#Tell No Lies
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Tell No Lies
[Part One of the third Synovus installment.]
Living on a tropical island didnât mean the weather was always sunny.
Your island wasnât in quite the right spot to really get the worst of the monsoon season - too far on the eastern side of the Pacific - but you did still get plenty of rainstorms. When that happened, your group of minions battened down the hatches, triple checked the generators, and usually played cards or other bored games. Sorry, board games.
Sometimes you played, sometimes you didnât. You werenât playing this time, because you were catching up on some reading. Sans costume, slumped sideways in a chair, one hand on the cup of hot chocolate you had requested and immediately forgotten about.
Then your phone had dinged.
That was weird, because during storms you didnât usually have service - technology hadnât yet beaten Mother Nature entirely. But there were the underwater cables that had been set up to provide internet access, and emergency calls.
And that was more than enough for an entity like Optix to get through when it wanted to. Even when your phone was set to silent.
With a small sigh, you had set the book aside and reached for the screen. An email from Optix: the subject line, in all caps, âINVITATION.â
Intriguing.
You opened it, scrolling past the gold-adorned letterhead to the digital party invitation. You read it. You deleted it. You reluctantly pulled it from the trash folder to read it again. You forced yourself to read it a third time.
âThank you for informing me.â You replied to Optix, before sliding the phone away. The book came to rest comfortably against your chest, pages down, probably doing all kinds of damage to the spine. You stared up at the ceiling, ignoring the present to alternate between stewing over the possibilities of the future and miring yourself in the past.
Eventually, your field of vision had been interrupted by a slow-moving face, drifting in from your peripheral. One eyebrow raised, only inches from your own face, it continued moving slowly and smoothly past where most people would have reached a limit.
âDude.â Alexandria said, âYou havenât even blinked in like. Two minutes.â
Your erstwhile âapprenticeâ was using her abilities to float over you. Wearing her suit, which had been modified recently to include panels of bright color against the near-black gray youâd initially designed, she looked sleek and surreal. And older than seventeen, though maybe you just couldnât judge ages past âyoungâ anymore.
âHello, Menace.â Youâd greeted her placidly. âHow goes the Great Pacific Vandalism Project?â
Alexandria beamed, and floated away an inch or so to a more comfortable speaking range. Sheâd finally gotten a better handle on equilibrium in flight, so her gestures as she talked no longer caused her to wobble in whatever direction she indicated. âIt went great! We finally managed to get that CEO.â Her grin widened, âRight in the middle of a press conference.â
âIt was satisfying.â A different voice had agreed, as another costumed figure moved into your general field of view. This one didnât lean over you, but rather settled into the chair opposite, and helped themself to your hot chocolate. Cold chocolate, by now.
A bit of concentration had changed that, as the thief raised the mug to consider it. Their dark blue form-fitting suit had changed in recent times as well, now featuring more delicate details around the neck and wrists. Not quite scales, not quite flourishes, not quite vines, picked out in a slightly darker shade. The short cape at the hips now had flared ends, rather than a pointed tip. It had an elegance that Menaceâs suit lacked.
Or perhaps that was the wearer?
âNaiad.â Youâd been certain that your tone hadnât changed. âWelcome back.â
Minerva had lifted the stolen mug in salute, and allowed you a trace of a smile. Crime agreed with her - even if she only rarely agreed with it. Once the straight-laced, impeccable hero Athena, she was now known much more widely as the Naiad: a bioterrorist with a strong cult following among ecology groups.
Over the past year, she had very publicly and very precisely targeted companies who were responsible for much of the pollution going into the Pacific Ocean. Working alone at first, then allowing Menace to join her, she had made trips to the great garbage patches that floated in the oceanâs wide expanse, and returned their contents very directly to sender.
Cars, homes, persons, factories and distribution centers (while they were closed and no one was present; employees were innocent until proven guilty) were all fair game. The only way to be sure of immunity from the Naiadâs attacks was to publicly document cleanup efforts, make donations to the groups who did the same, and implement vast reductions in pollution.
It was good mother/daughter bonding time for the two of them. You knew your presence would only overshadow their efforts, so you simply offered aid and tips during the planning phases. And there was the standing unspoken fact that you would appear to bail them out, if it ever became necessary. So far, it had not been necessary.
Minerva had even admitted, grudgingly, that this new angle on life was, at times, fun.
And that, really, plus the trace of a smile, is what had given you a terrible idea.
â------------------------------
What was even more terrible was that Minerva had agreed.
She stood now at your shoulder, just a step behind, while your invitation was inspected by a man who had gotten very tense at your approach. His costume was patterned in pale yellows and purples, a strip of rainbow draped over his collarbones. You couldnât make out much expression behind the mask, but you didnât really need to when you could hear the material creaking as he prepared to square up.
âI am⊠confused.â He allowed, considering the printed invitation. âYou - do know this is a heroâs wedding, right?â
âIâm aware.â You answer flatly, the helmet giving you a wonderfully crisp punctuation. Youâve made only the slightest concessions to the eventâs formality in the form of a nicer, gilt-edged cape with decorative clasps, and white rose corsages at your wrists to indicate your intention of peace. âI donât begrudge you the confusion, Sun Dog. I will be grudging if you attempt to deny me entry.â
Sun Dog hesitated a moment more. You really didnât want to hurt the man, no one you knew of did - which was probably why he was the bouncer at this particular event. It was hard to hate the person whose sole job was disaster response and relief.
Just when you were resigning yourself to this going poorly at the gate, Naiad leaned forward over your shoulder. Her costume had been adapted to include a floor-length skirt in a blue ombre, slit to the thigh on the sides and revealing the usual suitâs leggings beneath, and her arms were bare to the shoulder except for jewelry in the places of her normal accents. Sheâd pinned her hair up with sea-shell and coral pins, with deep purple pearls for earrings. You stopped breathing, attempting to be as still as possible to prevent any of those decorations catching on part of your ensemble.
âParhelion. Weâll cause no trouble.â
The name clearly meant something to him. Sun Dogâs body language changed, shifting rapidly through a few shades of things you didnât know him well enough to identify. None of them were hostile, though, so you gave the man his moment to process.
âI⊠had my suspicions, butâŠâ Sun Dog shook his head, âSorry. Not the time or the place. Glad youâre alright - Naiad, is it?â At her confirming nod, he continued, âAnyway, the invitation is legitimate, Iâm just surprised you actually came. Uh. Guest book is ahead, gift table to the left. Good luck?â
You nodded regally and moved further into the venue, gaudily bedecked in white and taupe and glittering silver and gold. At the guest book, you confined your signature at first to the simple stylized S that was popular among bored schoolchildren. Naiad signed more gracefully, and pressed the pen back into your hand. You contemplated stealing it to make a point, but added the remaining letters to your name in a normal script instead.
Naiad was also the one to place your gift - a small black box with a silver ribbon - among the bright and shiny assortment of well-wishes, though that was more a matter of practicality. If youâd put it there, everyone wouldâve assumed it was a bomb.
And the entire time, you were surrounded by people in costume. Some had made little to no alteration to their standard getups. Others had clearly commissioned outfits specifically for this event. Those who were part of the wedding party were all in what felt to you like mockery of their usual garb; the same shapes and silhouettes, but in shades of champagne and adorned with glitter, their masks or helms altered to match each other.
You didnât stand out as much as you mightâve. There were heroes who dressed in dark colors and full-coverage helmets. It was the cape that really made your silhouette distinctive, which was why youâd shortened it from its usual wide floor-length to a slimmer, knee-length drape. And besides, who would invite Synovus to a wedding? Particularly this wedding?
Abruptly, you wished that changing your outfit hadnât felt like so much of a concession, a surrender. You wished that you couldâve hemmed and hawed between narrow or wide skirts, short or long sleeves, backless or high necked. Layers of chiffon, of deep blue with tiny flickering gems in blues and greens and purples, a clear blue sash at the waist, or perhaps a shawl around the shoulders -
But that kind of wishful thinking is what got you here in the first place. The moment passes. Your suit is familiar, fitting, and practical. The rosettes at your wrists feel like chains.
You hear the first whispers from one of the bright costumes around you. Is that Synovus?
You turn to Naiad, âWe should find our seats.â
â-------------------------------
You were, rather mercifully, seated to the back and one side, in a portion of the room not quite as well lit. The set up was rather traditional, with everyone split down rows, and the aisle in the center. You were on the brideâs side, and couldnât honestly have said what the name of the groom was.
A few of the heroes had taken to eyeing you. Before they could investigate or act on their suspicions blindly (you knew which one you thought was more likely), the music started.
And the lights went out.
Your hand found Naiadâs in the darkness, and you lifted it to your helmet so she could feel you shake your head. Not me. Your power was quiet, the shadows entirely natural. You remained still, watching the attendees shift and begin to whisper. Most of them must have been warned ahead of time - prudent, considering how many of these people youâd fought. How many of them had you given a fear of the dark?
When a light appeared, it was not natural, nor electric. Nor was it yours. A pale silver glow began at the foot of the aisle, illuminating from beneath one high heel. Then another. On the next step, the first light began to float, turning from a spot on the floor into a small orb of light. Others joined it, like so many small sparkling stars.
In this way the bride, the hero Dazzler, made her way down the aisle.
You had to admit, it was a stunning display. On occasion, one of the lights would twirl around her, granting tantalizing glimpses of her dress and playing off the crystals in her hair. The pale silver glow was soft and alluring, and in the darkness of the room, it made her seem as though she were a deity of creation; the steps she took forming reality in her wake.
At the altar, she paused, to hand off her bouquet. Then she turned to face the crowd, raised her hands, and called all of the globes of light to encircle her and the man in a suit who was presumably her groom. They formed the shape of a heart, then faded as the roomâs lights came back on.
Everyone oohed and awed appropriately. Naiad shifted, and you realized you still held her hand. Without conscious thought, your grip had tightened. Abruptly, you let go.
The two of you sat in silence as the ceremony began.
â----------------------------------
Once everyone had moved to the tables, you actually thought you might get through this without being officially recognized by anyone other than Sun Dog. That was both a relief, and mildly insulting.
Naiad had given you questioning glances since you had left the ceremony, but youâd yet to provide an answer. Youâd warned her before you arrived that you would speak as little as possible once inside the venue - your voice would certainly give you away. Naiad had said that was the consequence of being a monologuer. Youâd protested, vociferously, because it was true.
But as the guests were mingling, the open bar being besieged, the instant your shoulders started to relax, there was a high pitched shriek from somewhere behind you. Not a shriek of terror or anger or surprise. One of joy.
Of course.
The syllables of your name filled the air, broken into three and a half parts. There was a frantic rustle of cloth and the rapid clicking of heels. Then arms wrapped around your middle, and a heavily perfumed, glittery weight slammed into you.
You, very judiciously, did not move.
âIâm so glad you came!â Dazzler gushed, moving around in front of you. She let her arm trail as she did, so that she never lost contact with you. You felt like you were being circled by a shark. Up close, the makeup and glitzy hair-pieces felt like an attack. âYou never RSVP'd! Iâd almost given up hope!â
You still had not moved, even to turn your head. Dazzler pouted at you, and you tried to ignore that you knew she was just looking at herself in your helmetâs reflection. Around you, half the guests had abandoned their chairs or their place in line at the bar, half-starting, ready to leap into action. Every single pair of eyes in the place was fixed on the two of you.
And you knew that this was exactly why Dazzler had invited you. Youâd known when you received the invitation. You knew when you decided to attend. Because this kind of bullshit was exactly why youâd harassed her into moving to a different continent.
âMany felicitations, Diane.â You reply, as though she isnât doing her damnedest to make a scene. As though sheâd cornered you in a hallway, instead of the middle of the banquet hall. âI get invited to so few parties - I canât imagine why.â
Laughing, Dazzler moves to swat you on the arm, and transitions from that to looping her arm through yours. âOh, Syn. People just donât know you, thatâs all! Come on, say hello to everyone with me, itâll-â
You have no intention of being dragged off by Dazzler to become arm candy. But before you can find a way to elegantly maneuver out of the situation, Naiad is stepping between you.
âPerhaps things have changed since my wedding.â Without a filter, Naiadâs voice is not far off from Athenaâs. Sheâs taking a terrible risk to do this, that someone will identify her by her past persona and its questionable end. But Athena never took quite that tone of condescension. âBut greeting the guests is typically something one does with their groom.â
âOh.â Dazzler steps away, a tiny frown creasing her brow. Sheâs not used to having competition. Not used to being thwarted by anyone who isnât you. Still, she recovers quickly, laughing again and holding the back of one hand to her forehead. âOf course! With all the preparations and everything, I forgot thereâs so many steps! You must remember, right? All the decisions you have to make, and then thereâs so many people here -â
Again, Naiad cuts her off, âThen we wouldnât want to monopolize so much of the brideâs time. Happiness - and many years of it - to you both.â
She raises an arm to your back, and automatically, you reciprocate. It makes you a unified front, automatically reinforcing her words. You know everyone here will remember this. Naiad is now permanently associated with Synovus.
âBe well, Dazzler.â You add, so no one will think this is some kind of catfight you allowed to happen. Youâre not sure that thought was coherent, actually, but saying something seemed important at the time.
Together, you and Naiad turn away, moving to your assigned seats in a corner. The rest of the room is silent, except for the music no one thought to pause. Dazzlerâs bridesmaids - most of them heroes themselves - swarm her, whispering furiously.
Dazzler raises her voice to be heard by everyone when she responds, âOh, we used to date.â
âââââââââââ
âI dislike that I canât even call that woman a menace without besmirching my daughterâs name.â Naiad said, some time later.
The two of you had sat in silence while the room slowly restored itself to a cautious order. No one had forgotten you were there, but some seemed to accept that you were here peacefully. Given that you were not going to remove your helmet, and therefore could not actually consume anything, both you and Naiad had eaten before you came. This also spared the nervous waitstaff the task of servicing your - otherwise empty - table.
You let out a long, slow exhale, below what your helmet will verbalize. âCalling her anything will please her, in the end. Any attention is good attention, and if it lets her play the virtuous victim, all the better.â
Naiad glances back at you, gauging something. âShe fooled you?â
You wince, attempt to communicate something solely by facial expression, and fail utterly because youâre wearing a helmet. How to describe what youâd seen in Dazzler once?
âIâŠ. Wanted very badly to be someone worth effort. She caught me by surprise. It wasnât until much later I realized she actually believedâŠ.â You break off, grimacing.
Naiadâs head tilts in a way that suggests sheâs raising her brows at you. âBelieved you loved her?â
âNo - no, I knew she thought that. I wasnât - I was young.â
These had been the days before Rosie, before Doll. Before there had been anyone but you, still running from and hunting any of Sunhallowâs surviving lieutenants. Nineteen and alone and then suddenly there was someone telling you otherwise, someone with a power of light so like and so different from your fatherâs.
âShe felt.â You say finally, âThat we were⊠destined. Her light, to my darkness. That I was⊠tameable.â
It had taken some years of retrospection to put the pieces together, but you had. Dazzler had wanted a tame villain; proof she was worth loving enough that it erased your identity in the process. Justification for everything she was, because she was the âgoodâ half. The âpureâ one.
âOh for fuckâs sake.â Naiad mutters. She raises one hand, as though to pinch the bridge of her nose, but settles for bracing against the maskâs thick material.
âThat too. But as I said - we were young.â Your voice was dry, and a little bit weary. Dazzler exhausted you, even now.
âDoes she-?â Naiad cuts herself off, looking to re-affirm that Dazzler (and her groom) are on the other side of the room. Still, she lowers her voice, âDoes she⊠know, then?â
Your laugh is bitter, but it is a laugh, âNo. No, I got away before she learned all my secrets.â
You tap the table, curving your hand to make a small alcove where only you and Naiad can see your palm, and summon a small flicker of light. Then you let your hand fall flat again, extinguishing it.
âI am complete without her, by whatever metric you care to use.â
Naiad nods, accepting that explanation. There had been glasses of water on the table when you arrived, and sheâd pulled one closer to claim it. You can tell sheâs thinking by the way she traces its rim. You can tell sheâs upset in some way by the way the water in the glass rises to follow her movement.
âHowâd you explain the tattoo?â She asks mildly.
âShe never saw it. I think she believes I have scars I donât want anyone to see.â
A tattoo was a kind of scar, in a way, so it hadnât been a lie. And it had fit with the image of you Dazzler so wanted, for you to have been broken and abused. Ashamed.
Naiad narrows her eyes, âIf you were lovers, then-â
âDonât ask questions you donât want answers to, my dear.â
She leans back in her seat, taking the glass with her. She sips at the water and surveys the crowd. You pretend not to be surveying her. Dazzler was not a secret, per se, but the details of how youâd felt about it are not something youâve ever shared.
You need to stop giving Minerva your secrets. Particularly when she doesnât realize how many of them she holds.
The music is upbeat and space-filling. Loud enough that conversations are confined to their groups, but not loud enough you have to shout to be heard. Youâre pretty sure this song is on one of Menaceâs playlists - something by Chappell Roan.
âSynovus, why are we here?â Naiad asks finally. You willingly give up any attempt to identify the song to consider the question.
âBecause Iâve never been to a wedding. Well, no, thatâs not quite true. Iâve never been a guest at a wedding.â
Naiadâs gaze drifts to the middle distance, and she downs the remaining water like she wishes it was something stronger. You silently slide another glass over towards her - they set the tables for six apiece.
âWhose wedding were you in?â She asks, making conversation.
âMine. Technically.â Itâs a long story.
Minerva - no, Naiad, you need to think of her that way in the field - had been toying with the stem of the second glass. Now she stopped, becoming very still. At first, your attention pivots to your surroundings, searching for the threat.
Then Naiad says, flatly, âExplain.â
âIt wasnât - like this.â You wave a hand. âI - this was after Dazzler. There wasnât - Iâm not still married.â
âSynovus.â
âIt lasted a week, as weâd agreed at the start, the identities were fake, and we swore to never speak of it to each other again.â
It had been a last grasp at normalcy. You didnât have a social security number, you hadnât had a community in which to undergo rites of passage that werenât geared towards Sunhallow. Youâd never been to a public school or a prom or a fucking football game. But getting Vegas married and having a honeymoon, then immediately divorcing?
Well that you could do.
âWho did you even do this with?â Naiad asks, flabbergasted and possibly appalled.
âAh.â You wish you could sip water, to buy yourself time. âTallflawes.â
Naiadâs outraged, âWhat?â Is drowned out, however, by the sound of shattering glass, as a blurred figure drops through the roof.
âââââââââââ
Itâs a bad idea to crash a wedding. Lots of people, most of them easily rallied to at least half the attendeesâ defense. Itâs worse when more than half the guests have superpowers.
The good news was that no one had to worry about the falling glass - there were four or five different barriers flung up immediately.
The bad news was that it was absolute fucking chaos for five minutes. You hope no one attending had epilepsy.
You, of course, had no intention of intervening. This wasnât your doing, you were going to be blamed for it regardless, so you might as well enjoy the show. But then youâd recognized the invader as Prodigy. And he was alone.
And the only thing he was yelling, over and over, was your name.
So you stood, removing the white rosettes at your wrists as casually as someone adjusting cuff links. You called to the shadows youâd been keeping at bay. You dialed up the volume of your helmetâs speaker.
And as everyone in the room except Naiad - including Prodigy - found themselves wrapped in solid darkness, you bellowed into the room,
âBE SILENT.â
You also had a small loop of shadow kill the music, because you never did a thing by halves.
As the room suddenly quieted, Prodigy came to drift in the middle of the space. The hum of his hoverboard was the loudest thing in the room at the moment. He wasnât even struggling against your bonds.
And when he neither complained nor cracked a smile, only looking at you with wide wild eyes and tendrils standing on end, you felt your stomach drop. You knew even before he said, âTheyâre coming, Synovus! My homeworld - they sent a ship!â
ââââââââââââââ
[I did say this was the one where they went to space. Buckle up, everybody, itâs time to dance!
Which Chappell Roan song is playing? Whichever one you personally believe is funniest and/or most tragic. Tag it!
Links to Ao3.]
#synoverse#synovus#Tell No Lies#Personally I liked the idea of the song being Super Graphic Ultra Modern Girl#but I see potential in other options#Also#what are peopleâs thoughts on Dazzler?
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Galapa Ancestry - Tell No Lies by Arturo Gutierrez
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I think my taglist is outdated so I will just post this, hoping it reaches everyone who's interested. Ara and Thor are having an important conversation.
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so sometimes when i have big projects due i will basically lock myself in a room for like a whole day and put on murray gold's doctor who soundtrack and just work and work and work. so as a result i know the soundtrack pretty well, especially of heaven sent cause ive used that one quite a lot! and THIS year i did this same thing and decided to put on ones that i havent listened to as much of in the past, and one of those was the soundtrack to day and time of the doctor. and i couldnt write about it at the time because, well, i had deadlines, but one track in particular caught my eye:
2.47 billion.
first of all, 2.47 billion is mostly another version of the doctor's theme from RTD's (first) era in a low strings setting in the middle + some song for four at the end. BUT at about 30 seconds in it had a theme that i recognized:
the very end of tell no lies from the heaven sent soundtrack.
now, the tell no lies version has an additional part to it, but they're definitely the same basic tune... so why did murray gold bring 2.47 billion back here, for this episode? well, that's an easy one.
[ID: screenshot of the heaven sent transcript from chakoteya.net, from the very end of the "hell of a bird" speech.
DOCTOR [room 12]: Argh! You must think that's a hell of a long time, (More and more.) DOCTOR [tower]: Two billion years. DOCTOR [room 12]: Personally, I think that's a hell of a (Again.) [Room 12] (The Doctor charges the remaining layer of crystal at the end of the twenty foot tunnel.) DOCTOR: Aaargh! (The Azbantium finally gives way. Bright light floods in and the Veil explodes, cogwheels and shrouds falling to the floor.) DOCTOR: Personally, I think that's a hell of a bird. /end ID]
he uses the part of 2.47 billion that is its own individual thing in heaven sent because the doctor remains in the confession dial for... 2 billion years. murray gold you fucking genius.
#murray gold#doctor who#heaven sent#dr who#dw#INSANE THANK YOU#dw music#2.47 billion#tell no lies#ari opinion hour#not bonff
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#flopswords#you really think someone would do that just go on the internet and tell lies?#definitely not my best work but#This Is Fake For The Love Of Fuck#I Made This#Quit Panicking About Your Data Getting Sold
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TOM ELLIS Tell me Lies 2.05 "Evil, Ornery, Scandalous, and Evil"
#tom ellis#tomellisedit#tell me lies#tellmeliesedit#tvedit#actor#men#menedit#guys#đ#holesrus#userviet#gifs#mine#*
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The FNAF Vanessas meet their younger selves..
#myart#chloesimagination#comic#fnaf#five nights at freddy's#fnaf vanny#fnaf vanessa#vanessa shelly#vanessa afton#fnaf movie#security breach#fnaf fanart#MORE SCENE VANNY đ©”đ©”đ©”#also this is a semi sequel to the Mikes ver I made#seeing I think the Vanessas deserve the funny too đ€#I like to think Vanny would tell her younger self white lies#she knows at that age she just wanted to know life would get better for her#seeing teen her was stuck living with her awful father#Vanessaâs life does get hard again as an adult but.. SINCE HW2 I think sheâs in a better place#finally stood up to her abuser and all so it does get better#WHILE MOVIE VANESSA âŠ#bit more manic here BAHAH#listen if younger Vanessa loosen screws on her fathers suit#would anyone even know đđŸ#she could get away with it-#Movie Vanessa of course would want to prevent things anyway she can#the Afton kids always being a lil crazy is so real
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AND THE CROWD (me) GOES CRAZYYYYYYYYYY
Can you believe I had to wait 5 MONTHS to draw my baby Nezha????
Shadowpeach Bio Parent AU (PREV / FIRST / NEXT
Next part is coming November 24th, 1PM ET
#are you telling me that now I have to draw li jing 4 store house every time?#my art#kyri45#comic#lmk#lego monkie kid#lmk fanart#lego monkie kid fanart#lmk season 5#lmk shadowpeach#shadowpeach bio parents au#lmk mk#lmk qi xiaotian#monkey mk#monkey qi xiaotian#lmk art#nighttime coming#lmk nezha#lmk li jing
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Sheâs brown and a democrat, gotta get that birth certificate, that weâll call fake news anyway. Apparently, if you canât win in a fight, you gotta at least try to get your opponent disqualified.
Sad and weird.
#this is why we can't have nice things#lies and the lying liars who tell them#kamala harris#vote kamala#kamala 2024#vote harris#harris walz 2024#harris 2024#kamala for president#kamala is brat#Kamala is 100% American#vote for democracy#your vote matters#vote blue#Democrats care about Americans#why do republicans hate democracy?#republicans hate democracy#democrat#vote democrat#democracy#vote democrat to preserve democracy#democrats#Democrats for democracy#Democrats are the ultimate patriots#no more old white man presidents#no more trump#donald trump is weird#Donald trump is a bad choice for president#quora answers#quora.com
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The Winter King | Death An Other Details | Tell No Lies | Series & Mov...
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they just got to have a sleepover and nothing bad ever happened at all
#dndads#dungeons and daddies#dndads taylor swift#lincoln li wilson#normal oak#scary marlowe#hermie the unworthy#oakworthy#dndads spoilers#idk how they did it but they nailed the extremely codependent maybe a little toxic sort-of-polycule queer friend group dynamic#i am deeply unwell is it obvious#i just think hermie and norm would've fixed eachother. nvm that everyone's worst relationship ever happens around that age it's fine#also they said fuck that one 7 eleven in particular#they had to pick CAH because monopoly or uno would've ended with someone dying#thank you to the dndads discord for motivating me to finish the first one. it was bad#tell me why scary without all her makeup is making me emotional
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Everyone should read perfect communication and wolves tell no lies by Ryoko Kui
#Ryoko Kui#Perfect Communication#Wolves Tell no Lies#Manga#Wolves tell no lies is a bit weird about medication if you ask me but it's still a good read#Dungeon Meshi#dunmeshi
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Three new Grimwalkers. I wonder what I could possibly need so many designs for!
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Pet peeve of the moment: brands which treat 'Linen' like it's a style description instead of a fiber
No, your 65% cotton 35% spandex shirt is not linen, it will never be linen, and if fact the closest it will ever come to linen is hanging next to it in a closet. If it's not made from flax fiber, it's not linen.
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real footage of me watching spn s4 for the first time and patiently waiting for castiel to show up again because somehow, in all the years i've spent on the internet, no one has ever considered telling me that castiel isn't like a fucking main character in every fucking episode
#MISHA COLLINS COME BACK THE KIDS MISS YOU#no but seriously i feel like as an outsider it always seemed like he's almost as much of a main character as sam & dean??#now you're telling me is always like okay byeeeee see u in 3 episode!!''#i feel lied to#spn#supernatural#misha collins#castiel#baby's first spn watch
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Trump lies about the size of rallies and the size of his everything.
Hereâs to whoever was working the camera đ«Ą
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