerer known as Emrys, King Merlin!"
Geoffrey punctuated his announcement by placing the crown on a very pale Merlin's head, much to the horror of Arthur and Gwen.
And it was at that moment that Merlin did faint.
That's all from this au for now! Let me know what you think of it and if you'd like a continuation of this au! Until next time!
And, as always, thank you for reading through my ramblings! :D
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⚔️ 𝗡𝗲𝘄 𝗶𝘁𝗲𝗺! String Blade
Weapon (rapier), rare ___ This magic blade looks like the bow of a string instrument: the bow’s string is a fine and sharp metal filament. You gain a +2 bonus to attack and damage rolls made with this magic weapon, which deals slashing damage instead of piercing. If you use the blade as a bow to play a string instrument, this bonus applies to any Charisma (Performance) check you make with it. If you’re proficient with at least one string instrument, you can choose to replace one or more of your attacks with the weapon with a special ranged one, which has a normal range of 20 feet and a long range of 80 feet. To do so, you drag the blade through the air as if you were playing a string instrument (such as a cello or violin). For each attack you make with it in this way, a shimmering blade of sonic power leaps from the weapon and streaks towards the target. You are proficient with this attack, which uses either your Dexterity or Charisma modifier for the attack and damage rolls (your choice). On a hit, a target takes thunder damage equal to 1d8 + the chosen modifier. If you’re a bard, the damage is equal to your Bardic Inspiration die, provided it’s a d8 or higher. ___ ✨ Patrons get huge perks! Access this and hundreds of other item cards, art files, and compendium entries when you support The Griffon's Saddlebag on Patreon for as little as $3 a month!
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Can do a part 3 of scarlet witch reader x viltrumite mark this time nolan and the rest of the viltrumites will meet scarlet witch reader neither they see her as a threat or she will be respected because of her powers.meanwhile our mark will find a way to save the reader,round 2 between our mark vs viltrumite mark.
UTTER CHAOS — viltrumite! mark grayson x scarlet witch! reader
INVINCIBLE MASTERLIST
PART ONE. PART TWO.

The Viltrumites stood in a loose circle, their presence suffocating. Towering figures clad in bloodstained armor, each radiating the same overwhelming arrogance that seemed embedded in their DNA. Y/N could feel their eyes on her, but none of them looked particularly impressed.
Nolan stood at the front, arms crossed. “This is the one you’ve been keeping, Mark?” His tone was neutral, but the hint of disapproval was there.
Mark, standing beside Y/N, nodded. “She’s stronger than she looks.”
A gruff chuckle came from one of the Viltrumites—Thula, Y/N thought her name was. She smirked, tilting her head. “That’s not saying much.”
More laughter followed. A pit of irritation coiled in Y/N’s stomach.
She knew this would happen. The Viltrumites respected only one thing—power. Not magic, not intelligence, just brute strength. And to them, she wasn’t a threat.
Nolan stepped forward, examining her like she was some curiosity. “I’ve heard you’re different from humans. That you have… abilities.”
Abilities. Like she was some kind of party trick. Bc Y/N clenched her fists, red mist curling from her fingertips. “You could say that.”
Another Viltrumite scoffed. “She doesn’t even have the physique of a fighter. Are you sure she isn’t just another pet?”
A deep, amused chuckle came from General Kregg. “We’ve wasted enough time. If she was really worth something, she would’ve proven it by now.”
That was it. The ground trembled. The sky darkened. A pulse of raw power surged from Y/N, sending waves of red energy through the air. The Viltrumites staggered—not from an attack, but from the sheer force of her presence. And yet, none of them looked afraid. Just… annoyed.
Nolan sighed. “Is that it?” Y/N’s eye twitched.
Mark, sensing her frustration, placed a hand on her back. “They don’t get it,” he murmured. “They never will.”
She wanted to rip them apart, to show them exactly how fragile their bones were in her grasp.
But then she saw it—the way they still weren’t taking her seriously. They weren’t afraid. They weren’t impressed. To them, she was just another human. Y/N exhaled slowly, letting the energy dissipate.
“Not worth my time,” she muttered. And as she turned her back on the Viltrumites, she could feel their laughter following her. This wasn’t over. Not by a long shot.
The Viltrumites never feared her. Even after she left Anissa bloody in the dirt, even after she displayed magic that could warp reality itself—they still looked down on her. Treated her as if she was nothing more than an amusement.
But she had been feeling it lately. A shift. Her magic was coming back. Ever since she had arrived in this world, something had been wrong. She hadn’t been able to use her full strength—like an unseen force was dulling her, keeping her caged.
That was the only explanation for how Viltrumite Mark had beaten her. Her power far exceeded his strength. She should have crushed him. But now? Now, she felt it rising. And when she did, she knew—this was about to change.
She was standing outside, staring at the sky, when it happened. A tear in reality. A portal. Her heart leaped into her throat as she saw him—her Mark.
“Mark!” she gasped, her feet moving before she even realized it. She ran straight into his arms, his scent, his warmth, everything she had missed enveloping her. He held her tight, burying his face into her hair. “God, I thought I lost you.”
She grinned up at him. “Took you long enough.” But then his body went stiff. His grip on her tightened—not in affection, but in alarm. She turned just in time to see Viltrumite Mark staring at them, his son standing close behind him.
“Mom?” the boy asked, confused. Y/N’s breath caught. Main Mark pulled her behind him instinctively, his expression hardening. Viltrumite Mark didn’t waste a second. He shot forward, tackling Mark with a force that cracked the ground beneath them.
Y/N barely had time to react before a shadow passed overhead. She looked up. An army of Viltrumites. Dozens of them, their capes billowing, their eyes filled with bloodlust as they descended upon her.
A slow smirk spread across her lips. Her hands crackled with red energy, magic swirling around her fingertips like a living storm. She turned to face them, her power surging. “Now I can stop holding back.”
Bodies dropped from the sky like shooting stars, lifeless and broken.
Y/N tore through the Viltrumites with terrifying efficiency. Some she ripped apart with her bare hands, others she crushed midair with a flick of her wrist. And then there were those who barely had time to scream before she invaded their minds, twisting their thoughts, making them turn on each other.
Blood filled the air. They called themselves an unstoppable empire, but she was proving them wrong. Still, they kept coming.
A fist slammed into her back, sending her crashing into the ground with a force that left a crater in its wake. Dust and debris clouded her vision as pain radiated through her body.
She pushed herself up, her hands crackling with energy. But before she could strike, a small figure ran in front of her. Mark’s son—her son.
He spread his arms wide, standing between her and the Viltrumite who had struck her down. “Stop! You can’t hurt her!” His voice cracked, desperate and filled with fear.
The Viltrumite barely even looked at him. Just scoffed. Then swung his fist. The boy was sent flying. Something inside her snapped. Before the Viltrumite could even lower his arm, his body twisted unnaturally, bones snapping like twigs. He barely had time to choke out a strangled breath before he was gone—reduced to nothing but red mist.
Y/N didn’t spare him another thought.
She flew to the boy, dropping to her knees. His small body trembled, blood trickling from his lip. She cupped his face, brushing his hair from his eyes. “I’m here,” she murmured. “I’ve got you.”
Tears spilled down his cheeks as he threw his arms around her, burying his face in her chest. “Mom…” His voice was muffled, shaking.
Her breath hitched. Hesitantly, she placed a hand on his head, smoothing down his hair. “It’s okay,” she whispered, closing her eyes. “Everything will be okay.”
Tears soaked into her suit as the boy clung to her, his tiny fingers grasping at her like she would disappear if he let go.
Y/N swallowed hard, her hand still resting on his head. This wasn’t her child. Not really. But in this world, in his eyes, she was his mother. And that Viltrumite had tossed him aside like nothing.
Her body trembled, rage still bubbling under the surface. She had killed the bastard who dared lay a hand on him, but it wasn’t enough.
The war wasn’t over. She lifted her gaze. The battlefield was still chaos—blood, bodies, screams. Mark and Viltrumite Mark were locked in brutal combat, fists colliding so hard the shockwaves cracked the very sky.
And the Viltrumites were regrouping. They weren’t afraid. Even after she had slaughtered them, they still thought they could win.
She gently pried the boy away, cupping his face as she met his tearful eyes. “Listen to me,” she said firmly. “I need you to stay back.”
His lower lip trembled. “But—”
“Stay back.” Her voice was soft but unyielding. “I won’t let them hurt you again.” She stood, her fingers twitching as magic surged through her veins. The Viltrumites were coming. She exhaled, crimson mist curling around her body. She would make them fear her. they would understand. With a flick of her wrist, the battlefield turned red.
The battle had become a blur—an unstoppable force of chaos. The remaining Viltrumites crumbled in her wake, their lives snuffed out in an instant as her magic twisted their minds, shattered their bodies, or simply erased them from existence.
Y/N stood at the center of the devastation, chest heaving, her hands still crackling with raw energy. The air around her was thick with the scent of ozone and blood, her eyes glowing like twin orbs of red fire.
She had slaughtered them all. Every single one of them.
The boy was safe for now, cowering behind debris, too young to truly understand what was happening but old enough to see the terror in his world.
It was time to end this.
She flew toward the battle between Mark and Viltrumite Mark, her fists crackling with power. The sound of their blows—each one stronger than the last—rippled through the air, the earth itself trembling with each strike.
As she neared, she saw Main Mark struggling under the weight of Viltrumite Mark’s strength. His bloodied face glared up at the invincible version of himself.
She wasn’t going to let this go on.
Her hands flared, blasting a surge of energy that slammed into Viltrumite Mark, sending him flying backward.
He landed with a heavy thud, skidding across the ground. Main Mark groaned as he pushed himself up, shaking off the impact.
Y/N hovered above them, staring down at Viltrumite Mark as he slowly rose to his feet. She felt the familiar pull of rage—he had hurt her, and he had hurt the boy. He had dared to challenge her.
Yet when she met his eyes, there was no hate. No defiance.
Just… hesitation.
He didn’t move immediately.
Her lips curled into a sneer. “You’re not going to keep me from him.”
But Viltrumite Mark didn’t attack. Instead, he stood still, fists clenched at his sides, his breath ragged.
“You don’t understand,” he said, voice strained. “I won’t hurt you again.”
Y/N blinked, confusion flickering through her. She had blasted him into the ground with everything she had—and he wasn’t fighting back?
“What are you talking about?” she demanded, her voice low. He shook his head, a tired look crossing his face. “I’ve hurt you enough.”
Her brows furrowed. Enough? What did he mean? The same man who had kidnapped her in this twisted version of reality. He had stolen her life, stolen her future.
Yet here he stood—refusing to fight. She clenched her fists, the red magic swirling around her fingertips. “You think I’ll just let you walk away?”
He met her gaze, his eyes softening in a way that she didn’t expect. “I never wanted any of this.” His voice was rough, as though admitting it physically hurt him. “I never meant to hurt you. I—” His words faltered, and for a brief moment, Y/N saw the faintest flicker of the Mark she once knew—the man who had cared for her, who had once called her his equal.
But the woman before him was no longer that same person. Y/N didn’t know what to make of it. She wasn’t sure if she even wanted to.
“I don’t care about your excuses,” she spat, her voice thick with bitterness.
With a wave of her hand, she conjured a blast of energy, hurling it directly toward him. But Viltrumite Mark didn’t move. He didn’t try to dodge or block it. He just… stood there.
The blast hit him square in the chest, sending him flying backward once again. His body crashed into the ground, but he didn’t get up right away. M Y/N hovered in place, watching as he slowly pushed himself to his feet once more, his gaze never leaving her.
“I can’t fight you,” he muttered, his voice a mixture of exhaustion and regret. “I won’t. I can’t hurt you anymore.”
For the first time, Y/N faltered. She had been ready to destroy him. Ready to take everything from him that he had taken from her. But now… She was torn.
“Why?” she demanded, her voice trembling. “Why would you—”
But Viltrumite Mark didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. Y/N felt the pull of the magic inside her, the deep well of power that had been growing stronger within her ever since she had arrived. She could end him, right here, right now.
But for some reason, she couldn’t bring herself to do it. Instead, she turned her gaze to Main Mark. He was bruised, battered, but alive. And that was enough. The battle was over.
Y/N felt a tightness in her chest as she heard the voices of her children—her children, even if they weren’t truly hers. The words they called after her cut deep, more than she wanted to admit.
“Mom! Please!”
“Don’t leave us!”
Their voices trembled with fear, with desperation, and it was a sound that felt too familiar. She turned slightly, her eyes stinging as she saw them standing there, her daughter gripping the remains of a broken pillar for support, and her son—still limping from his injuries, face streaked with tears.
They were hers. Or at least, they were meant to be. They were her children. But she wasn’t their mother. Her hands trembled as she turned back toward Main Mark, still standing there, his eyes locked on her. She knew what she had to do. She wasn’t the woman they needed. She wasn’t the woman they thought she was.
She felt the burn of magic in her veins, the very air around her pulsing with the strength she’d reclaimed. But none of it mattered in that moment. Their faces haunted her as her feet began to move. Slowly, reluctantly, her heart thundering in her chest.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered, not even sure if they heard her. Her voice cracked with the weight of her words. “But your mother is gone. I’m not her.” Her daughter’s eyes widened, disbelief written across her young face. “No… no, you are…”
But the truth settled like a cold stone in Y/N’s chest. She couldn’t stay. She couldn’t pretend to be what they wanted her to be. She wasn’t their mother. Not anymore. With a final glance, she turned her back to them, her heart breaking with each step she took. Her power surged, lifting her into the air, the wind whipping around her as she flew away from them. Away from everything that reminded her of the life she couldn’t have.
The last thing she heard before she disappeared into the distance was her son’s desperate cry: “Please don’t leave us! Mom!” It tore through her, but there was nothing she could do.
Her hands clenched into fists as she vanished from their sight. There was nothing left to say. Her mother—their mother—was gone. And she wasn’t going to be able to fill that hole. She just had to keep moving.
The wind howled around her as she soared through the air, her body carrying her farther and farther from the wreckage of the battlefield, from the world she had once hoped to be a part of.
She couldn’t think. Couldn’t process what had just happened. Every step, every word that had come from those children—her children—felt like a weight pressing on her chest, suffocating her.
She hadn’t expected to feel this torn. She had fought so hard to survive, to reclaim her powers, to get out of that twisted world, but now… now she was leaving behind pieces of herself.
Her daughter’s tear-streaked face flashed in her mind, her son’s voice echoing in her ears. They were hers in every sense of the word, and yet… she wasn’t their mother. Not in the way they needed her to be. Not anymore.
She slowed her flight, hovering in midair for a moment as the world below her blurred. The landscape was alien, desolate. Every thought of them made her chest tighten again. She couldn’t stay. She couldn’t be what they needed her to be. But she had just left a part of her behind, and the emptiness gnawed at her.
The air around her shimmered, her magic pulsating with an intensity that matched her grief. She clenched her fists, as if hoping to hold onto some semblance of control. But the truth wouldn’t let go.
She wasn’t their mother.
Not anymore.
“Why does it hurt so much?” she whispered to the empty sky, her voice barely audible even to herself.
Somewhere below, a flash of movement caught her eye. She blinked, trying to focus, and saw a small figure standing alone in the distance, looking up at her. Her heart lurched. It was her son.
He was still limping, dragging himself through the dirt, his face streaked with blood and tears. But he was moving toward her.
The sight of him made everything inside her crack wide open. She wanted to go to him, to hold him, to take away the pain she had caused. But she couldn’t. She couldn’t let herself. His tiny hand reached out as if he could touch her, as if he could stop her from flying away. His voice was faint but carried through the wind, desperate and heart-wrenching.
“Mom… please!”
For a split second, she hesitated. She wanted nothing more than to fall to the ground and hold him, to tell him everything would be okay, that she was still his mother. But she knew she wasn’t. Not in the way he needed her to be. She wiped the tear that had escaped down her cheek, her lips trembling.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered again, though he couldn’t hear her. Her voice cracked, the words barely reaching her own ears. “I can’t… I can’t be who you want me to be.”
She turned away, forcing herself to look forward and not back. The sting in her chest was unbearable, but she refused to let it consume her.
She had to leave. For them. For herself. And as much as it broke her heart, she knew it was the only way. With one last tearful glance at the boy she had once hoped to be a mother to, she shot off into the sky, her heart torn between two worlds—between the world she had once dreamed of, and the world she was leaving behind.
The familiar hum of magic surged through her as she and Mark stood side by side. The portal shimmered in front of them, its swirling colors a blur of light and shadow, like the very fabric of reality was being torn apart just for them. The air was heavy with the tension of what was to come.
Y/N’s heart was a tangled mess of emotions, still raw from the way she had left the children—her children—behind. Their cries echoed in her mind, each one a reminder of the life she could never have. She had made the decision, but the weight of it was crushing her. And now, she had Mark with her.
But it didn’t feel like a victory. It felt like a quiet, hollow escape.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered to herself, barely audible, as she stood next to Mark, her fingers brushing against his. She wanted to reach out to the world she had just left behind, wanted to feel like she was still connected to it in some way. But she wasn’t.
“Are you ready?” Mark asked, his voice low, filled with that gentle concern that had always been a part of him.
She hesitated. It felt wrong to be so close to him when everything inside her felt so out of place. But she nodded, her lips pressing together in a thin line. There was nothing left for her in that world. She had done what she had to do, as difficult as it had been.
“I’m ready,” she replied softly, though she wasn’t entirely sure she meant it.
Mark gave her a small, understanding smile and turned to face the swirling portal. He reached for her hand, squeezing it as the vortex began to pull them in. The force was gentle at first, but it intensified as they stepped toward it, the swirling lights wrapping around them, pulling them deeper into the unknown.
Before she could say another word, they were pulled inside.
The world around them twisted, the colors bending and folding like ribbons, the feeling of weightlessness enveloping her. Mark’s presence beside her was the only anchor, the only thing keeping her grounded as the portal carried them through.
And then—
With a sudden rush of energy, the portal snapped shut behind them with a deafening silence. The hum of magic faded. The swirling colors dissipated.
They were alone.
Y/N staggered slightly, disoriented from the journey, her breath shallow as she took in her new surroundings. The air here felt different. The landscape was different. They had crossed worlds, leaving behind the wreckage of the life she could never go back to.
She could feel the weight of the change, the finality of it. There was no turning back now.
Mark was still by her side, his hand gripping hers tightly, but his expression was unreadable. It was as if even he knew how heavy the silence between them had become.
“I—” Y/N started, her voice thick with the unspoken words she didn’t know how to say. “I don’t know if I made the right choice, Mark.”
Mark didn’t immediately respond. Instead, he lifted her hand to his lips and pressed a soft kiss to her fingers. His gaze met hers, calm and steady, the only reassurance he could give.
“It’s not about right or wrong,” he said quietly. “It’s about surviving. And moving forward. You’re here now. That’s what matters.”
She swallowed hard, trying to push away the doubts creeping in. Her children, her world—it all felt like a distant memory, a life she had abandoned.
But she was here now. With him. In a world that was her second chance.
And as much as it hurt, as much as she longed for something she couldn’t have, there was no going back.
Mark was right. It was time to move forward. With a deep breath, Y/N stepped away from him, looking out at the new world she had entered. The weight of her decision pressed down on her, but there was also a strange sense of freedom. She was no longer shackled by the past.
A week had passed since they arrived in her universe. The unfamiliar surroundings were starting to feel more like home, but the weight of what she’d left behind still lingered. Despite Mark’s reassurance, despite the peace this universe offered, Y/N couldn’t shake the gnawing emptiness in her chest.
She had tried to settle in—learn the ways of this world, focus on the present—but her mind kept drifting back to her children. To them. To what she had left behind.
Her fingers brushed over the spine of the spellbook she’d recovered upon entering this universe, the ancient leather creaking slightly as she pulled it closer. The book had been one of the first things she’d taken with her, even when she was torn between running and staying. It felt like a tether to the past, to her true power, to the part of her that hadn’t fully let go yet.
She hadn’t used it much since her arrival, but today… today she felt compelled.
Her hands trembled as she flipped through the pages, the familiar glyphs and runes guiding her along, beckoning her to look deeper into the magic of the book. She had once used it to look into other realms, to peer into the lives of those she had left behind, but never had she been so reluctant.
But today, she had to know.
The children… Her children.
With a shaky breath, Y/N placed her hand on the page where a ritual to scry into another universe was laid out. The words were simple, but the magic was always complicated. She could feel the power building inside her as she whispered the incantation aloud, her voice barely above a murmur, her mind racing.
The room around her shifted, the shadows lengthening as the magic took hold, and suddenly—the portal opened.
She felt the pull immediately, her mind drawn into the swirling vortex of energy. She had done this many times before, but now, it felt different. She wasn’t looking into someone else’s life—she was looking into her own. Into the lives of children she had abandoned.
The vision was hazy at first. Then it cleared, revealing the harsh landscape of the Viltrumite universe. She saw her children—her children—again, standing in the wreckage of their world, though it was clear they weren’t in the same place they had been before. They were older now, stronger. Her son was no longer injured but standing tall, and her daughter had a hardened expression, eyes steely and calculating.
But there was something else… something she hadn’t expected.
Viltrumite Mark was with them. But not as a father, not as a protector. No, he was simply there. Watching them, his cold eyes unwavering. He didn’t comfort them. He didn’t offer them warmth. He only trained them. Pushed them. Molded them into soldiers.
Her heart twisted at the sight. The warmth she’d seen in their faces when they had called her “mom” was gone, replaced with a look of stoic resignation. They weren’t children anymore. They were soldiers.
And in that moment, it hit her—she had done this to them.
She wanted to turn away, to close her eyes and forget the image, but she couldn’t. She needed to see it. She needed to understand.
Her son, the one who had reached out to her, stood tall at the front of the group. His stance was rigid, military-like. And her daughter—her fierce, stubborn daughter—stood beside him, her gaze cold and distant, unlike the warmth Y/N had once seen in her.
They were no longer the children she had cradled in her arms, and yet she couldn’t help but feel that same protective instinct rise within her.
But as her vision began to clear, she saw something that made her stomach churn. Her son, standing tall as he trained with the others, glanced upward. And his gaze met hers—through the scrying, through the magic. His eyes widened in recognition, a spark of something she couldn’t quite place.
“Mom?” he whispered, but the word was lost in the chaos of the training. No one else noticed the brief moment of connection. No one except her. Her breath caught in her throat. She had thought she was gone from their lives, that they had moved on, but he still remembered her. The connection felt… real.
But before she could process it, before she could reach out through the magic and offer any comfort, the vision shifted again. She saw Viltrumite Mark step forward, his presence looming over them all. His voice was cold, commanding, and without mercy.
“Focus. You are warriors. There is no room for weakness. Remember your place,” he ordered, his voice a low growl. The children snapped to attention, the life in their eyes dimming as they fell into the role he had carved for them. Her heart sank. They were lost. All of them, lost in this brutal, unforgiving world.
Y/N’s hand tightened around the spellbook, the vision beginning to fade as the magic’s grip loosened. She couldn’t watch anymore. It was too much. As the vision finally dissipated and the magic around her ebbed away, she was left with only the faint echo of her son’s voice, still calling out to her.
“Mom…”
She blinked rapidly, trying to focus, trying to rid herself of the pain that had taken root. B Mark entered the room then, looking over at her with concern. He saw the tear tracks on her face before she wiped them away. He didn’t ask, didn’t need to. He simply walked over to her and put his hand on her shoulder.
“Are you okay?” he asked softly, his voice gentle. Y/N swallowed hard, the weight of what she had just witnessed settling deep in her bones.
“No,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “They’re not the same anymore. I’ve ruined them.” Mark didn’t say anything at first, just pulled her into an embrace. He didn’t have the words to make this better, but he didn’t need to. He was there for her, and that was all he could offer.
She leaned into him, letting the tears fall freely now. She had done what she thought was right, but all it had led to was more pain. More regret. And as she felt Mark’s warmth surrounding her, she realized just how much she wished things could have been different. But it was too late for that.
As the days passed, the weight of the vision from the spellbook lingered in Y/N’s mind like a shadow. She couldn’t shake the feeling that no matter how much she wanted to reach out to her children, she would only bring them more pain. The life she had left behind was gone, and the consequences of her choices were already written in the cold, hard reality she had seen.
Every time she closed her eyes, she saw her son’s face, his desperate call for her. She felt the tug in her chest, the pull of the bond that only a mother could feel for her child. But deep down, she knew that seeing them again would only drag her back into the chaos and confusion she had fought so hard to escape. They were no longer the children she once held, no longer the innocent souls she could protect. They were soldiers—trained by Viltrumite Mark to carry out his orders without mercy.
And what could she do now? They had their father. They had their life with him, a life of cold discipline and ruthless survival. They didn’t need her.
The realization hit her hard, the kind of truth that felt like a weight lifting off her chest, yet also crushing her at the same time.
She couldn’t go back. Not to that world. Not to the wreckage of what she had created.
Sitting in the quiet of their new home, Y/N found herself staring out the window, her thoughts scattered in a thousand directions. Mark was in the other room, busy with something, but she could feel his presence, always close by. Always there, steady and calm, offering the stability she hadn’t had in so long.
She couldn’t go back, but she could move forward.
Mark had been patient with her—understanding, supportive. He’d never asked her to forget her past, but he had been there when she needed him most. He had been a constant, a rock that grounded her in this new world. The decision was hers to make, and as much as it pained her to admit it, she knew what she had to do.
Turning away from the window, Y/N stood up and walked toward the living room, where Mark was sitting with a book in his hand, his brow furrowed in concentration. His eyes met hers, and for a moment, they simply stared at each other, unspoken words hanging in the air between them.
She walked over and sat beside him, her fingers finding his hand instinctively.
“I’ve made up my mind,” she said, her voice quiet but firm.
Mark set the book down, his attention now entirely on her. He didn’t say anything, just waited, sensing the gravity of what she was about to say.
“I can’t keep looking back,” she continued, her voice shaking slightly. “I can’t keep holding onto a past that’s gone. They’re not mine anymore, Mark. I… I ruined them. I ruined everything. And I don’t want to drag you into that mess.”
Mark’s expression softened, but there was a resolve in his eyes, an understanding that mirrored her own.
“You’re not dragging me into anything,” he said gently. “You’ve been through so much already. And I’m not asking you to forget. But whatever you decide, I’m here. I’m with you.”
Y/N felt her heart twist at his words. She had feared that he might ask her to choose, to decide between him and the children she had left behind. But he didn’t. He was offering her the one thing she needed the most—acceptance. He was giving her the freedom to make her own choice without judgment.
“I don’t want to keep hurting myself over this,” she whispered. “I don’t want to keep looking back and wondering what could have been. I have you now. I have a chance to build something new, something… better. And I can’t keep holding on to what’s already lost.”
Mark nodded slowly, reaching out to cup her face gently. “You’re not alone. Whatever you need, whatever you choose, I’ll be by your side.”
Y/N closed her eyes, feeling the weight of his words, feeling the strength of his love. It was more than she had ever known. More than she ever thought she deserved.
She opened her eyes, looking into his, and a small, bittersweet smile tugged at her lips. “I’ve decided to move on, Mark. I want to live my life with you. I want to stop looking back at the past.”
Mark’s smile was soft, understanding. “Then we’ll move forward. Together.”
With that, Y/N knew she had made the right choice. It would never be easy, but she was ready. Ready to let go of the ghosts of the past and focus on what she had now. On the future that could be.
And as they sat there, side by side, Y/N felt a sense of peace settle in her chest. It wouldn’t be easy. It would take time. But with Mark by her side, she felt like maybe, just maybe, she could find a way to build something new. Something that wasn’t tied to the mistakes of the past.
#x reader#reader insert#x female reader#scarlet witch reader#viltrum mark x reader#viltrum mark#viltrumite mark#viltrumite#mark grayson x y/n#mark grayson x you#mark grayson x reader#angst#mark grayson#invincible variants x reader#invincible variants#invincible x fem!reader#invincible x y/n#invincible x you#invincible x reader#invincible
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Batfam and Danny, Part 29
Jason: Hey Danny.
Danny: Hey.
Jason: You know my friend Roy. He's Arsenal, we've gone on a few mission together.
Danny: Yes?
Jason: So recently... well since before you and I even met, him and I have been close. And recently talked and decided to- ah-
Danny: You and your friend with benefits have decided to formally become boyfriends.
Jason (blushing): Yes.
Danny: Congrats.
Jason: Thank you. But I wanted to ask you something.
Danny: What?
Jason: Roy and I talked, and we would like to move in together. Yes it might a bit of a leap given we just started dating, but on the other hand we have been going on dates, been acting like a couple, and been... enjoying each other's company for the last eight months, so we've basically been a couple for that long.
Danny (laughing): "Enjoying each other's company?" Tell me, how have you and Roy been "enjoying each other's company."
Jason (blushing): None of your concern. Anyways, the two of us would be living with Roy and his two-year-old daughter, Lian. Thing is neither of our apartments are big enough for the four of us, so we are thinking about buying a house in the suburbs. But I wanted to ask you first.
Danny: Sure, I won't mind having another little sister. What about Lian's mom? She in the picture?
Jason: Lian's mom, Jade, works for the League of Assassins, she comes by once in a while. Strangely enough Lian and Damian came about in similar ways.
Danny: Seriously? What's up with vigilantes having drunken one night stands with League of Assassin members?
Jason: I'm not sure... Wait we're getting of topic. Are you sure? Again you'll be living with my new partner, and a two-year-old. Don't just say yes for my sake.
Danny: Yes I'm sure, it'll be fun. And I don't think you can call the guy you've been going on dates with, been acting like a couple with, and whose "company" you've been enjoying for the last eight months, your "new" partner.
Jason (smiling): Shut up, I meant in the sense we only just became boyfriends. I'll talk with Roy, and we'll start looking at houses.
Danny: So... when is your boyfriend going to become my new dad?
Jason (flustered): D- Danny!
Danny: Just wondering... One other question.
Jason: What?
Danny: If you and Roy decide to have kids together through adoption, cloning, magic, or whatever, what will their last name be?
Jason (laughing): Roy and I have talked about that, and agreed that if we ever have a kid together their last name will be Todd-Harper-Queen-Wayne.
Danny: Hmm, I don't Bruce will be happy that Wayne comes after Queen.
Jason: If your grandfather wants to be a baby about that, then that's his choice. Now stop asking questions and finish your homework.
Danny (saluting): Yes sir!
[A few weeks later]
Roy: And that's the last of the boxes.
Jason: Now we just need to get everything into place.
Roy: This place is beautiful, I still can't believe we managed to get it so fast.
Jason: Money makes the world go 'round.
Roy: Ah yes, my boyfriend and is deep pockets.
They kiss.
Danny and Lian: Ew.
Jason: Shut up.
Roy (laughing): Leave them be.
Jason (smiled and shook his head): Danny mind emptying some of the boxes in the kitchen?
Danny: Sure.
Lian: Can I help?
Roy: Sorry sweety, why don't you go play with your toys instead?
Lian: No!
Danny (kneeling down next to Lian): Do you mind if I borrow Teddy for a minute? Lian looked up at Danny and handed him her teddy bear. Danny casted a spell and it and the teddy bear started moving.
Lian (gasp): Teddy's moving!
Danny: Why don't you keep him company.
Lian: Ok!
Roy (to Jason): I like your kid.
Jason (to Roy): Yeah Danny's amazing. I like your kid.
Roy (to Jason): Yeah Lian's great.
Jason: Why don't we go unpack Lian's things? Danny can handle his own things later.
Roy: Ok, let's go.
(Master Post)
Character ages:
Roy - 22 (A few years back he took Oliver's last name so his full name is Roy Harper-Queen)
Lian - 2 (full name Lian Harper-Queen Nguyen)
Jade - 23
#dp x dc crossover#dc x dp crossover#dc x dp#dp x dc#jason todd#red hood#roy harper#red arrow#arsenal#danny fenton#danny phantom#lian harper#jason x roy#red hood x arsenal
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the client didn’t even wanna sing baby shark 😭 he wanted skinamarink and I don’t even know how to spell that 💔
literally watching baby shark videos to prep for fieldwork
#I only know the first line dang#I also offered twinkle twinkle little star and patty cake but they were also rejected#my musical stylings were a flop!!#but he loved my magic unicorn that would leap up into the air and fly#so I’ll take that win#my favorite client at this site for real#can’t believe I’m considering pediatrics after 2+ years saying I’d never do it
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