#admin: sully
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
some neteyam crumbs for all of you to enjoy <3 i made all of them you’re welcome
#admin post#g talks!!!#neteyam sully#neteyam#neteyam sully gif#neteyam gif#avatar twow gif#avatar twow
679 notes
·
View notes
Text
Jake Sully the malewife™️
#jake sully#neytiri#jeytiri#avatar#funny#avatar movie#james cameron avatar#avatar memes#avatar the way of water#Jake is such a wife guy#Sam Worthington: neytiri is Jake’s world#if you saw the I heart my wife stuff on avatar struggles on twt#I’m an admin for that page I made it and didn’t steal it
29 notes
·
View notes
Text
THE WAY I STARTED BARKING!!?!
instagram
#logan sargeant#williams racing#sully speaks#logan sargeant x reader#WILLIAMS ADMIN IS FEEDING US#Instagram
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
What is your favorite song off of Pink Tape? Mine depends on my mood. But recently I had been listening to No More a lot.
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
Nadie Espera un Milagro (No One Expects a Miracle)
Fandom: Narcos / Javier Peña
Pairing: Javier Peña x f!reader
Reader: Sassy, confident, American ex-pat female who finds her parents a little tedious and enjoys both her independence and her job as a high-level admin at the DEA. No physical descriptions, no use of y/n.
Rating: T
Warnings: era-”appropriate” behavior of men towards women in the workplace (but a lot better than it was, Steve and Javi are actually pretty respectful). Overbearing and slightly infantilizing parents. Author doesn’t know anything about politics or law enforcement.
Summary: When your parents come to visit you at your job in Bogotá, you figure it’s just easier to paint a picture that will put them at ease. The idea is simple. The plan is flawed. The execution is just fluff.
A/N: Written for my Year of Tropes (part of @yearofcreation2023) Fake dating seemed like an easy trope for a busy month, which is why I chose it for February. (Whoops. Happy April!) With all of these tropes I like to challenge myself a little and I feel like the character choice alone for this one was challenge enough for me. Not only do I not know anything about politics and law enforcement, I haven’t written Javier much. And, of all the boys I do write, I feel like he’d be the least likely candidate to participate in and fall for fake dating, so I had to figure out how to make it believable for myself. Which is why there’s more plot than I intended and reader ended up with some backstory. This is season 2 Javi, obviously not canon, and maybe a bit too soft, so sue me for yearning. Yes, reader’s parents are cartoon versions of my own parents, why do you ask?
“Well hey there, sunshine,” a wisp of smoke accompanies Steve’s greeting as he leans back in his chair and crosses his long legs at the ankle to the side of his desk, leaning over momentarily to stub the cigarette out into a shared ashtray. “We don’t often get the pleasure of a visit–looks like you remember we exist.”
“Ha ha. I could say the same about you. Did you boys finally get your morals whipped into shape, or are you just over the thrill of making me break the law for you every other week?”
There’s a halt in the clack clack clack of Javier’s typewriter as he turns at the sound of your voice. Standing to reach across the desk, he scrubs out his own cigarette, makes a futile attempt to wave away the smoke, and watches you descend the stairs into their working arena. “Hey, Sully,” he smiles like a man not accustomed to it and rests his hands on the waistband of his ridiculously out-of-fashion jeans. “That’s a new dress.”
You flash him a grin and shake your head. “Stop. Don’t waste your flirting on me, Peña. You know I don’t need greasing.”
He only shifts his weight to one hip. There’s no response but a compliant tick of his jaw.
It’s second nature with Javier. He knows he’s good looking. Knows all he has to do is flash those puppy dogs and throw some attention, and ladies will give him anything he wants. You love it and hate it. Hate it because it’s insulting to be targeted for manipulation just because you’re a woman. But you love it because the man is Javier Peña and you’d be lying if you said those big brown eyes weren’t beautiful and you’re happy to have an excuse to have them pointed your way with warmth rather than the chill he reserves for the more bureaucratic workers. It’s a safe kind of crush, the kind you can play with as long as you never expect too much.
Javier’s been stopping by your office since before there was a Steve Murphy, buttering you up and asking for favors–access to a file here, a release stamp there–hell. You’ve expedited more requests on his behalf than all of the upper cabinet combined. And how many times have you distracted the clerk in tapes archives just so Javi could walk by and flash a request form without having it scrutinized for certification?
Every request starts the same, with his awkward little smile and an actual compliment. And every mission accomplished gains you a “Thanks, you’re a miracle worker.”
“Like Anne Sullivan?” you’d asked after the tenth or twentieth time.
“Huh?”
“Anne Sullivan. Hellen Keller’s teacher. The Miracle Worker.”
That caught him off guard. “Uh, yeah. Anne–?”
“Sullivan.”
“Right. I guess you’re an Anne Sullivan. I’d be lost in the dark without you.”
You’d allowed yourself to be charmed. “Careful there, Agent Peña, or you’re gonna make me rather fond of you.”
Nothing makes a grown man blush faster than to out-flirt the flirter. Not that it was hard with Javier. He was adorably miserable at it.
But it was always fun to watch him try…and to periodically beat him at his own game.
Once Steve landed in Colombia, you got two for the price of one. But Murphy knew you could see through his games and didn’t even try. It endeared you to him that he approached you sincerely. And you knew you could always do the same with him.
“As a matter of fact, it IS a new dress,” you chirp, twisting your shoulders one way and then the other, fluttering your lashes and fanning yourself with a hand in a mock display of coy preening. “My parents are flying in tonight and I’m taking them out to dinner.”
“I thought the trade conferences weren’t for a few days,” Steve frowns and shoots a concerned glance at his desk calendar.
“They’re not. But they’re coming through to spend some time with me and tour the city. Mixing business with pleasure. That’s…um…actually why I’m here. I need to cash in a favor.”
Javi chuckles as he settles back into his chair, throwing one heel and then the other onto the desktop. “Time to pay the piper. Name it.”
“Actually,” you cringe, turning to Steve, “I thought I’d ask Murphy here.”
Throwing a surprised but self-satisfied grin over at his partner, Steve puffs out his chest. “Well I guess I can be the hero for the day. Anything you need, sunshine.”
Thankfully Javi seems to feel the need to show he’s not offended and returns to his typewriter to peck out his report. Good. This is an embarrassing enough ask. You don’t really need witnesses to this.
“So, this is going to sound like a big deal but it’s really not. My relationship with my folks is just…complicated,” you assure him, priming the agent for the stupidest thing you’re ever going to ask for in your life. “It would make my and everyone’s life easier if I was seeing someone? Because then my mother wouldn’t bring it up and pressure me and irritate my father, and he wouldn’t worry about me here so much thinking I’m a woman all alone…it’s just…it’s…,” you sigh, irritated. “This is so dumb.”
Clackety clack clack ding whirr. You look up to see Steve gaping at you.
“Are you asking me to pose as your boyfriend?”
Silence. You’re sure if you turned to look over your shoulder, you’d see a frozen Javier, two fingers of each hand hanging above his typewriter like a little T-Rex.
Oh for a trapdoor or hand of god…. Suck it up. They owe you.
“Yup.”
“Uh….”
You expected this. “I’m not asking you to make a show or….they’re coming in tomorrow and I thought if you were here you could just meet them for a second. And if you’re not, I could just point to your desk–”
“Doll,” Steve releases a confused laugh, “I’m married, you know.”
“Yeah, but Connie’s not here. Like I said, they won’t delve. If I just point at a man, they’ll accept it and leave it alone.”
“So you’re going to lie to your parents.”
A confident nod is your first response. “Absolutely. And if you’d met them–when you meet them–you’ll understand why that’s best. Or you won’t. You really won’t get to talk to them long enough to find out. Just give a couple of handshakes, be nice and I’ll move them along. It’s that easy.”
Gritting his teeth, Steve gives a disbelieving shake of the head. “I dunno. I mean, the ruse won’t stand if they mention my name to anyone. Why me? Why not that new guy in the mail room who’s been watching you walk away?”
“Jimmy?” you scoff. “Yeah, no, not my type.”
“Really. Dark hair and pretty blue eyes and a six-pack he doesn’t mind showing off isn’t your type?”
“Wellllll, when you put it that way…sure he’s not your type?” Now it’s Javi’s turn to huff a silent laugh and you give him a conspiratorial smile before rounding back on Steve. “He’s dull, Murphy. My parents know me well enough that I’m not going to go for dull. So take that as a compliment. And he’s a bedpost-notcher. I don’t want to encourage that kind of behavior. I may be lacking in male companionship but I’m not that lonely. Yet.”
Your no-nonsense, shut-em-down tone quiets both of them and for a moment you think you’ve won. But his response makes it obvious you’re going to have to cash in all your chips.
“Still. There are enough single guys around here–”
“Because,” with one hand on the corner of his desk you lean in to conspire even though his partner is three feet away and can obviously hear you, “most of them are a bunch of lazy sit-abouts and you’re always out and busy. It not only paints a good picture, it’s the perfect excuse not to join us for dinner because my mother will do her best to insist. And,” you wheedle, lowering your voice further, “because you owe me.”
“I would counter that I owe you a lot more than he does.” Javi keeps his voice at a stage whisper in mockery of your own and shrugs as you and Steve swivel your gaze to him. “What.”
“Lying to the Assistant Trade Rep of the Western Hemisphere about intimate relations with his daughter sounds like a good time to you? You can have it.” Steve taps your shoulder before pointing at his partner. “He’s not hitched. Why not Javi?”
Rolling your eyes, you stall for time as you try to find a better answer than the truth, but when one doesn’t come, a sigh paves the way. “Because you dress more respectable than he does–”
“Hey.”
“--and my mother is judgy!,” your heartfelt insisting pushes through, doing your best to placate Javi–handsome Javi–who really does know how to keep the last decade’s fashion in fashion. “Javi, you’re lovely and you look good and I don’t want you to change. But my mother is going to take you for a ladies man, which you are, you know you are, and she’s going to pick apart your choices with wanton disapproval which is almost more unbearable for me than not being attached to anyone at all because then I’ll spend hours defending you for nothing–”
Steve and Javi finally break and their sudden laughter shuts you down. It’s all you can do not to give both of them the finger and a good ol’ fuck off.
“It’s okay, it’s okay,” Steve says through his trailing amusement, taking his turn now to placate. “Fine. We’ll make ourselves scarce and you can use the imprint of my ass in this chair as proof of warm-blooded human male. But maybe a false name, yeah? Like…Peter or…Harvey or something.”
“Harvey?” Javi scoffs. “How about Dick. Dick Bob Jones.”
“That sounds like a hillbilly name.”
“Yep.” ________
According to your mother, your apartment is “charming,” the streets of Bogotá are “interesting,” and the department headquarters are “surprisingly up to date.” In the car on the way to the office, you managed to dodge most of her questions about your personal life, dropping one-word answers before pointing out the window and explaining certain buildings or neighborhoods.
As promised, Agents Murphy and Peña are out in the field when you walk your parents past their desks on your way through to your own department. “Well,” you wave with half commitment at it and move on, “looks like he’s out doing his job and catching those bad guys. Too bad. Maybe next time.”
The crisis is momentarily averted, but while your father ducks into a nearby restroom, your mother can’t seem to let the matter pass.
“So what does he do then? He’s a cop?”
“I told you. He’s a DEA agent. He’s on the team trying to stop the drug trade from reaching the States. Have you heard of Pablo Escobar?”
She scoffs and looks past you. “Everybody has heard of Pablo Escobar, dear. That naughty man. Oh. Oh! Is that him?”
“Hmm? Escobar?” Following her gaze and turning to look back into the atrium, you’re gifted the sight of tight jeans stretching over a familiar backside and tanned arms yanking open drawers on Steve’s desk, obviously looking for something. “No, Mom, that’s just–”
But before you can correct her, she’s striding over in her Prada heels, ruffled blouse bouncing and pearls clicking, reaching forward into an eager handshake as she interrupts the very visibly hurried agent. “It’s so nice to meet you!” she chirps. “You must be Harvey!”
“Mother–!”
Javi stops digging, having found the warrant he was looking for, looking up in surprise at this forward, fussy, American woman, his lower lip hanging in a soft V, before taking her hand courteously and introducing himself, “Javi.”
“Oh, I knew I was right! The minute I saw you I knew you had to be her Harvey, you’re certainly her type.” Her hospitable countenance flickers only for a second as she takes in his tight shirt. “She says you’re quite the cop.”
“Mom, Javi’s a government agent and–” As you catch up to her, the momentary confusion on Javi’s face melts into understanding spiced with just a hint of amusement. “--and, as you can see, he’s in a hurry so–”
“It’s okay,” he beams, continuing to shake your mother’s hand. “I can take a minute to meet the woman who raised mi milagra.”
What.
Something in your brain hits the panic button and your mother chatters on to him as your backup generators whir into gear. He gives her his full attention, smiling as she babbles about how proud she and your father are of you and how nice it is that you’ve found someone to spend time with and…did he just say–
“We’ve got a lead on a collaborator and I was just ducking in to grab some paperwork,” he explains, waving the warrant in one hand. But his other hand– “What a lucky coincidence” –dips behind you– “that you happened to stop by,” –slides across your back– “because my girl here has told me so much about you,” –settles on your hip– “ma’am,” –and pulls you flush to his side.
It’s a smirk. A smirk that he has the brazen balls to grace you with then, and it’s hard to tell if he’s fucking with you or if he’s just really enjoying being your hero and sharing a joke that only the two of you know about.
And it’s equally hard to tell if you’re about to laugh or swear or….melt… he’s holding you so tightly and he smells like cigarettes and his surprisingly light cologne… his shirt is damp, your blouse is damp, it’s a humid day and you’re sticking together a bit and he wears such fitted clothes and one of his few buttons is strained enough to give you a peek at his smooth chest beneath…
“Well, if you have to go, Harvey, I don’t want to distract you from your work, but my husband is using the facilities and he’ll be sorry to have missed you. Will you be working all evening? Why don’t you come join us for dinner! You know how well my daughter cooks and she’s making her carbonara for us–”
“Mom–”
“Your carbonara?” Javi questions you before turning back to your mother and squeezing you tighter against himself, causing you to stumble closer. “I wouldn’t miss it.”
Her delight is evident. “Oh wonderful!”
“If you’ll excuse me though, my partner’s waiting. I’ll see you tonight, honeybunny.”
The world tingles a moment as a mustache and warm lips bush your temple and then you’re watching broad shoulders and slim hips swagger away from you and up the stairs.
Honey…bunny? Honeybun–
Fuck.
“Javi! Wait!” You hold up a hand as you pass your mother. “Stay here for a second, I have to…I forgot to tell him… uh…”
He stops at the top of the stairs, leaning in, anticipating your quiet brand of ire. “Your mom’s sweet.”
“I’m going to kill you.”
“What. Seems to be going well, I mean, apparently, I am your type, so it all works out. I think that performance down there earned me a dinner. I fucking love a good carbonarra.” The glare you serve him loses its bite under his soft smile lacking in any sarcasm or hazing. This is the Javi you know, the conspirator that finds you working late at night and is grateful for your help in the file room or in the microfiche lab, the one that noticed yesterday that your dress was new. Doing you a favor. What else would you expect? “If you want, I’ll wear baggier pants.”
“No, just…” you sigh. “I should give you my address–”
There’s a thing he does with his smile, something that gets you every time, a little jaw tick that comes with a quick downward bounce of the eyes and a single shake of the head. “Don’t need it. I know.”
“Okay, but…. Wait. What?” You call after him as he trots toward the door.
“I’ll come hungry!” _____
“Sir,” Javi bobs his head in reverence as he meets your father’s handshake. It’s above and beyond your requests, as is the cleanup of the five-o-clock shadow, the change to his black button up shirt, and his showing up on time. And in true commitment to the bit, he didn’t even knock, just came in and found his way to the dining area like he spends most of his time in your apartment.
“Good to meet you, Javi.”
“Dear,” your mother chirps from her watchful eye at your shoulder by the stove, “it’s Harvey.” She doubts herself. “It is Harvey, isn’t it?”
Completely disregarding your mother’s interjection, your dad gestures to a spot across from him at your modest dining table set for four and offers him a packet. “Sit down, sit down, agent. Smoke?”
“Ah,” Javi falters, and when you turn your head to your shoulder, you catch him checking in with you out of the corner of your eye. “She…doesn’t let me light up in here.”
“No? Heh. Well. I don’t know how she does it but it’s always been her way or no way. I see she’s worked her magic on you.”
“That’s for sure.”
You can’t help but smile as you give the noodles another good swirl in the pot and set the spoon on the counter. That little display just earned him a treat. Pulling out two glasses from the cabinet, you give a generous pour of the whiskey you picked up on the way home especially for him and bring them over to the table without a word for the two men.
“Thank you, sweetheart,” hums your father.
Javi glances at the glass, then up at you and your cocked eyebrow that queries him don’t I get a ‘thank you sweetheart’ from you too?
But oh, he came to play.
Ignoring the glass and taking your hand, his thumb skips across your knuckles. “You need any help, hon?”
There’s a microsecond between you where laughter is very very possible. The game is on. So you up the stakes by pushing a little curl of black hair behind his ear before trailing your fingers down to pinch his chin. “No, baby. You just relax and enjoy yourself.”
The smallest flush of pink and flash of panic that you catch on him as you turn away (only because you’re looking for it) tells you that you’ve won this round.
Back at the stove, your mother’s taken over, having drained the noodles and now attempting to pour the sauce into the noodle pot rather than your tried-and-true method of bringing the pasta to the sauce pan.
“Mom! Could you not–”
You see it coming a second too late, the sauce hasn’t thickened properly and a good portion of it misses the pot and splashes onto her blouse.
There’s commotion, a shriek and an overreaction, and you reach for a towel to catch the sauce before it stains, but the towel is dirty with spills and bacon grease and you’re both trying to keep the sauce pot from toppling off the stove. “Just…hold still, Mom, here…let me get a clean towel–”
“I’m on it,” Javi jumps up, heading down the hallway.
Great. Here’s another thing splitting your attention from timing the sauce. “Javi??” you call, “The towels are–”
“I know! The cabinet behind the door!”
How did he….doesn’t matter. The woman who raised you is in need of someone to mother her at the moment and you’re doing your best to calm her down before she causes even more of a mess. In a matter of moments, your stand-in man is back with a hand towel and you join her at the sink to help her dab it off.
“Oh, well this is just dandy,” she whines. “Now I have to sit here in a wet blouse in nice company…”
“It’s fine, Mom. You can wear one of mine.”
“The pink one or the blue? She can change in the bedroom,” Javi gestures, offering to show the way. “Ma’am?”
“Uh…the…blue….” This time you don’t have time to veil your shocked and confused expression. If Javi truly notices it as your mom swans by him, he doesn’t let on.
The rest of the evening is uneventful and pleasant, your father and Javi carrying most of the conversation as the older man drills the agent on the particulars of the cartels and Escobar’s influence with his communities, how it’s affecting customs and trade, and what that means for the conference your father is here to attend in his duty to the Trade Rep.
After a couple of hours, he makes it known that it’s time to get back to the hotel, that he has an early morning as his boss is flying in.
“Already? Dear! You boys spent all this time talking shop and I have all kinds of questions for Haaavi.”
“Well, my bride, you’re just going to have to wait to satisfy your curiosity. I’m sure it will keep.”
“Are you free for dinner tomorrow night?” Javi asks just as you take a sip of water and try your best not to choke on it. “If you’d like to try some of the local specialties, I know a place not far from here. Sancocho to die for, made fresh every day.”
The fire in your eyes is shielded, soft, but directed straight at the side of his face, hot enough that he can surely see it from his periphery if not feel the flames. The corner of his mustache rises the smallest fraction of an inch.
“That sounds a real treat, son,” your father says, rising and crushing Javi’s shoulder in a squeeze. “Tomorrow night then.”
Javi joins you at the front window when they leave so you can wave them off, having the balls to wrap his arm around your shoulder as you do. Once their car pulls away into the night though, he retracts it and ambles back to the table, gathering up a few stray plates and taking them to the sink. “Well, that went well.”
When you don’t answer, he turns to find you with a level expression and your arms folded across your chest. “What was that?”
He has the audacity to look surprised. “What?”
“We are going to address tomorrow night in a minute, but I’d love for you to explain to me why you know the location and the layout of my apartment, Agent Peña.”
Now he catches up, nodding slowly and returning to you at the window. With one hand on a hip and the other pointing to the nearest streetcorner, he explains, “Did you see that car that pulled out of there after your parents? Security. I sat in a car in that exact spot for three weeks after you were appointed to the agency. Couple days while you were at work,” he waves a hand, gesturing to the apartment as a whole, “I spent quite a few hours in here on a deep scan for taps.”
Now it’s your turn to carry the surprise. “Excuse me?”
“Standard procedure for government employees to be shadowed for a probationary period, eliminates the suspicion of inside involvement. You got a deluxe security detail treatment on top of it because…well. Your…family’s connection to Washington.”
He’s kind enough to wait for you to process this. “Wait. You mean,” peering outside at the location he indicated, noting the straight-line view into your living room, “you watched me? For three weeks???”
He turns back in search of his glass. “You dance when you’re happy. You could stand to be happy more often.” Giving you the time it takes for him to pour another finger of whiskey to stew over this, to grind through the gears of your mind and work out if you might have done anything embarrassing under the gaze of the DEA, he finally assures you, “Don’t sweat it. You’re usually a stickler for keeping your curtains closed. It was about as uneventful as a watch is possible to be.”
“So this is what they pay their agents to do? Babysit a government employee’s daughter? That seems below your pay grade.”
He downs the drink and shrugs. “I was lower on the pole back then.”
“Not that low.” But then…. The jaw tick presents itself again. His lack of eye contact confirms a sudden suspicion. “My…father paid for it.”
His nod hangs silent and sorry between you.
Independence. That’s why you took this job. Something you thought you could do on your own without your father’s help, run away from America, go live abroad and work somewhere new, somewhere exotic. How naive to think–for three years now–that you’ve done all this on your own.
The embarrassment burns.
Javi slowly runs a finger over a plate, raising a dollop of sauce to his tongue. “This is good. You’re a hell of a cook, Sully.”
It’s meant to lift your spirits, make you feel accomplished at something in your life. It’s appreciated.
“Thanks. It’s not that complicated.” Moving past him into the kitchen, you pick up your tongs from the counter and quietly start heaping half of the leftover meal into a bowl. “What’s this place you’re taking us to tomorrow? You’ve seen what a holy terror my mom is about food.”
He comes to lean against the refrigerator. “Dos Rosas Cocina.”
“I know it. Good choice. Atmosphere’s… rustic, but the food’s amazing.” Tying the bowl up in a clean towel and placing it in his hands, you sigh, all the stupid, terrible tension you didn’t know you were holding this evening seeping its way out. “I can’t believe you’re electing to spend more time on this little act.”
“You’re welcome.”
“I don’t remember thanking you, but thank you.”
“What’s this?”
“Leftovers. Lunch. Enjoy.”
“Thanks. I will.”
“You’d better.”
Later, after the dishes are done and the leftovers stowed, you curl up on the couch with the novel you’re battling your way through. But not a single page is turned. An hour goes by as you think through the interviews and steps you took to get this job, to land your working visa, to find this apartment in a nice part of town, how easy it had all seemed at the time, how accomplished you’d felt. And then there was that little look of realization and regret in Javi’s eye. That he knew. That he was the one that slipped and let you figure it out, that he never told you before. That nobody told you before. Had you come off as stupid in that moment? Innocent? Naive?
You need to confront your father about it. Probably not tomorrow, not in front of Javi. But soon.
Dammit.
You’re not getting any reading done so you turn off the light and head to bed.
Your pajamas are folded and the bed’s been meticulously remade.
Of course.
No wonder it took longer than it should have for your mother to change her blouse.
How is it you get to be a grown ass adult and your parents will never see you as anything but their little girl, even at this age?
________
“Soooooo, how’d you two meeeeet?”
Having arrived early at Dos Rosas Cocina, Javi already has a drink in him, so your mother’s question earns a contented smile. “Well–”
“At work, Mom. Obviously at work.”
It’s not a lie. It was at your desk. He needed something notarized and your new stamp hadn’t arrived yet so he wrote his direct extension on your desk pad, asked you to ring him when it did. You remember thinking that his eyes wandered too much but couldn’t be mad when you realized yours must have too if your first impression was that his pants were a good fit.
Later that night you’d come here, to the Cocina, charmed by its walls lined with picture frames full of the owner’s ancestors and descendants, how it seemed to be the center of time itself reaching backward in it’s colorful mountain-style decor and forward in its state of the art cashier’s computer and cd jukebox.
The owner had served your meal himself and sat down to chat with you, to practice his English, he said. It was a slow night and you had nowhere to be and he put you at ease right away.
“Dos Rosas,” he explained, “it means two roses. You see the sign? One red, one white. You know what it means?”
You shook your head and smiled, mouth full of some heavenly empanada.
“The red rose is for love. The white rose for friendship. Dos Rosas is a place my father made where he wanted guests to come with love and friendship.” And then he produced a single white rose, slipping it into the vase on the table. “For your luck. You are welcome here, friend. Someday you will bring someone who will share a red one with you, si?”
It had been a favorite place ever since.
Javier had been there that night too, now that you remember it. Sitting in the dim corner away from the basket lamps, nursing a beer and a plate of arepas, the curtain of his cigarette smoke nearly hiding him from view. Back then he was just the agent who needed some papers stamped and who just happened to be at the same restaurant that night.
Hindsight and new information reframes the nearly-forgotten memory now. Of course. He must have been tailing you then.
“I think,” Javi says as he drapes an arm across the back of your cane chair and leans in, “she understands where, milagra. But what she wants to know is that I couldn’t keep my eyes off you.”
Your response comes with a sweet smile that hides a challenge. “I know. You watched me for three weeks straight.”
“And then some.” He doesn’t let your jab throw him off the act. “And then there were the times I had to get into the file room for nothing in particular, just a reason to come down and talk to her.” On the contrary, he hooks a foot around the leg of your chair and yanks it closer to his own, effectively throwing you against his chest. “She used to laugh at my flirting; made fun of me, thought I wasn’t serious.”
The clench of your stomach, the cold wave of your blood pressure dropping, every method your body has to signal and react to danger begins to take over as Javi keeps you locked from pulling away with one arm, hazy smile inches from your face, his ��heavy-lidded gaze dropping to your mouth.
A warm hand folds gently over one of your own, floating it upward, his fingertips guiding your palm until he ducks his head half an inch to meet your knuckles to his lips. Big brown eyes beg at you and that cold wave rebounds now as a hot tsunami.
And all you can do is stare, stare at this display of tenderness that seems so very unlike the Javier Peña you know. Gone is the indifferent agent, the shielded ego, the preference for solitary. As his kiss lingers on your hand just a second longer than necessary, you get a glimpse behind the curtain to the man beyond. For one moment you witness a vulnerability and care, a fleeting tease of what it must be like to have his perfect attention, his devotion. It’s literally breathtaking.
And then something in him stalls, shifts, as if he notices the same in you.
Is he going to kiss you? Should you kiss him? Right here in front of your mother? Why is he so warm? What is that amazing cologne? Is his shirt unbuttoned further than usual? Is that a cymbal roll in the music coming from the jukebox or is that your blood rushing in your ears? Does he always breathe this forcibly? How have you never noticed that little crease in his bottom lip or realized just how dark his eyes were?
Just as his tongue flicks forth to wet his lips, your father returns from the phone booth in the back.
“Well, false alarm. Seems the ambassador just had some bad fish, but it’s passing. Conference is still on.”
Oblivious to your predicament and drawing your mother’s attention, he’s happy to answer her questions regarding the type of fish and how long it was prepared, and she offers her wisdom to nobody in particular as to preventing such a thing as food poisoning. Neither of them notice as you slowly twist yourself out of Javi’s loosening clutches and both of them obviously assume your hasty retreat has more to do with wanting to powder your nose than calm your racing heart.
The restroom is one small room, looking like a much older sibling to the restaurant itself as if it had been built first and the rest of the building added later. You count fifteen cracks in the wall over the solitary, rust-stained toilet before a knock falls on the door, momentarily spiking your softening anxiety. It’s an old man’s voice enquiring in Spanish if you’d fallen in.
You’re far from convinced that you’re ready to face or deny whatever’s going on in your heart. But you wash your hands–one of them still stubbornly holding the tingle of Javi’s lips and mustache against it–surrender the room, and find your way back to the table where the man who is not your boyfriend leans forward on his elbows, spinning stories for your parents.
“But we’re zeroing in on him now. He’s made more than a few mistakes and we’ve just barely caught them by turning around at the right second. It’s only a matter of time.”
A smile pulls wide over your father’s face as he leans back in his chair. “That’s what I like to hear. Damn, son. I admire your tenacity. We’re lucky we have talented young men like you down here catching the bad guys.”
“And we’re also lucky to have you here looking after our daughter,” your mother helps.
“Thanks, Mom, I can take care of myself. I mean, that is,” To one side, you feel Javi’s focus tilt your way, “as long as Dad’s willing to pay for it, I guess.”
Silence blankets the table as the waiter sets down four bowls of sancocho, a plate of flatbread, a candle, and a red rose in a vase in front of you all before hastily retreating.
“What is that supposed to mean?”
Staring at the rose and trying to sort out your thoughts, you’re not sure why you chose this moment to bring up the subject. Maybe your body is just in fight or flight mode and perhaps you’re diverting your fluster to this deep-seated frustration. Something is shaking the cage of your heart and wants out, wants to cause some damage–
–but Javi’s hand comes to a gentle rest on your knee, soothing whatever savage beast had awakened, somehow turning frustration and fear into calm strength instead.
“I know about the money, Dad. I appreciate the help, I really do. But it’s okay. You don’t have to pay anyone to babysit me and pull strings just to make my life easier here. I came to Colombia to challenge myself. I can’t do that if you’re sneaking in and slapping training wheels on me all the time.”
For a split second it looks as if he’s going to deny it, play dumb. Instead, he softens.
“Well, sweetheart, you’ll have to forgive me. Your mother and I can’t help but look out for you. It’s what we’ve done all your life. It’s a hard habit to break.”
The confirmation stings, but you can’t deny that you set yourself up for it. “Did you do the same for Kennie?”
“Your sister has a husband and a family. She doesn’t need us to look after her anymore.”
A frustration wells up inside, burning, humiliating, full of futility. It doesn’t matter what you accomplish, how many times you have to prove yourself, they’re just not going to change. They’re never going to overcome what their generation has held as truth all their lives, even past the recent wave of feminism and push for equality. They’ll never ever see you as complete unless there’s a man involved. There’s nothing you can do. There’s nothing anyone can do.
And perhaps that’s the conclusion that makes Javi’s actions feel like the only heroic course as he rubs a side hand over your back and explains, “Sir, you don’t have to worry about her. She’s capable. Thriving. She’s in no danger here. If there were any threat at all, she could hold her own. And even so, I’d do my best to make sure trouble never came near her.”
“Oh, Haaavi. You’re so good to her. She’s so lucky to have you.”
With a defensive flick of a hand, he continues. “It’s not luck, ma’am. And it’s not goodness. It’s simply part of my job. Even if she was nothing to me but another clerk that’s too smart and too bold for her position, I’m an agent first. As a U.S. citizen and employee of the DEA, I’m going to put her life before my own. With all due respect–and I’m sorry to be so blunt–but to doubt that she or any American isn’t safe here is an insult to Colombia, to me, and all government agents on a professional level.”
The hard drag of conviction in his tone. The realization on your parents’ faces. The understanding sinking in. The steadying warmth of his arm around you.
“But she doesn’t need me. She doesn’t need anyone. Most self-sufficient and confident woman I’ve ever known. I’m the lucky one; lucky she’s bored enough to keep me around. Must be for entertainment.”
Wow.
And all at once, you regret that you hadn’t taken the chance to kiss Agent Javier Peña. ________
“Are you sure you wouldn’t like a ride back to her apartment, son? It’ll be faster.”
“Thank you, sir, but I’d like to walk her home.”
Javi takes your hand in his, waving at your parents with the other, and quietly pulls you away from the car window down the dark street toward your place.
Half a minute later he’s still silent. And still holding your hand.
It feels awkward not to let go. And yet rude to do so. So you find a middle ground and squeeze instead, “Thank you. For that. Back there. I hate that I have no power to convince them of my autonomy on my own, but I think they just needed to hear it from…”
Who? A man? A government employee? A “cop”? A workaholic who is cranky most of the time because he disregards his own health and safety and refuses to sleep in his never-ending quest to quash every last cokeslinger within a thousand-mile area?
His nod and squeeze in return says he knows. “You know it’s love, right?”
Your heart trips over his words. “What?”
“Your parents love you. Doesn’t matter how old you get. Doesn’t matter how far you run. Doesn’t matter how long the flight is and how repulsive they find the local guaro, they’re gonna love you.”
In the shared laughter that follows, your hands naturally part and you double over, remembering the look on your mother’s face after tasting the aniseed liquor Javi ordered for her.
“It was so beautiful!” you crow. “She tried so hard to smile and be polite…and the tears! You could almost see the fumes pushing out of her tear ducts!!!”
“It broke my heart to do it to her, but she insisted I order for her–!”
It’s not often you see Javi laugh and smile–really smile–with unrestrained joy. Playful smirks, weary grins, the occasional shy blush perhaps, yes. But it’s not until this moment that you see him genuinely happy. It takes years off him, as if he’s shed responsibility like a coat and gone skinny-dipping into life for a minute. His eyes crinkle deeply when he truly smiles, they shine and sparkle. Like stars on this dim street.
The giggles and chuckles continue as you near your block and it’s in a resurgence of his that he casually just reaches out and takes your hand again, as if dropping it had been a little mistake that needed correcting.
And suddenly, it doesn’t feel so awkward. It should be, but it’s not. It’s like you both decided it doesn’t have to be and yet, it doesn’t have to mean anything either. If anything, a shared happiness. A familiarity.
“You’re enjoying this, aren’t you.”
“Hmm?” His attention is slowly returning to the street, constantly scanning, every second a chance to gather information, find the next piece of the druglord puzzle.
“This. Being the perfect boyfriend. Having someone’s parents just think the god’s ass of you for once. Playacting chivalry.”
That last bit sobers him. “Yeah, well, at least I can put on a good show.”
There’s something in the response that rings…tired. You’ve hit on some old hurt, some buried regret. Knowing Javi, addressing it would only cause him to close off and dig it in deeper.
“Well, I’m enjoying it. I feel like I’m getting good value for all of the favors I’ve done for you and prettyboy Murphy. You’re good at this. A girl could get used to it. That story you told my mother about how we met? Let nobody tell you that you don’t go above and beyond in every way, Agent Peña.”
You can’t see the little grin that pulls at the far corner of his mouth, but you know it’s there. An eyebrow cocks. “So you’re saying my tab’s clear? I can put in a new order to the miracle worker?”
“Order up,” you laugh. “After all, now that I know Dad’s pulling strings, who’s gonna fire me? Bring your worst shenanigans!”
It doesn’t have quite the reaction you expect from him and he stops just short of the steps to your apartment building, deep grooves forming between his brows. “You know, it’s not unusual; landing any job has a lot to do with who you know. Keeping it is the part that’s all you. Even if you didn’t get it on your own, you still made it your own.” When you can’t seem to meet his eyes, his tone softens. “You’ve got a lot to be proud of here. Why did you feel like you had to perfect some image of your life by toting me around?”
Flustered, you scoff and jump at the chance to dodge the question. “I’ll have you remember that I asked Steve, not you. You’re the one that jumped at a free meal.” It doesn’t work. His stance demands an honest answer, his face says it’s required more for your sake than his. “It’s… a long story. There are checkboxes in my family… my sister got married and had kids and I never did. I never really felt it was important… or that anyone would put up with my attitude. i’m not exactly the picture of perfect wife material. I mean, of course I’d like to find someone someday, but it’s never been the main goal… but my parents–”
“I couldn’t do it,” he says. Not an agreement; an admission. Simple. “I walked away from the altar. Left her standing. It just felt like there was a responsibility there to be ‘the husband’, and–like you said, same thing–check off the boxes. I didn’t know if I could check off the same ones everyone else thought were necessary.”
It takes a moment to say anything. To move past the fact that he’s just confided a piece of his past and his personal life to you. That he’s let you in. It explains a little about why he doesn’t get close to anyone, why he prefers feminine relations without hangups. Which makes this admission very weighted and precious. You see that he trusts you not to judge. And perhaps it’s his way of letting you know that you’re not alone in dodging the tried-and-true life path.
“Everyone had expectations. You thought you couldn’t be a good husband. So you ran away to join the DEA because you knew you could do that spectacularly.”
Now it’s him that can’t look at you. “I wouldn’t say that I’m doing that well–”
“Javi.” That catches his eye. “You’re a damn good agent. I know you’re going to get the job done. Why the hell do you think I’ll jump at the chance to break every rule in the goddamn department to help you do it? Like I said. Who’s gonna fire me now if I do?” Something shifts in him, like he’s been slapped or sharply woken. As if it’s something he’s been needing to hear and didn’t have the right person to tell him. You’re suddenly honored to be that for him. He needs it. And so you gift him a little more. “Obviously you don’t have to do everything by the book to be good at something. Look at the past couple of days. Thank you for being nice to my folks. And for the encouragement. That’s all it takes sometimes, you know? You’ve been a damn good stand-in boyfriend. Your little stunts included, you asshole. That’s what made it fun. I’m sure you would have been a great husband.”
He opens his mouth to speak, but thinks better of it with a tick of his jaw. Regrouping, he gives you a pained look to say, “I’m sorry that you feel you were lied to…with the surveillance and all. And that’s how you found out. I meant what I said back there, Sully.” He swallows. “All of it.”
It’s so serious and vulnerable, an obvious effort for him to say. He’s a good man, Javi. You’ve read the reports. You’ve heard the rumors. He may keep others from getting too close, may come off as flippant and impatient or pour his focus into his work. But his moral center is pointed in the right direction and he’s the first person to discard his own needs in favor of someone else.
It’s probably what overwhelms him–caring about others but not allowing anyone to care for him–bubbles up so far that he has to visit his girls to vent it. He says they’re his informants, everyone’s heard that, but nobody buys that’s all it is. He needs to be cared for, but the money keeps him safe, keeps the lines drawn. It’s an exchange he can allow himself to make.
Something about that suddenly twists your heart. You could ask him in. You could take care of him. It’s tempting. It’s what he needs.
But you’re not sure if the inevitable fallout and distancing is what you need right now. It would be too easy to want him to stay.
It’s fine to fall in love just a little with Javier Peña, as long as you don’t expect too much.
Instead, you squeeze his hand. Big and warm and gun-callused. “I know you did. Good night, hero. Thank you.”
He lets you go, this transaction settled. Doesn’t ask anything more. As you expected. The perfect gentleman. When he puts his mind to it.
________
You’ve lost count of your yawns.
Even though you brought leftover carbonara for lunch the following day, you need to escape. There’s twice as much work with the ambassador’s conferences, more calls coming through and the agents and policia all have their regular requests. And you didn’t sleep soundly the night before; something whining at the back of your mind, like something forgotten or missed… Every form and file feels like an effort and you’re just so out of it. If your mother were to stop by and take you out to lunch–a real possibility–that would just be too much.
Half an hour in the outdoor cafeteria should help, even if it’s another hot day. Air and sunshine are usually good revitalizers. And you can hide in the crowd.
Or so you thought. Just as you’re settling in with a bowl of rice and veggies, a long shadow falls across your bench and you look up to see broad shoulders and dark hair.
But the eyes you meet are blue.
“Hi, Jimmy.”
“Well hey there. Mind if I join you?”
Without waiting for an answer he perches on the bench next to you with his sandwich and starts talking. About nothing. About the heat. How it’s hot here, how it was hot back home in Arizona but nothing like the hot here. Humidity. Dry heat. Sweat. How he once baked a cookie on the dash of a car parked in the sun. How he never understood the calculations between fahrenheit and celsius, just that one is higher and one lower. Something about mercury in thermometers.
You stop listening after a minute and just chew and smile and nod. You’re not that lonely. Yet.
There’s a little old man who sells flowers from a bucket, sets up a little stall on the sidewalk across the other end of the courtyard. He’s out here most days. He’s out here today. Carnations, chrysanthemums, birds of paradise, roses…
You should get some flowers for your desk. Something nice. Might wake you up a little. You watch absently as the flower man speaks to someone in a tan shirt. A man with dark hair like so many others here. He looks like Javi from the back.
You’d rather not think about Javi’s back. Or front. Or deep brown eyes.
So you listen to Jimmy ramble for a while before he finally asks you a question.
“Don’t you think it’s hot?”
“Yeah, Jimmy. It’s hot.” _______
“I’ll take one red and one white, por favor.”
The little old flower man’s smile is even warmer up close.
On your way back into the office you muse that you’ll put the roses in a vase and let them decide for you, depending on which one lasts longer. Do you really feel the need to entertain the possibility of infatuation? Or can you be content with the easy friendship you have?
But upon arriving at your desk, you find that your little bouquet will be unbalanced and one of the two choices will have twice the advantage.
There’s already a red rose laying on the credenza.
Next to a bowl that held carbonara leftovers when last you saw it.
And a note. Fast scratches on a torn piece of yellow steno paper. Probably from the ripped piece on your desk. Next to your pen.
“I meant all of it, Sully.”
Suddenly the clack of keyboards and whine of printers and ring of phones fades away. You lift the little note to read it again. “All of it.” As if the words aren’t enough, as if you need more empirical evidence–or maybe because it was with the flower–for some odd reason you bring it close to your nose only to confirm what you knew you’d smell there.
Rose. And cigarettes.
All of it? That’s the last thing he said last night. I meant what I said back there, Sully. All of it.
It had been a heartening thing to hear, reinforcing how he would protect and serve, how he thought you were competent and confident, but why remind you now–
Oh.
Oh. Not just that part.
All of it.
“I couldn’t keep my eyes off her. And then there were the times I had to get into the file room for nothing in particular, just a reason to come down and talk to her. She used to laugh at my flirting; made fun of me, thought I wasn’t serious.”
Suddenly you understand what was keeping you awake last night.
The look on his face as he stood by your steps. The way he rethought the words before he spoke. It wasn’t easy for him. He tried to tell you and you just…
All of it.
You just thanked him and walked away.
He’s been…this whole time…he’s…
“Darling?”
Yanked from one confusion to another, you turn to find your mother rounding your desk–even though you told her not to, that only government officials are supposed to be around your files–coming to take your hand.
“Your father and I are going on a tour of the city with the Representative. I dropped by to see if you’d like to join us.”
“Hi Mom. No… no, thanks. I’m…swamped today. I’m sorry.”
She coos, worriedly. “Are you alright? You seem tired. Those are pretty…”
Blinking down at the roses in your hand and stepping slightly to the side to shield her view of the third on your credenza, you agree, “Yeah, just tired today. It’s the heat. Here,” handing her the flowers, you smile. “The red one is for you. Please give the white one to the Representative’s wife. I hope you have a nice tour.”
“Oh. Thank you, dear…but…how did you know I was coming?”
“I didn’t. There’s a nice old man who sells them. Sometimes I buy some to cheer up my desk.”
“You’re buying your own flowers? We should stop by Haavi’s desk and tell him he needs to do that for you.”
“Oh. No need. He does.”
Once she’s on her way, you swing out to the atrium, but find Steve and Javi’s desks unoccupied. There was talk of a situation on the east side of the old town, no doubt the whole department will be out most of the afternoon.
Good. Maybe you can get some work done.
Still carrying the note, you flip it over on Javi’s desk and scribble five words with the same pen–
You know where I live.
–tuck it under his typewriter with just the tiniest corner sticking out, and head for the coffee room. One cup and three more work hours should shrink that stack of paperwork on your desk.
If you can just shut it all out and concentrate.
And try not to expect too much. ________
The door to your apartment is unlocked when you get home. Well, he certainly jumped at your note.
It shouldn’t surprise you. There’s got to be department keys in some file somewhere. After all, how could he have done all that snooping around when you first got the job?
Dropping your bag and keys on the table in the hall, you head for the main room. “Javi? You here?”
Heart ramming against your ribcage, you emerge into the apartment…
…and find your parents seated at your dining table. Waiting.
“Mom. Dad. How…how did you get in?”
“Your father talked to the landlord. It wasn’t difficult, dear. We wanted a word.” Even though there’s an endearment, your mother’s tone is anything but.
“Okay. That’s kind of excessive. You could have just swung by my desk, you know where I–”
“This is a more delicate matter and we thought you might appreciate the privacy,” your father grumbles. “Sit down, sweetheart.”
There are two things on the table. Your mother’s purse, and a box of tissues. Not the brand you own. Provided for.
“I don’t think I will. What’s going on?”
They share a glance, a starting gesture as if to choose who will begin, even though it was always going to be your mom.
“We had a very nice tour of the city today. We saw the opera house and the capital. It’s a beautiful city. You must really like it here–”
“Representative wanted to go into some of the deeper parts of the city,” your father interrupts, already going off book it seems, “to see the neighborhoods that really reflect the majority economy, get a feel for the true people of Colombia.”
What’s this all about. There’s a silence. Of course there is. They’re waiting for you to prod them. “The old town. I know it. It can get rough, but mainly only if you’re already involved in something shady.”
“Well, there’s plenty that’s shady there, I’ll tell you.” Your mother’s nose lifts more than slightly. “Did you know that it’s crawling with brothels?”
“I do, actually. There are a lot of women who don’t have any other way–”
“Well, Haavi certainly knows about those brothels. We saw him coming out of one today.”
Oh. Shit.
Wait. What?
Fuck.
Your mother continues, something about being sorry to be the one to tell you, something about your heart and how it must be breaking, how it’s hard to be lied to….
The tissues sit on the table, a pretty pink box with daisies on it. They expect you to break down. Cry. How good of an actor are you?
“...and if you want to come home for a while, you know you are always welcome–”
Not good enough.
“Javi’s not my boyfriend, Mom.”
The silence that follows is thick, it mingles with the humidity, curdles it like cream in the air. You let it sit until it sours.
“He posed for me so you wouldn’t worry about me here. Like you always do. As if I could never make it on my own without someone.” Their shock sustains. The quieter they become, the easier it gets. “And Javi went along with it because he works with me. Day in and day out. If anyone ever thought I was in danger here, or couldn’t hack the agency, he’d be the first to say so. And I trust him.” Your mother opens her mouth to run her tongue, but you cut her off at the pass. “I trust that man. Yes, you saw him coming out of a brothel, but I’m not his girlfriend and he’s there for his job. Those women sleep with the people Javi’s trying to catch. It’s a brilliant tactic, actually. And they trust him too. Because he is good to them. He’s a good man; one of the best I know and deserves respect. He takes care of them and protects them as much as he would anyone else. You should have seen what he did for this girl Helena–”
It’s here that you notice something out of the corner of your eye and turn to find Javi standing silent in the hallway, still close enough to the door that your parents can’t see him around the corner into the room. But you can. Wide eyes. That tight fitting tan shirt. Slightly off balance as if he came to a stop immediately at the knowledge of walking in on something.
Why do you feel….caught?
“Anyway,” turning back to your parents with a sigh, “I appreciate your concern. But you don’t have to be. Not about him, not about me, not about anything. I’m sorry I lied. It just seemed…easier. Because you have never just believed I was fine. I’m fine. I’m more than fine. Like Javi said the other night, I’m thriving here. Even if he was posing, everything he said was true…”
But if everything he said was true…
A glance to the hallway finds it empty again. Even if the door is slightly ajar.
“Well. You can’t blame us for wanting the best for you, sweetheart. You’re never going to stop being our daughter.”
“I know, Dad. You keep saying that. It’s right there on my birth certificate.”
“There’s no shame in accepting help if it’s given freely and if it helps you achieve a goal.”
“I understand that, but I really wish you’d told me about it rather than let me think I did it all on my own. Do you understand how that feels? To be lied to?”
Your mother huffs. “I do now.”
Thank god for office coffee. Without the edge taken off of your exhaustion, you might have had more bite. But for now, you’ve said what was necessary and you’re not up for a fight or managing their feelings; you have enough of your own to sort out. If they care about you as much as they say they do, they’ll let what you’ve said sink in and not push the matter.
“Are you flying out tomorrow morning or afternoon?”
“Tomorrow morning, sweetheart.”
You nod and move into the kitchen. Seems they do care. You have to give them credit. “Okay. Do you want some dinner? I’ve got leftovers.”
“We have a dinner scheduled with the ambassador.”
“Well good. I’ve had a long day and I’m really tired. I probably wouldn’t be good company anyway. You’re coming back in for the trade agreements in January?”
“Yes, dear.”
“Good. I’ll get to see you for a whole week then.” The sad smiles you exchange with them signal that everything’s going to be okay. For now.
There are hugs and kisses, a wish for safe travels and a promise to call in the coming days. Your mother apologizes loudly for cleaning your bathroom mirror. Your father apologizes softly for your mother’s volume. This time, you walk them all the way out to the street.
Your mother’s halfway to the car when your father doubles back, digging in his pocket, just barely remembering to give you the key he got from the landlord.
Or maybe he didn’t really forget.
“Your mother and I are proud of you, sweetheart. I’m sorry if we gave the impression that we weren’t.”
“Thanks, Dad. It’s good to hear.”
“I should have said it sooner.” He hovers as your mother gets into the car. “You tell Javi that it was nice to meet him. And that we’re proud of the work he’s doing here too.”
There’s something in the way he tells you this. Another apology. Or a knowing. You’ve never been sure with Dad.
“I will.”
As they pull away, waving, your plan is to go collapse on your couch and just be alone for a minute.
As you come back into your apartment, you have to amend that plan to collapsing on your couch next to Javier Peña.
“Hey.”
“Hey.”
“You heard all of that?”
He doesn’t answer the question. You sink in, lean back, let your eyes close. He sighs.
“You mind if I smoke?”
“I do, actually. You know I do. And I don’t have an ashtray. There’s still some whiskey if you want though. Knock yourself out.”
The couch shifts a bit as he gets up. The pop of cabinet doors. The clink of ice against glass. After a few seconds, the couch shifts again and a cool tumbler slides gently against your hand.
You open your eyes to ice water.
“Thanks.” You take a long drink, not knowing what to say. “I didn’t sleep well last night.”
“I never do. Bed’s too big. Sleep better when I’m not alone.” When you look him in the eye, he knows enough not to turn away. “One of the girls was called into one of Escobar’s regular haunts. Didn’t see him, but got a good look at some clients he’s courting. It was info worth delivering a retainer. And a final thanks.”
You do your best to keep your hope from shining through your cracks. “Final thanks?”
“Yeah. For all the…help in the past couple of years. Told them there’s a woman I’d like to spend some time with. Get to know better.”
The sly smile spreading across your face will not be contained. “Really. You told your informants that you were shoving off to the boring world of dating.”
“No. But I did let them know that if there’s a next time I darken their door, I won’t be in a very good mood. I don’t have a Jimmy to turn to if this doesn’t work.”
“Oh. So that was you today in the courtyard. That’s what inspired this? You jealous of Jimmy?”
“Nothing to be jealous of. He’s not your type. But. It might have sped up the process.” When you don’t laugh at that, he sighs. “Listen. I’m not good at this.”
“Yes, you are, I told you that you arrrre,” you yawn and go after another sip. “But I’m the one who’s going to be cranky and crap at it unless I take a nap. I’m sorry. It’s been a day.”
“Can I join you?” His dark eyes search yours as you empty the tumbler.
There’s something like a hope there. And something else, not quite an apology, not quite yearning, a worry that he’s going to do this right or die trying and he waited far too long to start.
Like he’s fighting the urge to expect too much.
“I said a nap, Peña.”
“Good. We were called in early. I could use it.”
It comes naturally. A smile. A matching smile. A whispered okay. He leans forward and slowly, softly, presses his lips to yours. Lingers a moment. Traces your nose–one side then the other–with his own.
“And what happens when we wake up?” you ask quietly in the space between you, in the space before the next slow, lingering kiss.
Javi stands, wraps three fingers around your glass and lifts it gracefully out of your grasp. Setting it on the end table, he reaches for your hand to help you up. “This is technically the third date, isn’t it? We could just…check off the usual boxes.”
“I think we established that I don’t especially love to do everything by somebody else’s rulebook.” Using the inertia of you coming off the couch to pull you straight into his arms and into a deeper kiss--one full of holding breath and clutching fingers--he chases it with a nip to your lip, which coaxes a chuckle. “But I’m open to actually following some rules for once. Especially the good ones.”
“Good. I think it’s time I worked you a miracle or two.”
“Pretty sure of yourself, aren’t you. Well, lead the way. You obviously know where the bedroom is…”
He smirks, guiding you by the hand. “I’ll give you the tour.”
________
MASTERLIST
CHARACTER MASTERLIST
#narcos fanfiction#javier peña#javier peña x reader#javier peña x f!reader#year of tropes#javier peña x fake dating
627 notes
·
View notes
Note
What was the Batshit insanity from Red Bull?
Oh there’s been a lot going on. I think it’s time to gather a rough list of evidence going towards Daniel signing for RBR in 2025:
Laurent Mekies saying he’s “not worried” about Yuki and Daniel but also saying that VCARB intends to return to a team for juniors. Pair that with the fact Lawson’s contract expires 15 September and you’ve got a more than zero chance Mekies is considering a 2025 Liam-Yuki lineup at VCARB. As for Daniel… :)
Helmut Marko admitting that Checo isn’t good enough for RBR to win the constructors
Both VCARB and RBR social media admins going hard on the maxiel agenda in the run up to the Azerbaijan GP
Daniel’s Instagram post with a clip of the Monster’s Inc “put it back where it came from” scene and then a photo of himself with a statue of Sully from 2018 when he was still at RBR.
There’s also a load of info we know around how Checo’s camp squeezed their way into salvaging Checo’s seat for the rest of the 2024 season in the aftermath of Zandvoort. We know it was because of sponsorship for the Mexican GP. Checo has managed to keep his seat for the rest of the 2024 season but 2025 is up for grabs
Although a lot of the above evidence is circumstantial I think it isn’t too delusional to conclude that Daniel has signed something but he can’t talk about it yet 👀
#if I’ve forgotten something can someone else please add to this post#silly season#daniel ricciardo#f1#red bull racing#vcarb
30 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ugh! The "maturity" of Facebook Wiccans is astonishing.
I just left yet another Facebook Wicca group.
This time it was because I found out the group is set to "automagically delete" any post or containing certain "keywords."
This caused a bot-induced mass deletion of an entire conversation in the group with a half a$$ed apology from the admin followed by the explanation that the keyword filter is there for our "own protection." And it's because the group is "So big." that it's necessary.
The group is only 41,000 members. They think THAT is justification for letting a bot auto-delete posts that use forbidden keywords and not even telling members what words they're not allowed to use?
My Sandman group has over 150,000 members. And I wouldn't dream of doing something so insulting. The words, in question, by the way, are not the words that are caught by Facebook's TOS. In fact (as they won't even tell the members what words are forbidden) it seems arbitrary and frustrating.
Rest assured I am aware of this feature and think it's quite... well, frankly, stupid. Letting a bot automatically delete the use of "certain words" and not even telling the members what words they cannot use isn't "protecting" anyone. It's freakin' ridiculous. And a perpetual game of Russian roulette for anyone who is articulate and talketive.
I felt insulted at the "It's for your own protection" comment and promptly decided to never sully myself by retaining my membership of that group.
What is WRONG with the Wiccans of Facebook?! They're like teenagers on a power trip and who have no instinct on how to lead.
It's like watching a nine-year-old trying to guide other children "For your own good" while not even understanding why certain rules are rules but knowing they MUST be obeyed no matter what.
Rest assured I will never use a bot keyword fishing net and I certainly never would keep what those words are a secret so the members are stuck walking on eggshells "For your own good."
The group, ironically, was "Wicca- Craft of the Wise."
THAT was wisdom!??
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Murderbot Diaries - Obsolescence
(Curious what I'm doing here? Read this post! For the link index and a primer on The Murderbot Diaries, read this one! Like what you see? Send me a Ko-Fi.)
In which we get our first new POV!
Jixy(1) hears yelling and crying, and heads for it vowing that this time, the kids are going too far. Only, when she gets there, Arnie smacks into her, and she realizes he's one of the ones crying. She hugs him, looking at the others, but before she can determine what's happened, the incident alarm jolts her. The kids know better than to hit it for anything minor.
She asks what happened. Lilly says Greggy is hurt, badly. Jixy's heart sinks, and she checks the comm to make sure Lilly also hit the code for medical emergency, before asking where he is. Lilly points at some storage compartments, and Jixy goes, telling the kids to stay where they are.
Inside the first storage compartment floats Greggy, in globs of floating blood and augment fluid. He's been damaged, several of his metal prosthetics torn to bits, and his metal skull torn into. Jixy first assumes some old bot part exploded, but that shouldn't be possible, and there's no blast or debris except Greggy himself.
Jixy gets Dubarre, the local fixer,(2) to look over the bay in search of the accident's source, while she and the medic, Shen Jean, take care of Greggy. She's never had to clean a friend's body like garbage before, and she keeps shaking. Shen Jean says he's still warm, and just the other day he thought he needed another refit. Jixy is surprised.
In an aside, we learn Greggy spent eighty years as an exploration rover for the Luna government, had helped build the first settlements on Luna and Mars. Twenty two years ago, the other rovers were pensioned out, but Greggy got some of his augments replaced and found work on Kidland Station as a teaching assistant. He was a teacher before the rover program, and he loved it.
Back in the "present"(3), Shen Jean starts to suggest there's too much damage to be an accident, before Dubarre says it definitely wasn't one. He's holding a tool that doesn't belong on a completed station. Jixy can hardly contemplate the tool, but Dubarre says Shen Jean will have to conduct an autopsy. She doesn't want to believe someone did this, but Jixy finally catches on, and asks Dubarre to show her. The tool has what's obviously some of Greggy's tissue on it, from his head.
The worst part is that she doesn't want to think that it could be anyone they work or live with.
They bag the rest of the remains. Dubarre and Shen Jean take it to the infirmary, while Jixy arranges for a headcount of all personnel, and then starts following procedures. She makes an emergency call to the Base Admin, with a brief description of what they found and theorize so far. Next, she calls Sully, whose title isn't given, and asks them to do a rescue search. It's not strictly protocol, but it's the search that looks in every nook and cranny that might hide a person.
Jixy also checks for anomalies on the hull, finding none, though some small vehicles or power suits might not register. Stations are designed for people to show up on schedules, or be calling loudly for help, not to prevent infiltration.
The headcount comes back full, it only took so long because Joi forgot that the total included Greggy.
Jixy puts the station in emergency mode, so every hatch requires an admin code. She forces her face into a calm expression, then heads out to the lounge. She remembers Greggy saying he felt comfortable here because Kidland has so many people with prostheses and medical augments, he didn't stand out as much.(4)
Tia Joi approaches Jixy, as Sully and Aarti come from the other direction. They discuss what's happened, and Sully says they've heard of an incident kind of like this, on Juno Outremer Three-four, some thieves snuck aboard and stole supplies. The group wonders if Greggy stumbled on them and got killed for his trouble.
Lilly slides in and says they need to be detectives. Tia Joi says Lilly needs to go sit down and finish her juice. Lilly says juice is for shock, and she doesn't have shock. Jixy says Base will surely send someone soon, they just need to stay calm until then. The adults go on to the infirmary.
Going over the autopsy, Shen Jean says whoever it was, attacked Greggy from the front, and tried to take his parts. Jixy sees the expression on her face and asks what that's about. Shen Jean says there's a story, told in the Mars tunnels, about some kind of serial killer who goes after helper robots and people with augments and prostheses. Dubarre confirms, there were hazard warnings from Juno Central that warned about someone like that, called them the Piecework Killer.
Jixy says they're supposed to use critical thinking, not conspiracy theories. Dubarre says augments get stolen. Jixy counters, from morgues and medical storage, not people. Augments are usually customized, and no use to anyone but the first recipient. Maybe it's happened, but it's no time to tell everyone there's a serial killer aboard.
Dubarre asks if Jixy has Greggy's comm on her. She doesn't. Dubarre can't even find pieces of it. Shen Jean suggests the murderer took it. Dubarre offers to scan for it, but Jixy thinks whoever did this wasn't dumb enough to leave it running. She says he can try, but she needs to check on the kids.
Jixy calls Lilly and Arnie into a compartment. Lilly is talking about investigation stuff, suggesting they should look for blood splatter.(5) Jixy is about to dismiss it, but suggests Shen Jean give everyone a scan for Greggy's augment fluid, since there was so much of it. Getting back to business, though, Jixy asks if Lilly or Arnie have Greggy's comm, or remember seeing it. The kids say they didn't even think it was a person, just a prank, at first. They didn't look too closely before or after they realized that wasn't the case.
Lilly suggests the murderer took it, to listen in on their conversations. Arnie says they'd have their own comm, but Lilly says nobody who lives here did this. With the mysterious tool as a murder weapon, Jixy can't quite say she's wrong.
The sweep for augment fluid comes up negative, but so does the comm scan. The call from Base comes in, and Jixy is upset to learn the nearest help is twelve hours out. When she tells the other adults, they're no happier. Tia Joi says at least the hatches are command-sealed, but Shen Jean says they might be able to hack them or "jimmy" the hatch seals.(6)
Jixy is worried that Shen Jean is right, and someone might be hanging around, hoping for another victim, or to destroy the station somehow. They haven't messed with any systems yet, but if they came for augments to steal, this is one of the best places in civilization to find them.
She can't just stay here, so she stands and says she has to go look "down the spoke" to check something. The adults are horrified, but Lilly just asks if she's looking for clues. Jixy confirms, clues, and everyone's to stay here while she checks the supply ship. Dubarre and Shen Jean say they'll go with her, but she doesn't want them down there, so heavily augmented, such good targets. Jixy says no, and that's an order.
Dubarre follows Jixy a short way, and whispers she's doing what dumb people in horror films do. She knows, but the supply ship that arrived a few days ago was the most likely source of a stowaway. If they went back there to hide until it leaves again, she might find them, comm for help, and set a trap.
So, on Jixy goes, and through several sets of security protocols and onto the lift, where a small figure flings itself on with her just as the doors are closing. Lilly has followed Jixy, and says she needs backup. Jixy can't turn the lift around mid-journey, and now has to waste all the time going there, coming back to bring Lilly back, and going back down again. Lilly says rule number one is you don't do anything dangerous alone, you take someone who can help or call for help.
Jixy protests, but Lilly says she's the one who found him, they killed her friend. He was her first friend on Kidland. Nobody liked her because she was from Earth, but he said he was too, and they should be nicer to her, and they were. He told her he knew what it was like, to be alone. Jixy isn't surprised that Greggy shared more of his life, before and after his augments, with the kids. She says Greggy was her friend too, but her priority is keeping Lilly safe.
Lilly promises to do whatever Jixy says, and she knows a LOT about mysteries! She can help! She's already guessed that it was the last supply ship. Jixy doesn't ask how long she's guessed that, lest Jixy be embarrassed at how long it took her to catch it. Jixy is angry at herself for letting Lilly stay, but it does feel better to not be alone.
The lift reaches its destination, and Jixy tells Lilly to stay here, and hit the return if she says so. Lilly promises. Jixy looks into the corridor first, then carefuly sneaks along to the shuttle. It doesn't look tampered with. She taps the entry code, and it hisses air as it opens. She cheks the panel again, and sees atmosphere readings as if it were a live transport, not sealed supplies.
Relief and fear hit in equal measure. Good, it wasn't one of her people, but oh no, it wasn't one of her people.
Jixy backs away a bit, then comms to the adults: the shuttle's been tampered with, it's definitely how the visitor got in. She asks them to check the news reports for the last stop it made, Station Titan. She tells them Lilly snuck down as well. The adults suggest they both come back, but Jixy says that she can't. Whoever did this is competent at hacking systems. She has to find them. Shen Jean says to kick their arse. Jixy is oddly comforted by the comment, and mutes the comm again.
She enters the shuttle, carefully. She doesn't find much sign, but little things, like a sticky residue on the handle of a locker, some kind of sugar, and a piece of food wrapper in the nearby intake vent, like someone broke a liquid ration and didn't quite clean it up fully, despite being so careful everywhere else.
Lilly is excited when Jixy comes back. They examine the "clue", and Lilly says they need to check where the shuttle was last. Jixy says Shen Jean is already on it, and asks why Lilly isn't on leadership track. Lilly doesn't know, but says they need to find a motive, that will tell them what the killer wants. Jixy says real life isn't like stories, but Lilly says the stories draw from real life events.
Jixy thinks about the Piecework Killer, and wonders if stealing prosthetics for fun is wrong, and they might have some need to replace their own augments.(7) She admits Lilly might be right, the killer might have wanted Greggy's interfaces. Only, why weren't they on the shuttle waiting to leave? Lilly thinks they might know that the residents know about the shuttle, or maybe they want something else before they escape. Jixy uses her system access to look at the inventory, and says she needs to seal off a particular workshop, which is stocked with everything they'd need to replace augments.
Jixy gets a lock from Dubarre that might stay sealed even against someone who could hack a command seal, and drops off Lilly in exchange. She takes the lift on to the engineering foyer, and sneaks along. She touches the panel for the door she needs to close down, and finds it sticky. She realizes it's blood and augment fluid just as a voice says it's too late.
She turns, activating the panic button in her comm strap silently with three even, subtle presses. The person is pale, nearly colourless, except for brown eyes. Jixy says they killed Greggy, and the person asks if they gave "it" a name. Jixy says he was her friend, and a teacher. The person says he was a rover. Jixy says he was still a person. The person says to make a rover, they murder a person. Jixy says they're the one who murdered a person.
The person stares at her for a moment, and Jixy has a moment of dissociation. She asks why they need his interfaces. They say, for themself. Jixy says Greggy's augments would only work with another rover, which they'd know if they knew anything about rovers. They're almost amused at that, and show Jixy their torso, which is entirely augment.
Jixy asks how they can be a rover, they're all accounted for. They say the heroic volunteers were accounted for, they were corporate.(8) Jixy read about some of the early corporate expansion, and how unsafe it was. She thought they wouldn't have been allowed to make rovers.(9) But no, they made their own, and nobody knew. The person says, of course, to mine the precious elements from the asteroid belt.
Jixy is still confused, can't they go to a hospital for help? They say they needed a refit, and when they need something, they take it. Her friends called it Piecework. Jixy, feeling "dumb as well as terrified", says they used Greggy's comm to eavesdrop. They say they don't need the comm, they can get into any system.(10) Jixy says she could help them get the parts they need. They say she's lying.
“I’m not lying,” she said. “The Luna government, the Mars med/health agency—”(11) “The Luna government didn’t murder me. Vision Space Dynamics murdered me.” Their voice was a whisper of fury. “They said the contract would be for twenty years. Do you know how long ago that was? Vision Space Dynamics went bankrupt, and their assets went to Io Explorations, and then they were bought by Sideral, and then they went bankrupt. And then they sent the old equipment to recycling and told me to leave. It has been seventy-six years.”(12)
Jixy struggles to process. This person deserves better treatment than they got, but they also killed Greggy, and who knows how many others. But then, they have been mistreated, and this is a sort of illness of the mind, and the corporation's tech is rotting from the inside out. The whole situation is unfair.
But she thinks Greggy would want her to help.
She asks the rover's name. It says to call it Piecework. She says that's not their name, not really. She adds that "we" can help them, get them a hospital, a lawyer. The rover is dismissive, and Jixy realizes all she's done is make them mad.
Fortunately, Jixy sees a slight glint down the corridor, as of light off dark hair. Somebody's risked coming to help, thanks to her panic button. She tells the rover she's not a corporation, nor does she work for one. She can get it real help, it's what Greggy would have wanted. As their mouth twists with anger, she steps aside, hoping the others are in place.
It almost works, more or less, but it's headed for a bloodbath. Then, the rover's eyes change expression, and they open the nearest hatch, dive through, and close it behind them before anyone can follow. Dubarre wonders how they could open a biometric hatch, but Jixy says they hacked the command seals, why not this, now get it open again. As schematics load, Jixy sees that they're probably headed for a construction skid they placed as backup.
Jixy works the panel, and just as the rover is about to leave, saying it won't come back, Jixy flushes the airlock, and the rover tumbles into space.
Some of the others are glad the rover is dead, some are upset about everything. Jixy feels like she failed Greggy twice, and the rover as well. Somewhere in their mind was a person who knew their actions were wrong, who escaped instead of having to hurt the humans.(13)
When the Base patrol shows up, they send a security group and search every inch of the station. They don't find the body, or the skid.
Later, Jixy explains what happened to Lilly. Lilly says Greggy would never have done what the other rover did. Jixy says Greggy had advantages that the other one didn't, like his gentle retirement. They have no way to know what the other one went through, or their real name, or anything to follow up besides the defunct corporation name that would never be linked, this long after, to illegal rover programs.
Lilly asks how many more rovers might be out there, like this one. She asks if they could find and help them. Jixy says probably not, but she has no way to know how to find out. Lilly thinks maybe she can think of a way, someday. Jixy says, when she does, to come and tell her. Lilly nods, and goes back to the other kids.(14)
=====
(1)The first not from Murderbot's POV! If you've read the whole story, you know we never go to it, either. This is much earlier in the timeline, it seems. They still talk about Earth, later on. We've never heard a mention of it before. It could be much later in the timeline, but I feel like it's earlier because space expansion is so recent to them. Especially since MB mentioned a documentary about the rover-times. (2) Finding "words not used as we understand them" is always fun in fiction, particularly since it's so common in far-future scifi, but this one may take the cake for me. When I think of a fixer, I think of someone political, like in Scandal, or someone who does that plus murder. I don't think of a repair tech or general handypal. (3) I mean, such as it is. (4) Like Murderbot, hoping to fit in as an augmented human, since they're common enough that it doesn't stand out SO much unless someone has seen real SecUnits before, since they're all identical. (5) This kid is so bright, I'm glad that Jixy doesn't just shut her down every time. She tries to keep things age appropriate, but Lilly is driven to help, and I think it's really sweet and kind and good that Jixy lets her, as much as feels safe. (6) To jimmy - to pry open, especially a lock and/or with a crowbar. (7) Since we've all finished the story before reading this, we can say confidently that the rover does need replacements, just like Greggy was about to get a refit. (8) Murderbot's documentary was somewhat true, but was also false in some of the ways it predicted. Of course corporations ran their own cyborg programs in secret. (9) Wells examining just how easy it is for corporations, even in our day, to make their own rules and answer to authority later, if at all. (10) Truly the early blueprint for SecUnits, then. Such total integration, and then abandoned. It's no wonder the corporation believes the governor modules are so necessary to keep them controlled, as if we didn't already know the mistreatment and control they require are torture in MB's time. They have every reason to fear what those who they've mistreated might do to them. (11) I assume from context that she's about to suggest that they'll help, pension the rover out, like they did for their own. I'm not entirely sure why the rover jumps their response the way they do, to the corporation that made and abandoned them. (12) Not seventy six comfortable years, either. Not like Greggy got. Alone, and on the run, hiding in the corners… just like Murderbot. A mirror version of it. Made obsolete (hence the story title) and abandoned. (13) And here, again, a strange and distorted mirror to MB. (14) I don't think we've heard of anyone called Lilly in the story so far. Do you think we'll get callbacks to this story someday? Do you think it would be Lilly, or the rover, or both at once that come into focus again? Or, was this just a side story, brought to its conclusion, not to be seen anymore? I don't know how I feel, honestly.
#the murderbot diaries#murderbot diaries#obsolescence (murderbot)#jixy (murderbot)#lilly (murderbot)#piecework (murderbot)
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
So I did something stupid couple of Sundays ago-ish and have to wear a splint/removable cast … atleast I got to choose the colour of my cast :((((((
it’s just a sprain or maybe a ligament tear because I have not had an injury that still hurts a couple weeks after :(((((((
and the worst thing is I cannot remove it unless it’s for showers and stuff… I cannot write or journal because my perfectionist ass refuses to sully my amazing journals with subpar handwriting :(((((((
I have to wear this cast until Wednesday and I if it still makes no recovery I will be referred for a ultrasound and because of this I have missed so much work because guess what I do for work???
IM A FUCKING ADMIN ARGH
:(((
I need to return to work tomorrow but why is it so difficult to? And also fuck NZ mental health system..
PLUS
my therapist and I broke up and now I’m raw dogging life with 200 mg of Sertraline and 2 mg of Prazosin :(((((((((((
#can someone put me out of my misery#tumblr is my therapy#hand hurty#i cannot live laugh love under these conditions#dearest-yeosang#dearest-yeosang vents#actually bpd#bpd thoughts
0 notes
Text
all mine by brent faiyaz <3
90 notes
·
View notes
Text
Which album had the best photobook?
Pink Tape
VS
Red Light
10 notes
·
View notes
Note
that being said, the right answer to the person's concerns is not to shit on them for bringing to attention to the masses behavior they found concerning, but perhaps to open a dialogue about how we can admin without being bullies. /
also an admin here! i don't post on sincerely but i do keep up. i'm glad to hear your perspective because i had a similar one? my friends were like 'SEE, IT WAS WRONG THEY TALKED TO ME LIKE THIS' when reading op's post. that did wonders.
like there are situations that have never been mentioned here that absolutely do need to be called out. an insidigm admin once told this friend's friend (i saw the screenshots because their friend was having a panic attack and they came to me since i admin to get my opinion) that the admin team violating a trigger posted on their profile was not their fault, and that it was that member's fault for having that reaction. like? i sent this ahead to sincerely (which honestly this trend seems to be pretty efficient). also the public humiliation alone in that krp turned off good writers from krping ever again.
i just saw it again, but like that clique likes to think the au krp community is obsessed with them; have they considered that they were really just that bad? krp is not just a silly little hobby when people are angry about each other. it's certainly not a silly little hobby when admins abuse their power to ostracize or demean a member in ways that can remove them from their communities and sully their ability to build connections with a large group of people ever again. like wow the amount of friendships i saw break over this clique, friendships years old even. that's pretty fucked.
・❥・
0 notes
Note
not to bring wearelondonhq discourse back into your inbox but now they’ve allowed neytiri to be played by zoe saldana when really they should be advocating for the use of indigenous fcs for the navi. they also got a reserve for jake sully and i wonder if they’ll push for disabled rep and make sure the mun writes him as wheelchair user or just completely ignore that and come up with an excuse as to why he can walk (which i think they will do)
Don’t be sorry! Isn’t Avatar highly problematic for being racist? Like, how they depict Native and Indigenous cultures is racist? And the director made some comments? I have to look more into it, but Avatar has always been 🤢🤮 and technically we shouldn’t be promoting a movie that’s racist in this community in general.
Besides that, the admins will just see Zoe was in the movie and think that’s okay. Much like the Wanda business. No research or care being done.
To further speak about the disabled aspect, they’re probably not gonna push for it. And that’s sad.
0 notes
Text
The eggs went missing on September eighth, but that's not counted here--probably because the vacuum created the rawest lore we've ever had. That period felt truly unpredictable, and allowed the islanders' relationships and individual arcs to shine.
Things didn't start to derail until Purgatory, which created fantastic scenarios, but halted the existing lore and ended in such a scripted and anti-climactic way. Three months of grief, uncertainty, and mysteries, just for Cucurucho to rescue the eggs without the parents.
CCs were so burnout from Purgatory that Foolish and Tina took a week to log back in, while Slime, Cellbit, and Baghera took several more months (excepting the latter two's participation in Purga2ry). Pol has been asked not to log in due to admins preparing lore (but it's been three months, so...), and Jaiden left entirely. Max ended his character for similar reasons.
The inaction halted a lot of arcs from before Purgatory--like Foolish investigating the worker killings and preparing to arrest Cellbit. The eye workers killed Empanada, and threatened war on Quesadilla island.
But perhaps the hastiness to wipe the server came from Forever's prominence, and after he was kicked, they wanted to eradicate his presence. Understandable, but narratively unsatisfying. That entire era was insane--we got Forever threatening the eggs as @v@ and his enigmas on Twitter, then him announcing he was quitting to go start Stonkscraft, and then his old tweets and meetings with an underage fan were revealed while he was on vacation. His three streams addressing them were all over the place, and then he got kicked.
So, in two weeks, we went from q!Forever being a terrifying and powerful presence, to him being gone but a bright future, to disillusionment, to confirmation of some reprehensible acts, to cc!Forever being gone and memories with him being sullied. That's a lot.
Then QSMP prison happened. It actually did wonders to stimulate interactions and content (the group therapy was fantastic), with Missa, ElMariana, Roier, Baghera, and Cellbit all joining despite months of absence.
But while the CCs were asked which builds they wanted to save, they were planning stuff after prison; like Pac and Mike's nearly-completed hide-and-seek arena. They had no idea the server would be wiped! Cellbit and Baghera's triumphant return from Purgatory was relegated to a cinematic. And when it was wiped, so much history and build up went with it. And the reset DISCOURAGED the resolution of old plot points. In MCRP, builds are the result of character relationships and often necessary for plot.
Q presented it as a "new era" that would welcome new fans, but it came at the expense of the old. Even CCs felt isolated; Bad had prepared his builds in accordance with his character dying, and Pierre nearly left for months because he couldn't do his lore without his mansion.
I am glad that new CCs won't feel so far behind, but...was there ever a rush? Why not give everyone a month's incentive after prison that the server will be wiped, and let them spend a month wrapping up old lore? Even if they will be able to return eventually, the momentum to continue old lore will be gone.
dear god i hope we get out of this with shirts that say i survived qsmp from November 2023-April 2024
335 notes
·
View notes
Note
este es el mejor grupal en el que he estado en mucho, mucho, mucho tiempo, muchísimas gracias por traerlo a la vida y por todo el trabajo que hacen 💐❤️
Habíamos dejado este mensaje de lado porque nos llegó de sorpresa y no supimos cómo reaccionar, pero desde el fondo de nuestros corazones te agradecemos por tomarte la molestia de venir a dejarnos palabras tan bonitas. Repetimos y lo repetiremos hasta el cansancio de que la mayor parte del crédito se lo llevan ustedes, usuarios, por mantener activo el dash y desarrollar a sus bonitos personajes de toda forma posible. Estamos encantadas de que la dinámica resulte buena hasta el momento y hayamos sabido mantener el ritmo junto a ustedes. ¡Esperamos seguir en línea por mucho tiempo más si ustedes nos permiten acompañarlos!
Sully.
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
2 notes
·
View notes