#calvin tag!!
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@blurrymango hereâs Calvin!! Itâs not perfect, but Iâm proud of it!! His boots are platforms now đ
#calvin tag!!#drawing#traditional art#gel pens#oc#oc art#blurrymangoâs oc#not my oc#redraw#minty creates đż
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Ed and Stede as Calvin and Hobbes
#ofmd#our flag means death#ofmd fanart#blackbonnet#gentlebeard#calvin & hobbes#calvin and hobbes#my art#this was fun to make tbh but it took me SO long#also this is the first time I'm using an ink pen on procreate#boyfriends#I should have a boyfriends tag#save ofmd#adopt our crew#classics redraw#ch redraw
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richey edwards / alkaline trio / calvin and hobbes / the mountain goats
#message from mirph#words tag#web weaving#calvin and hobbes#the mountain goats#alkaline trio#adulthood#growing up
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uta hagen
(divorced!art donaldson x reader; tw divorce obviously; tw sporadic mentions of violent or otherwise shitty partners; that sounds intense but this is actually a fun time i swear; cw a little smut; as a treat; tw ironic intimacy; kaz write a normal romance where one or both people aren't hypercritical of the other challenge ((impossible)); tw group therapy; tw condensing of tashi duncan's character for narrative reasons but i hope you know me well enough by now to know where my heart lies; whoever came up with the art donaldson calvin klein campaign headcanon i owe you a kidney; tw exploiting therapeutic exercises for sexual tension lol; tw hamfisted closure; raymond carver easter egg for all who have the eyes to see)
Before anything happens, Art Donaldson is just another guy in the âLearning to Let the Ex Goâ group therapy session you signed up for.
It occurs to you, pretty quickly, that Art Donaldson has zero intention of letting his ex go. Dr Harper has this question he asks all the newcomers.
Youâre having circle time with a bunch of adults on a Friday afternoon. So that look of longsuffering on the new guy's face isnât particularly remarkable. You note a few furtive whispers and glances his way. But then this sad little workshop is mostly comprised of weepy middleaged women. They, too, kicked up a ruckus when that silver fox with the HarleyâRickâdeigned to grace the room with his impossible biceps for a single, cigarettescented session two weeks ago.
What youâre saying is you know heâs handsome.
And, anyway, youâd never hold anything against your motley crew. Agnes invited you to her neighbourhood book club. Padma brings little clingwrapped trays of desserts every other week. These are your gal pals. Your bereaved bosom buddies. You wouldnât begrudge them their eye candy.
Dr Harper says, âSo,â and claps his hands the way he starts every session, narrowing his eyes with that scarily sentimental smile and sweeping his gaze around the circle. He makes a point to make eye contact with every single person for two whole seconds, as though he knows something you donât. Then, âAs you can see, we are not as few as we once were.â
He tends to speak in that meandering sort of way. He makes a flourishing gesture with his clipboard, as if setting a stage, and says,
âIf you wouldnât mind introducing yourself, and letting us knowâŚâ He pauses for effect. He tends to do that, too. â⌠Why canât you let your ex go?â
You do the guy the favour of not laving him in that expectant stare people seem to love doing here. You fiddle with your fingers and listen to the uneasy knell of his sneakers against the linoleum. The stilted whine of his little plastic foldout chair. You cast him a glance as stands. Heâs sort of tall, but not imposing. His fingers fidget at his sides like heâs awaiting a time bomb.
When he speaks, he looks so upset youâd think heâs getting a root canal. âUh, hi. Iâm Art, uh⌠just Art.���
And, at the time, you think this is kind of strange.
The next week, when Dr Harper brings a purple tennis racket with Just Artâs face on the front to get him to sign it for his daughterâwhich you already think is unprofessional and a bit presumptuous, considering how few people actually return for a second session, and how fascinatingly tortured he looked all throughout the firstâyou will think oh. And then his whole humble kicked puppy thing will feel a little annoying. But thatâs besides the point.
On that first day, while heâs standing there awkwardly, and every shriek of his shoes against the ground is making him wince like heâs sporting stab wounds, and he keeps casting very conspicuous glances at the clock, Dr Harper asks why canât you let your ex go?
And the thing about that question is itâs mostly rhetorical. Sure, itâs supposed to make you think. But the ultimate unearthing there is of the truth that there is no real reason. And such is the first step to selfactualising change and so on and so forth. You get it.
Thereâs a couple answers you come to expect. The notably lachrymose will get to weeping straight away. Because Iâm pathetic! you remember someone wailing, which made you feel like a bit of a sadist, just sitting there and watching. Youâre pretty sure youâd said a less than kind, I donât fucking know, on your first day, but youâve grown since then, and you appreciate Dr Harperâs abiding effusiveness despite that.
But Just Art releases a contrite sort of exhale and says, âBecause I still love her.â
Whichâokayâstrikes you as a bit overkill.
A tissue discreetly finds his palm, but he only rumples it into a ball.
Dr Harper nods sagely, leaning back in his seat, steepling his fingers under his chin.
âGo on,â he prompts in that gentle, needling way he does.
You donât Google him. You donât really need to. Dr Harper keeps intentionally-unintentionally peppering sporadic little pearls of information about him into conversation like some sort of bizarre BINGO game.
Likeâfor exampleâwhen heâs passing out little notepads and outlining your task of writing unflinchingly honest farewell letters to your exes, he tacks on, ââitâll be tough, but itâs no Wimbledon, am I right, Donaldson?â
And Just Artâs ears will turn a dazzling shade of crimson.
You file these little tidings away in some less important corner of your mind, passively constructing a criminal profile.
Padma brings her son to a session, which youâre pretty sure sheâs not allowed to do. Luckily, the kid doesnât internalise any of Padmaâs scathing anecdotes about his father because heâs too busy marvelling at his own freshly signed Art Donaldson racket.
There seems to be a new racket to sign every week.
You doubt people actually give this much of a shit about tennis. Butâanywayâyou suppose if fucking Michael Cera rocked up and joined the circle, everyone would be hauling a Superbad poster out from some dusty corner, too. Such is the nature of celebrity.
Dr Harper, for one, appreciates the effervescence. He seems to think the mere presence of a famous athlete will motivate everyone in the room to face with renewed fervour their own pathetic little romantic quagmires.
Well, itâs that, or a strange personal infatuation he houses with the guy. Probably both.
You donât Google him. You donât Google him, nor his conceivably equally famous exwife. You donât need to. Dr Harper seems to think it necessary to give you all regular progress reports on that whole imbroglio.
You know thereâs newsâperhaps unfortunate newsâby the colour of Dr Harperâs voice when he says, haltingly, âAnd Art⌠how have you been doing?â
By the severity with which Dr Harper nods as Art reads his letter. (âTashi,â he begins, and one of those not so furtive whispers ricochets around the room, another tissue in his hand; you think itâs Agnes whoâs slipping them).
By the abject enthusiasm with which Dr Harper declares what real progress Art is making. Like heâs one of those zoo animals being parallelreared with a human child, and heâs starting to glean the art of speech without being prompted.
This is all saying something, for whom you know to be an already colourful, severe, enthusiastic Dr Harper.
What you gather is a vague impression that Artâs exwife tortured him psychologically by wielding his body and tennis career as serrated edges by which to flay their marriage intricately, slowly. And then thereâs something about her repeatedly sleeping with his exbestfriend? Whichâbig whoop. Eleanorâs boyfriend tried to kill her, which you feel is a marginally more exceptional love story.
A month in, you realise whatâs really bothering you is the untruth.
Art Donaldson has zero intention of letting his ex go. He still loves her. He opened with that.
He reads his letter (that reads a lot more like a draft for vow renewals) aloud to the room. Everyone looks at him with these misty eyes like heâs just chainsawed his chest open and wrested his heart from his arteries while simultaneously reciting Sappho.
Which is to sayâand youâre no doctor, butâwhat fucking progress?
You donât think youâre the patron saint of therapy or anything. But youâve paid decent money to be here, and youâve spent more afternoons than youâd stomach admitting on guided meditation. Youâre doing The Work, as they say.
You get it; you do. Losing a relationship can feel like a death. Losing yours certainly felt like the Sun had imploded. But Eleanorâyouâll mention againâcould be dead. Your jaded inner voice struggles to identify with this probably deplorably wealthy Adonis who can't seem to cut the racket strings.
So you think itâs a little irresponsible to glorify the abject pining of this crestfallen man. All flaxenhaired and broadshouldered like Prince Charming lamenting bedside of Sleeping Beauty.
This is a class about severance.
Art Donaldson seems to weave himself inextricably around something. The love of his wife, sure, thatâs obvious enough. But thereâs something. Something. Something very sad, sure, but not sad in the way youâre all so sad around here. A different kind of sad.
Youâre trying to figure it out.
So you spend some time doing that. Trying to figure him out. You expect to start to hate him the more you stare. The more you note the weird slope of his nose, his selfdeprecating laughter.
But you donât.
In fact, you find it delightfully, uncomfortably strange. He carries himself like an interloper to despair. Not like he thinks heâs above it necessarilyâyouâd thought that (reproachfully) for a whileârather like sadness is one of many things stored at the other side of the city, and he keeps missing the train.
Like these brilliant sorrowers are deigning to include him in their orbit, even though he doesnât belong. If he remains silent, maybe they wonât notice that heâs not one of them. Better yet, conceivably, heâll actually belong one day.
Thatâs what itâs like. Like heâs striving for sorrow. Like heâs working with something worse than sorrow and is saying, you know what? Iâd rather take the sorrow.
In the exercise youâre doing this week, youâre supposed to personage your ex and act out your final argument. Take your scene partnerâs hands and look into their eyes and everything. Dr Harper makes a big deal about how he's not trying to trigger anyone's relationship trauma, but that feels like a lie. You canât imagine a productive reason to make a bunch of lonely, divorced adults hold hands in a cruel parody of their last brush with fleshdeep connection.
And anyway, fuck this shit.
That doesnât mean you wonât communicate circles around it. Youâre doing The Work, after all.
But fuck it hard.
His hands sort of swallow yours. They are warm and calloused and a little sweaty.
You were, at first, excited by the idea of this proximity. Excited in the way a cultural anthropologist would be, at the prospect of conducting participant research. But now youâre here. Sitting at the edges of your little plastic foldout chairs. Your knees between his. And his fingers are curled pretty firmly around yours. He looks about as comfortable as a grade schooler called to the chalkboard. And youâre the one whoâs been sitting around observing him from a distance and gleaning your data and passing your judgement all this time, but it is he who makesâand holdsâeyecontact.
His eyes are dusky and intentâmolten navyâlike heâs seeing past your skin and bone. And you are less than pleased by this subversion.
So when he shifts and his knee brushes your outer thigh, a potent shock of heat resounding through the denim, and he clears his throat and mumbles, âSorry,â you say,
âYou could back up a bit.â
His expression falters. You must admit, there is something alluring in his being disappointed by your little rejection. Anyone looking at it from the outside would find the whole thing pretty ludicrous. That you could say no, that he would even ask.
Dr Harper comes up and puts his hands atop both your heads, which feels more than a little patronising. He squats to be eye level between the two of you and whispers, âDo you know why I paired you two together?â
For a moment, you almost roll your eyes. When all is said and done, and the skull speaks and the bell tolls, your primary takeaway from your time Learning to Let the Ex Go is that Dr Harper has a spectacular penchant for assigning meaning where there is absolutely none.
If he paired you with Art based on eyelash hue, would he come up with some reason for that? Probably, you think.
But what he says next manages to throw you.
âYou twoâŚâ he begins, pausing for effect. Because, of course. And Art shifts his weight uncomfortably, quite literally wincing as he accidentally bumps your knee again. He glances fleetingly in your direction, ears gone florid, but you have little time to delight in this before Dr Harper stands up straight again and delivers his verdict, â⌠have the same problem.â
You make a face like you have just seen a lizard eat a bird.
And fucking Art, of all people, has this look in his eyes, this look thatâs almost hopeful. Like some explanation is finally to be offered for what the hell is wrong with you.
And you donât care for that shit. At all.
You bark out a laugh. âI donât think so.â
Which is, of course, when Dr Harperâs gaze sharpens like a scalpel and locks on you, like youâve said exactly what he predicted you would say.
Which you care for even less.
He doesnât look smug. Not exactly. He doesnât even look vindicated. The only way to describe that look on his face is total delight. Cat with the canary in his maw.
Art seems very committed to staring at the ground, now. Trying, perhaps, to evade something of a brewing storm. Youâre tempted to reach up and flick his head for his cowardice, but his hands areâvery tightly, now, youâll noteâstill holding yours.
âYou two are both at mercy to judgement,â Dr Harper declares, and heâs still got your head in his palm like a basketball, and all that selfregulatory yoga feels fucking useless right about now.
You shift to look up at him better. âIâm not at mercy to judgement,â you inform him as calmly as you are able, and maybe youâre disproving his point in this moment by being so affected by this analysis, but you sincerely believe that youâre generally pretty hardwearing.
Dr Harper pauses for effect. âYou are at mercy to your own judgement...â Another pause. And youâre about to tell him thatânice fucking try, butâyouâre actually a remarkably selfassured person who rarely, if ever, gives yourself to negative selftalk. But then, â... Of others.â
And now it occurs to you that the fucking room has gone silent. And you feel like your eyes have all but crossed in simmering anger. Becauseâokayâeveryone here is crazy, and miserable, and a little fucking pathetic, but youâve prided yourself on being the least crazy one here.
And fuck.
Fuck if youâre not proving his point right now.
When you open your mouth to argueâbecause you are going to disagree, if only for the sake of disagreeingâArt Donaldsonâs fingers screw up firmer around yours, like heâs some sort of sentient lie detector, and youâre about to ask him where the fuck he gets off, but Dr Harper isnât done.
He turns, now, to Art.
âAnd youâŚâ he says. Youâre getting seasick with all the pausing. âDonaldson. Youâre at mercy to othersâ judgements of you, my man.â
So Art, you see out of the corner of your eye, looks like heâd rather debone himself than be sitting here.
And fine.
Okay.
Letâs all agree that that much is true. That Art Donaldson lives and dies by the judgement of others, and you live and die in the name of it. Fine.
Even so, you canât help but think that these are directly antithetical problems to have.
And, in practice, if youâre a callous shrew, and heâs an open wound, youâll probably kill him. Or something.
But now Dr Harperâs pushing your heads together like a ref before a rugby match. And he crouches down again. And Artâs nose brushes yours, and your lash swipes his cheek, and you can smell the coffee Dr Harper was just drinking.
And he says, âLet. First serve.â
Then he stands again and pats Artâs shoulder like theyâre old friends, and gives a wink to the room at large.
He saunters away. Art looks like someone is pointing a gun to his head. But really itâs just yourâheartlessly selfrighteous, apparentlyâforehead still against his. His skin is feverwarm.
You pull away.
Of course no one takes the exercise seriously.
In its defense, you think, thereâs very little that goes down in this room that can be veritably labelled a âseriousâ event. Most of itâthe guided meditations, the writing exercises, Dr Harperâs entire vibeâfeels like you happened to miss some crazy event that tore reality asunder and tipped you over into a sadistically tragicomedic alternate universe.
But if you all were to sincerely sit here, knees to knees with mourning strangers, and concretise this litany of other strangers who have wounded you all irrevocably in different waysâshitâHarperâd be sitting with a fetid heap of weeping corses.
Soâwell.
Eleanorâs chasing Ally around the hall with a her fingers hoisting an invisible shiv yelling, I love you, I love you, you bitch. Which is certainly one way to contend with a murderous exlover, you guess.
Padma and Colin are treating this as a gossip session. You can tell because you can hear that delighted peal of laughter she emits whenever someone interjects one of herâdeeply engrossing, by the wayâcaustic vignettes about her exhusband with a little observational jab at the guy.
Most people are laughing. Or making fun. You catch fleeting dregs of remarkably hilarious conversation from all angles and are reminded why you keep coming back here.
The only person, however, who seems to have really taken Dr Harperâs thought experiment to the harp of his heartâmuch to your horrorâis Art Donaldson.
He sets his elbows on his knees and leans forward. You get a waft of him. Something acerbic like citrus, and maybe pine. He blinks up at you with this almost regrettable intensity. Like heâs about to tell you that he has to pull your teeth. But heâs not thrilled about it. Youâre still deciding if youâre flattered by the notion. Heâs looking at you like heâs trying to glean the pattern of your sinew with his eyes alone.
âIâll be you,â he says, his voice low and soft. And thereâs a hoarse quality to it, like heâs just run up a staircase.
Youâre suddenly very aware of all the noise around the two of you. The laughter, the bedlam. Something faintly percussive.
His thumbs swipe over your knuckles, which youâre hoping is an absent thing.
You blink. Your face is overcast with a less than kind, more than unimpressed glower.
âYouâre serious?â you deadpan.
He looks serious as the end times. His fingers twitch around yours. You feel his knuckles like piano keys against your palm.
Dr Harper has essentially told this man that you have something he doesnât. Something he needs. And nowâwith a tenacity you can only imagine churns through his bones by roteâhe seems determined to find it.
Heâs gripping your hands like youâre the fucking racket.
He leans down further, elbows pressing into his thighs, and his face gets alarmingly close to your fingers. A whisper of heat against your nailbeds.
When his tongue dips out to swipe the chapped coral edge of his upper lip, you nearly flinch, because you think that wet will touch you. But it doesnât.
He peers up at you intently. You see the way his throat shifts under his wan skin as he swallows.
âIâm as serious as you want me to be,â he says. He is absurdly sincere, but also something else.
Your brows twitch, and you frown, because you are now realising that, even after several weeks of careful observation, you do not have even a remote understanding of this man to speak of. You feel like an academic whose thesis has just been rejected, and now theyâre back to square one of some miserable odyssey. Moreover, this is all just unutterably ridiculous, so you sigh and roll your eyes and shift in your seat, your knee knocking against his inner thigh.
âFine,â you say, âYou be me.â
Artâs face is set in what you first think is determination, but are incredibly unnerved to discover is him getting into character. Heâs trying to emulate that vaguely bitter perennial scowl of yours. He looks like a bitchâwhich means heâs pretty fucking dead on.
Youâre almost impressed.
Of course, he still looks sad. Thereâs a vulnerability his mimicry cannot conceal. But you think heâs finding something cathartic in wearing the hue of your passive vitriol.
You tell him to express a perfectly reasonable grievance to youâand you yourself are now rolling your shoulders and slinking into the ethos of a gaslighting assholeâlike how you never wash the dishes. Like, ever.
He clears his throat.
âYou never do the dishes.â
You swallow.
âRightâŚâ you murmur.
Youâre still a little facetious about this whole thing, but there is that intensity in his gaze that wrests you into the moment like a fervid point of gravity.
âWell, now Iâas my exâwould probably tell youââ You roll your eyes again, but now it is at the memory youâre unsheathing. ââoh, youâre being dramatic. I was just about to do them. Why are you always on my ass?â
And Artâs nose wrinkles, like the memory is offensive to him, too.
He looks you over like a sawbones trying to determine a patientâs symptoms. Mapping out the incision.
âThen Iâyouâwould sayâŚâ Heâs speaking really slowly, too. Like heâs giving you the chance to object where you see fit, on grounds of mischaracterisation. âI would say that you always say youâre going to do all kinds of things. But you never actually do them.â
âExactly!â you blurt, kneejerk. But then you catch yourself. Flex your fingers a bit in his. Clear your throat and put on your best impression of a total dolt again. âOkayâoh, maybe youâre too busy focusing on the little stuff I donât do to recognise the large sacrifices I make for our relationship.â
He scoffs.
Itâs your scoff. A facsimile of that incredulous ire you seem to always be evincing. Itâs deeply disturbing.
âWhat sacrifices?â You canât tell whoâs asking.
âWââ You falter. Swallow. It takes you a momentâlike youâre emerging from deep waterâto answer, as your ex, âWell, I moved here, didnât I? Packed up all my shit and left my friends, my family, fucking everything. To be with you.â
âI didnât ask you to move.â
âYou didnât,â you confirm quickly. And you canât tell whoâs saying that, either. But you put on the voice again, and say, âYou didnât. But I still did it for you. And I donât think youâve ever said thank you. Or sorry.â
A beat.
Your hands go slack in his. You sigh. âYou never say sorry.â
Artâs eyes search you like a probe.
Your shoulders are stonerigid and the blood is rushing like torrent through your ears becauseâsomehowâthis feels uncomfortably like a fight. Like that fight. And your body seems keen on adjusting the scoreboard accordingly.
His thumbs rub your knuckles again, in a way that feels a lot less idle this time.
âIâm still not going to say sorry,â he guesses with a marginal tentativeness, but a general certainty in his assessment.
You swallow again. âYeah,â you rasp, âYouâre not.â
It occurs to you that this exercise is a little like immolation.
Heâs supposed to be acting like you. But heâs acting like you at your worst, and doing soâto his creditâa little more accurately than youâd like to admit.
It strikes you as unfair. And excoriating. And you picture yourself tackling Dr Harper to the ground and choking him out.
And then Art says, âWeâve been having this fight forâŚ?â
âTwo months,â you mumble. Youâre not even doing the voice anymore.
Art clicks his teeth, a sentimental crease at the corner of his eye. âI think we should break up.â
You sigh. âYeah, probably.â
âItâll be really hard for me.â
A guess again, but then youâre here. Doing The Work. Holding hands and roleplaying. Itâs not inconceivable that you didnât take the breakup exceptionally.
Your lip twitches. âYouâll survive.â
He pushes off his elbows and sits up straight, his knees sidling fully around your thighs, now unashamed. He gives you a look. A different one. His mouth purses to the side in some alloy of pensive amusement, a dimple delved into his cheek. His gaze coruscates with a deep cornflower intrigue.
âI think I will, actually,â he says finally.
And he has the nerve to smile. Revoltingly soft and sympathetic.
He gives your hands a parting squeeze before dropping them in your lap, his chair scraping loud the linoleum as he backs off.
You call your ex that night.
âHey, listen,â you say, âSorry.â
Dr Harperâs probably somewhere creaming his pants so fervently as to have rendered himself numb in a state of gleeful stupor.
âHey,â husks your exâwho, for his flaws, has always been more magnanimous than youâbefore chuckling, âNo worries.â You can hear that easy smile of a life unburdened by you in his voice.
Which is fine.
âHow are you?â he asks then, âYou good? You surviving?â
You smile wryly. You feel like youâve been flogged by four consecutive eighteenwheelers. âI think I will, actually.â
You Google Art Donaldson.
Youâre having a drink with Eleanor and Ally and Colin and a few others from the group, and youâre basically shitting all over the whole programme in a very hush-hush sort of way because you all know what an Opportunity For Growth this has been, when Art walks into the bar and spots your table and nods at the whole gang. The mood quickly shifts. Excitement, sure, but a collective wordless agreement that the lighthearted gossip between real friends ends here. You feel bad. Itâs not his fault.
Art slides into your booth with beer floats and greets Colin, whoâs looking at him with a senexâs disdain because he was just telling you all how heâs thinking of getting hair plugs. Again, not Artâs fault.
Artâs in camouflage, with his baseball hat and T-shirt, which you think is unnecessary becauseâagainâyouâre still quite certain no one gives enough of a shit about tennis as to recognise him in a bar.
When he slides into the boothâinto the space between you and Colinâheâs careful to leave a distance between the two of you. Which you only really notice at all because youâre acutely aware of exactly how much space occupies the expanse between the two of you at any given instance.
A bunch of people at the table are already looking at him like heâs some sort of foreign dignitary.
You donât think athletes are necessarily charming by nature, and you refuse to give Art Donaldson that kind of credit, but he doesnât have to try very hard to make himself agreeable to everyone.
He buys a round for the whole group. He asks after jobs, and the state of marriage, and family, and life. He seems sincere enough.
You all start chatting about the various horrific relationships that lead you here, as though they were all particularly uninteresting ham and cheese sandwiches. Colinâs exfiancĂŠe diagnosed with early onset dementia. Allyâs exgirlfriend developing a heroin habit. Youâve all jabbed and scrutinised these woes to deflated nothingness, by now. None of it hurts anymore. Is that the whole point? You still donât know.
No one knows by what fancy Dr Harper pushes you all about in his great cosmic dance of personal selfimprovement.
You do know that Art remains quiet. Generally inconspicuous, but then youâre you, so youâre paying attention. And you donât think he should get to sit there like an archaeologist recording the fossils of your collective melancholy, as though his own warm and living bones are out of the question.
Maybe you all can pull up the People.com article, A Comprehensive Timeline of Art and Tashi Donaldsonâs Perfect Relationship and Messy Divorce, and have it contribute to the conversation.
Eleanorâs telling a story about the time her ex wrested her from bed and lobbed her out of the house at 2 AM in midwinter.
âAnd we lived in Duluth,â Eleanorâs saying, and sheâs laughing in that disconcertingly manic way she does when she shares these things. âAnd I sleep halfnaked, so Iâm fighting frostbite, and Iâm just totally mortified that one of my neighbours will see me.â
âThereâs nothing embarrassing about being halfnaked,â Ally shrugs.
And then you say, âHa, yeah, I mean Art would know.â
Artâwho, until now, looked like he was studiously contemplating the meniscus of his beer, or the grain of the tableâflicks his gaze up to you.
You snort. âWhat, Iâm supposed to act like everyone here hasnât seen you oiled up and smouldering to the camera for Calvin Klein?â
A brief hush descends upon the table like a falling guillotine.
Then, laughter.
Eleanor snorts her gin and soda with such force that she coughs for a solid minute afterwards. Thereâs tears in her eyes and Colin is laughing at her and Ally is laughing at them both. And Art looks as embarrassed as a woman strewn porchside in her panties in midwinter in Duluth.
Andâokay.
You were trying to be tongueincheek about it. But his discomfort levels are seemingly off the charts. He doesnât know how to react and it makes him unhappy. Clearly, ten and something years of public scrutinyâand, in your defense, actually doing that photoshootâhave not prepared him for this moment.
You lean forward and awkwardly bump his fist with yours. âHey, Iâm kidding.â
But youâre not, because it was technically true.
âI thought it was artistic,â says Ally.
Eleanor, still crying laughing, âWhat, the fullpage spread of him fully waxed and laid out on a clay court surrounded by Great Danes?â
âSomeone paid attention,â Colin chuckles, and Eleanor erupts into vibrant giggles again. Colin gives Art a courtesy clap on the shoulder before saying to Ally, âMaybe Iâm old fashioned, but a Billboard of a guy wearing whities so tightie you can see his dickprint isnât exactly Starry Night. But maybe I donât get it.â
âYou donât have to worry too much about that. The art has to get you,â Ally says, pointing at him with a fry. Ally studied theatre. âI mean, we are the most complicated machinery in our lives. You have to take yourself seriously to do something like that.â
Everyoneâs looking at Art like heâs some kind of colourful textbook.
Itâs not often people sit beside a guy of whom they can confidently guess the naked physique.
And maybe youâre thinking that, too; you brought it up, after all. His arms look strong in his T-shirt sleeves. Not, like, bodybuilder strong. But lean and cut. And thereâs a sort of animal grace to his movements. Like a fox, or something. Even as his ears burn a practically neon shade of carmine in the dim lighting.
He clears his throat. âI doubt anyone took that seriously,â he says dryly, the corner of his mouth ruefully, if hardly, upturned.
Eleanor shoves Ally playfully, swiping her tears away in a blissful mascara smear. âMy God Al, will you stop scaring him with your Uta Hagen spiel?â
The conversation meanders to other topics. Fringe stuff, briefly, like the societal implications of male sexuality and modern advertising. But then things branch off entirelyâThe Fast and the Furious franchise, artificial intelligence, Colinâs stepsonâs career aspirations of becoming a TikTok street interviewer. Et cetera.
You hope Art isnât looking at you when you chance a glance his way, but when have you ever been so lucky?
So heâs looking at you. He looks at you like heâs taking inventory of you at your expense. He gives a slow blink, an almost imperceptible smile, then he lifts his beer towards you and takes a swig.
At the end of the night, he asks for your number, which feels like a boot to the loins. Not because itâs profoundly unbelievable. Maybe a little surprising, but, if anything, itâs the conclusion youâve halfanticipated all night. Thatâs the way heâs been looking at you, at least. Itâs just the finality of it all.
But what are you gonna say? No?
You call him that night.
âHey, listen,â you say, âSorry.â
God, what have they done to you?
Art, on the other end of the line, presumably lounging in his stately mansion, remains cautiously silent. You sigh like youâre losing something here.
âI hope I didnât upset you,â you say, but realise your tone is too grudging, so you adjust, âI got awkward, I was trying to be funny. Which we both know by now that Iâm not. Iâm just a bitch. So, I just wanted to say⌠you obviously look fucking amazing. And your shoot was great. Everyone can see that.âÂ
You swallow the dryness in your throat.
Art makes his own pained noise across the receiver. âEveryone?â he groans, and you cannot tell if youâre imagining the fleeting hue of amusement you discern there. âPlease no.â
âI donât know what you want me to say here.â
âYou called me,â he scoffs. Itâs a good scoff, if such a thing can be said. But he still sounds pretty incredulous with you, and not in a way that says he thinks you a moral paragon. You think he thinks youâre a bit of a monster. Which doesnât offend you, actually. âTo apologise.â
âAnd I did!â
âOkay?â
A silence befalls you like a yawning maw, stretching out. He could hang up on you. He doesnât.
âLook, you can internalise the things I say at your own risk,â you say.
âYouâre telling me.â
âBut it was a nice photoshoot. And, you know⌠pretty hot and stuff, which I guess was the intended purpose.â
You feel like a corpse whose arteries are being drained of blood and filled with embalming fluid.
âPretty hot and stuff?â he echoes. You roll your eyes.
If youâre lucky, heâs tipsy, because you guys didnât only indulge in beer floats. So, maybeâby Godâs impossible mercyâheâll have forgotten this conversation in the morning.
âIââ you hesitate, adding a small laugh, kind of hoarse, kind of unconvincing. âIâhonestlyâI canât stop watching it.â
Itâs not a joke, you both realise.
His voice drops an octave. âReally?â
Andâfuck. Fuck, right? But youâve made it this far.
âReally.â
You feel his eyes on you, not Tashi. Harper has you all thronged around a burn barrel in the community centre parking lot at 8 PM on a Wednesday. Scintillating honeygold flames lick at the night and shadow his face at pretty angles. And heâs reading his letterâthat letterâand looking at you.
Thatâs bad.
This is supposed to be a cathartic and utterly sexless exercise in closure.
But you feel like a filthy fraud.
Youâre crossing your arms, and blinking off the flameheat, and pretending not to stare at the scarp of his Adamâs apple and his tendons working beneath the skin of his hands.
He clears his throat, and his lips are moving like heâs trying not to laugh.
âTashi,â he starts.
Her name, when he says it, still sounds like a tender orison. But last time heâd been reciting this thing, his eyes had been all flushed, raw, and misty, his voice abraded at its edges. NowâwellâAgnes hasnât slipped him a tissue in weeks.
âI still loveâ do we have to do this again? Canât I just throw it in?â
The group sputters into giggles. You donât know who brought the sweet Moscato.
Dr Harper pinches his nosebridge like an enervated preschool teacher. You think he, of all people, ought to be pleasedâand you suspect he furtively is, but doesnât want to discourage your good spirits with his approvalâbecause, as much as youâre loathed to acknowledge it, all his forcible, unwelcome attempts at conjuring vulnerability amongst the lot of you have actually kind of worked.
The fire warms your brows to dampness, the saccharine acidity of the spirit seeping through your flesh and sweltering the rest of you. You shouldâve worn a thinner sweater.
âArt,â says Dr Harper, âYour feelings are valid. Evenââ The group interjects with a smattering of jeers, a slurred, densetongued amalgam of fuck you! and get a life, Harper! and other stuff to that effect. ââeven your reluctance.â
The flames thrash deep indigo and copper. No one can quit laughing.
Dr Harper continues, âBut the whole point of the exercise isââ
âCome on, Doc, weâre still pretending these exercises have points?â someone heckles.
âWeâre still calling these exercises?â says someone else.
âHurry up and cry already, Donaldson, I got work tomorrow.â
âAlright, alright,â Art raises a hand and everyone wanes to a simmer of firewarm drunken murmurs as though heâs some sort of Biblical king.
You roll your eyes, but you keep thinking of Great Danes on tennis courts and tightiewhities.
Everyone cheers like this is fucking Madison Square Garden when Art holds his hand out for the bottle, teeth scintillating in the pyreglow with a wry slanting smile.
He takes a long, healthy swig. You think you hear someone whistle. His lips gleam with moisture when they pop off the glass bottlemouth.
âYou wanna see me cry?â he grins, eminently rueful and amused and resigned, all at once.
And everyone hurrahs and hollers and maybe some people even bark. Heâs being pushed around affectionately from all angles. His gaze is sharp and garlanded by flames and trained on you. You raise your brows at him wryly, perhaps a little dubious, before lifting your hands and joining in the applause.
He clears his throat and sweeps his tongue over his upper lip and flicks the paper out like a Shakespearean scroll.
âTashi,â he starts again.
You watch the fire lave and singe and swallow all your bitter, pathetic epistles.
Tashi.
I still love you. Iâm still sorry. For something, or everything. For anything, really. Itâs mostly okay, but itâs worse at night. And on weekends, and with Lily, and when the microwave starts making that shitty sound that you hated.
I miss you deep in my bones. Iâ
The flames scorch his words to flickering cinders.
You look at him, and he looks at you, and his bottom lashes glisten with tears. But heâs grinning widely. Heâs laughing. Heâs laughing a lot. Padma sings âAuld Lang Syneâ, for some reason.
The goodbyes are a little maudlin, but sincere.
Itâs time for you to all go home and actually get over your exes, which feels a bit jilting.
Art walks you to your car, and you let him, and you even let him get in your car, which is probably not a good idea. But itâs the end of the stupid workshop and you want to spend more time together. There, you can admit it.
You even say it out loud.
âIâm gonna miss this corny bullshit.â
âYeah, me too,â he says, a little more quiet.
When the middle backseat belt buckle is digging sharply into your hip, and heâs got you pinned beneath him, and his hands are everywhereâseriously, it seems he was just waiting for your permission, because heâs squeezing all the flesh he can reach, slipping his hands under your shirt, between your thighs, just absolutely no decorum on this guyâyou think to yourself, this motherfucker.
A spherule of spearmint gum slips from his mouth and into yours.
Youâd thought, too, that heâd be more deft with this. And he is, but heâs also very clunky. Maybe because your carâs quite small. Heâs not huge, but he is still fairly tall and broad and trying to fit himself between your thighs while covering you with his body in this small space, so itâs a bit chaotic. You donât really mind.
Andâyesâyou have thought about it.
Thereâs a shot of him, in the Calvin Klein campaign, sprawled across the court in greyscale, his hand resting on his middle, his other arm above his head.
You know they edit those photos. That thereâs some kid, fresh out of graphic design school, rubbing one out while airbrushing these halfnaked men to oblivion. But you now seeâfeel, more than see, really; thereâs a streetlight nearby, but itâs blown, so youâre all touchâthat such satin cannot be contrived. He really is that smooth. Thereâs not a bit of fat on him, but heâs oddly liquidfeeling, skin sloughing off like cream.
Heâs always looked almost uncomfortably boyish to you. But youâre realising now that thereâs an abrasiveness to his haggard breathing, and that potent, vaguely olid, mannish fume to his skin.
It's really doing it for you.
In that shot, he was lying right beside the polyethylene net and the sun was beaming down, searing alabaster, through the lattice, at an angle that splayed shadows all across him. The lines warping over the slopes of his body.
You feel the phantom crisscross of those shadows between your thighs now.
His eyes are still a little wet. He tells you heâs wanted to do this since he saw you giving him the jettatura while he was signing that racket for Harper's daughter. He also tells you he bets youâve wanted to do this since you saw him in tightiewhities lying under a tennis net.
Can he be your tennis net?
You donât even know what that means.
You laugh a little, but then he slips a finger inside you and latches his mouth to your pulse, and it is hot as magma, and you forget all about Great Danes and apologies and fires.
You would think they do some computer magic to make the cocks look bigger in those things, too.
They donât.
To be fair, he doesnât have some kind of doubletake worthy, John Holmes ordeal or anything, in the pictures. But the slope beneath the cotton, the bend of his hips like the handle of a water pitcher, all that pearlescent skinâso what if your saliva gathered on your tongue as you leaned in (way too closely) toward your laptop screen?
You feel especially shameless now as he slides into you.
Sure, the buckle is a bitch and the seatleatherâs sort of chafing your ass and your elbowâs in a cup holder. But you take furtive pleasure in thinking that some peopleâs fantasies about him probably go like this.
The softest thing is his hand cupping the back of your neck, dragging your head up. Itâs a weird contrast to the way his dick is pumping erratically in and out of you. Like heâs trying to control himself, maybe add a little romance.
You keep your eyes open to watch the way his body moves. Fuck it, you wanna see what all the fuss is about.
The talented Mr Ripley whose volleys (and probably orgasms) are intensive, frenetic affairs of selfpersuasion. Unless, of course, heâs fucking the random, judgy woman he met in a group therapy session. In this particular caseâthough laboured all the sameâhe comes harder and slower and you hear his panting groans in your ear as you shudder through your own pleasure.
He pulls your hips closer and empties himself in you and you rub yourself against him and you try to keep your eyes open, but, ultimately, you concede that you can only experience this pleasure in the dark.
You keep feeling his muscles work beneath your hands, though.
Dr Harper strongly recommends that you two not start seeing each other. He does just about everything but get on his knees and beg. And even that he nearly does. He reminds you that, on your Vision Tree, you mapped yourself single for at least the next two years.
But Art says heâs had enough of other people saying whatâs good for him.
And your Vision Tree also forecasted you taking up jogging, whichâcome on.
#challengers#art donaldson#art donaldson x reader#art donaldson angst#art donaldson fluff#art donaldson smut#the art donaldson calvin klein campaign is canon to me#challengers fic#uta hagen was team tashi#dr harper is his own trigger warning#i am actually an artashi divorce denier#but i was too compelled by this idea#tightiewhities#tag yourself iâm eleanor trauma dumping on a fun night out
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quote from boy stabbed
#bobs burgers#Felix is lefthanded now totally on purpose and not on me poorly planning during the sketch phase#calvin fischoeder#felix fischoeder#anyway! i hc them as younger than this when it happened but choose easy street and based this off that one photo in the movie#aww baby fisch#blood cw#i tagged the blood but if you feel this needed more cw tell me
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i actually didnât know about this piece of lore (x)
#seen the picture didnât know the story#also shoutout to swiftiekyle#calvin harris#<- yes i used that tag in the year of our lord 2023#arshia talks
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uhh hahahah
original image:
#thsc#thsc charles calvin#thsc ellie rose#charles calvin#ellie rose#the henry stickmin collection#nonomikun#rosevin#?#i mean i love putting ship tags when characters are barely interacting
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Toxic yaoi
(I feel like Cal would frustrate Andre all the time just to take up space and get his attention)
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silly stick doodles <3
#my art#the henry stickmin collection#thsc#henry stickmin#charles calvin#ellie rose#rupert price#dave panpa#sven svensson#burt curtis#right hand man#reginald copperbottom#hubert galeforce#polythreat#stickvin#rosemin#curtisson#panprice#copperright#wow that's a lotta tags#i probably forgot smth but oh well
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The nefarious anglerrr
(Click for quality, tumblr sucks) Original Pic under cut
#calvinâs creations#digital art#my art#procreate#Roblox pressure#sebastian solace#sebastian pressure#the nefarious anglerfish#meme edit#|||#saw someone tag the image as Sebastian and it all went from there. may do another one of these#someone's probably already done it but oh well.
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HAPPY 4TH ANNIVERSARY THSC!!!
It may seem like I'm new to this fandom, but I'm not. I got super into thsc about 4 years ago (which is when it released), and kinda had fun with it. Unfortunately, I don't have the history that some people have with this game, and that does make me kinda sad, but I'm glad to be here anyway!
I hope that I continue to fixate on this fandom for weeks in the future. I'm just having that much fun!
4 years is crazy. I can hold that on one hand, man.
I do have some extra stuff to share as well. For example, my oc's trying to celebrate the anniversary.
And failing. Carter dropped the cake. XD
It's okay, though. Devin is making him feel better with terrible puns and jokes.
That's all! Please enjoy your day!
#The drawing at the top took me 7 hours to finish#I struggled for a bit to decide what style to do it in#and I eventually landed on a style similar to the one in the game#There a lot of tags for me to go through so have fun!#art#henry stickmin collection#digital art#thsc#right hand man#reginald copperbottom#thsc fanart#thsc oc#the henry stickmin collection#henry stickmin rhm#henry stickmin oc#henry stickmin#henry stickmim collection#4th anniversary#thsc ellie rose#ellie rose#thsc charles calvin#charles calvin#ctm#Carter Miller(thscoc)#Devin Copperbottom(thscoc)#Carson Miller(thscoc)#man that was a lot...
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general weaponry favicons made by me ,, send requests NOW !
to do list under the cut
2 :: more zero day favis
#andre kriegman#cal gabriel#calvin gabriel#zero day#zero day 2003#favicons#rentry resources#pixels#graphics#rentry graphics#black favicons#what else do i tag
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This trend but make it stick
#thsc#thsc fanart#the henry stickmin collection#oh here come the tags#henry stickmin#henry stickmin fanart#charles calvin#thsc charles calvin#ellie rose#thsc ellie rose#thsc henry stickmin#sven svensson#thsc sven svensson#carol cross#thsc carol cross#toppat ellie#rhm#thsc rhm#burt curtis#thsc burt curtis#reginald copperbottom#thsc right hand man#thsc reginald copperbottom#full color??? from NICKEL?? since when???#also guess this is debut of my Sven and carol designs lol#I also reworked my rhm design a lil bit#he is indeed wearing chaps#ALSO THANK GOODNESS THE TOPPATS COME IN SO MANY DIFF COLORS#I WAS LOOKING FOR CHARACTERS AND IT WAS ALL SHADES OF GREEN BLUE AND GRAY#thank GOODNESS the Toppats have fashion sense
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theres something weird in rosswood park...
#sep.obj#marble hornets#mh#mh hoody#mh masky#jay merrick#tim wright#brian thomas#alex kralie#calvin and hobbes#peanuts#troy wagner let me illustrate a comic cover or smth for u challenge#also im reposting this to see if itll actually show up in the tags
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The Calvin brothers try to convince Rupert to give up Johnny.
[Cameron belongs to @rarestdoge !]
#got inspired by the pleading in your tags and wanted to make a follow-up coming AFSGDSDF#thsc#the henry stickmin collection#thsc rupert price#thsc johnny panzer#thsc charles calvin#thsc oc#comic#art#johnny if you dont want rupert to lose ya you got to STAY UNDER THAT HAT!!!!!
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edits of a bunch of honkai stuff into whatever this is (sticks)
og pics
#thsc#henry stickmin#the henry stickmin collection#charles calvin#ellie rose#hubert galeforce#should i tag this as honkai impact...#ah whatever#honkai impact#calvin bukowski#konrad bukowski#dave panpa#rupert price#victoria grit#gerald gruff#billy brown#how do i tag these editsâŚ#a-u edit stuff#there is Lore for the first and third edits btw#though if you lnow the context for the third you basicslly know whats happening#apart from the. herrscher thing.#cant really classify them as doodles so..#not even sure if i should tag the 3rd one as stickvin buuuuuuuuuttttt#the lore kinda makes it That so.
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