#efe can
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sadecelere · 7 months ago
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Üzgünüm, güzel gözlü küçük kadın... Ben seninle birlikte kendimi öldürmeyi seçiyorum.
Affet Sedef, bir kez daha sendeki Sedef'i öldürdüğüm için beni affet, güzelim...
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syruubi · 1 year ago
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The Hydro Sovereign comes to Mondstadt
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zira-draws · 3 months ago
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he wants his cookie so effing bad....
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jae-in-a-trenchcoat · 3 months ago
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You know I had to do draw something for the s2 trailer release
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alien-bottle · 28 days ago
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Homo
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emberfriday · 9 days ago
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wake up honey, new tf ocs just dropped🆘🆘🆘🆘
she liked helms with antennas....
so yeah, new boys, y'know all my tf ocs' names is just a big joke bc when I created Sloth I accidentally add “h” in the end of his name soo I just keep naming them as demons or something lolol
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happyheidi · 1 year ago
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vir-bellanaris · 2 months ago
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Anyway have some more facial differences between Solas (being jumpscared by) seeing normal Inquisitor vs romanced Lavellan.
I probably don't have to tell you which is which.
The quality is the best I could make it folks the lighting SUCKS
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knifetomeatu · 4 months ago
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quality time with uncle Hands🥰
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fahrenlegt · 12 days ago
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as was often the case, his eyes were drawn to jayce. concentration seemed to swallow him whole, utterly absorbed—nothing more important than their dream, progress.
they were close, he called them partners. simple, uncomplicated. it didn’t stop the ache that settled deep in his chest. a soft kind of torture; delicate, unyielding. quiet longing would continue to go unnoticed, the depth of it slowly suffocating.
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rooolt · 2 months ago
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and now where the hell is he looking
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sadecelere · 6 months ago
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"Çok mu güzel daldın rüyaya?"
"Seni benden alı koyacak kadar mı güzel?"
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furiosophie · 1 year ago
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i can't wait to go home
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celestialrealms · 10 days ago
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I can't believe mc used that line and it worked when Barbatos's Dark Santa gloves look like this:
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darsynia · 5 months ago
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Surprise blurb bomb!
You’re at a conference and a little worried because your boss has enlisted you to present. You’ve got about a day to go, so you’ve been in pacing in your hotel room rehearsing. However, the frustration mounts every time you hear yourself make a little mistake. Your next door neighbor has heard all of this, so they come to knock on your door, checking that everything is alright. When you explain what’s going on, they nod sympathetically, having to present as well. They kindly offer to help you practice, which leads to the two of you falling asleep collapsed on top of each other on your bed. What happens after that? Who’s your babe?
Thank you so much for this!! I chose Steve, and this is teeth-rotting fluff with my signature little characterization moments. I hope you enjoy!!
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gif from @askthesuperhusbands
Notes: Pre-Ultron, no warnings, 2,447 words, first draft so I get it out without fussing
Excerpt:
“I get it. Public speaking is hard enough when it’s important, but it’s even harder when there are no friendlies in the audience.” Steve smiles wryly. “That won’t happen here, I promise. I’ll be in the room, because just like with the war bonds, I’m a symbol of what you’re fighting for.”
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Always On
“The idea of ‘public relations’ has fallen into disrepute, just like ‘human resources’--and I think their tarnished reputations are related,” you say, hands clutching the edges of the wooden desk chair ‘podium’ precariously balanced on the hotel bed. “I know everyone in this room is well-acquainted with the concept of finding common ground with a myriad of people-- Argh!”
You frown, feeling the judgment of the rumpled sheet hanging on the wall. It’s covering the mirror that had pulled your focus away for the first twenty minutes of this practice exercise, but you still know it’s there. At this point, the sheet is a fig leaf covering your dignity and your inability to stay focused.
It’s past midnight, and the long day is getting to you. The introductory paragraph of your presentation is in the bag, but paragraph two isn’t working at all. It’s your thesis statement, the crux of the whole project, and you know you’re fighting an uphill battle. Without help from the well-respected UNITY Project, the governments of the world might try something extreme to keep the Avengers in line. Each year the group of philanthropists, aid workers, humanitarian lawyers, and other notorious do-gooders meet and choose ten groups to endow aid or oversight on. You’re hoping for the oversight, but it’s a long shot. The group has a sterling reputation, and their clout might be enough to get Secretary Ross to back down.
Your hands ache from where you’ve been clutching at your makeshift podium, but you square your shoulders and try again. “What we’re seeking is a partnership, a way to celebrate this team’s efforts and smooth over their rough edges.”
The sheet is mocking you, so you close your eyes and picture the faceless group you’re going to be appealing to.
“Citizens around the world trust your judgment and their heroism. Together we can ease fears and--” You stop, struggling to remember the word you’d thought up in the rental car on the way to the hotel. No amount of squinting at the note cards does any good. Your notes are rain-splattered and ruined in exactly the wrong spot, of course.
Throwing your head back, you let out yet another miserable groan.
Seconds later, there’s a gentle tap on the door. You recognize the pattern.
“Go away Steve, I’m busy dying of frustration!”
There is silence for over thirty seconds, but you’re not fooled. After counting to fifty-five, you stride over and throw the door open right before Captain America’s knuckles strike the wood again.
“Yes?” Your withering glare doesn’t faze him. Steve just raises his eyebrows and holds his hands up in a ‘surrender’ gesture.
“Three ‘arghs’ in fifteen minutes gets a visit, you should know that,” he tells you with mock sternness.
Hot embarrassment has you stepping back in dismay. “You could hear that?”
“A few words of the speech, too,” he nods, prompting another ‘argh’ from you.
Your choices are to spontaneously develop superpowers so you can drop through the floor, or do as you always do in this friendship--or let Steve Rogers be the hero. Your dilemma must show on your face, because for once, he doesn’t wait for you to ask for help.
“Something tells me the board of United International Continuing Acronym won’t be convinced by those noises,” Steve says, using Stark’s nickname to cover for the way he pushes past you into the room. For a few seconds, the fronts of your bodies brush against each other, and the heat from those few seconds burns through you.
By the time you recover, Steve’s already across the room, clearing his throat. “I sympathize, believe me. Doesn’t matter how much public speaking I’ve gone through, it still ties my stomach into knots.” He turns and gives you a look of teasing determination. “I have a few suggestions, but I’d have to swear you to secrecy.”
Your crush surges up to color your voice with maybe a little too much affection as you say, “Captain America has secrets?”
The look he shoots you has the same sort of heat from seconds ago. “Here,” he says, pulling a folded page from his pocket. “This is a new one, but back when they first put me in tights, I practiced my script in a room set up with some of these.”
Steve hands you a drawing of a crowd of people, some smiling, some frowning, some turning to their neighbors instead of looking forward. It’s got all of the charm of his usual drawings, despite being more simple than usual. When you look up at his face, his sheepish expression tells you why. He must have drawn it right before knocking on your door.
“Steve,” you breathe, touched by the gesture but also the way he’s captured the spectrum of audience reaction. It reminds you of everything he’d gone through to be the man he is now, the man you’ve fallen for as inevitably as a crowd cheers for a brilliant performance. You couldn’t help it.
“Not now, all right?” he whispers, a kind of pleading in his eyes. “Speech first.”
You blink at him. Did he just acknowledge that something’s different between you? What is it about this corporate hotel hundreds of miles from the home that’s turned everything deliciously sideways? He’s already on the next Act, and you shove those feelings aside to focus like he’s asked you to.
“My place was a quarter this size, but maybe we can…” Steve trails off, propping his drawing on the draped wall sheet and flipping off all but the lights above the bed. Somehow it works, limiting distractions and changing the covered mirror into an easel for his thoughtful drawing.
There’s only one problem.
“Are you planning to lurk behind me?”
“Well, I’d sit in the chair, but--”
“Steve!” You can’t even glare at him, because all you can see is the glint of the fluorescent light reflecting off of his shined shoes. He pushes off the wall and steps forward just enough so you can see the kind look on his face.
“I get it. Public speaking is hard enough when it’s important, but it’s even harder when there are no friendlies in the audience.” Steve smiles wryly. “That won’t happen here, I promise. I’ll be in the room, because just like with the war bonds, I’m a symbol of what you’re fighting for.”
There’s no way he could know how romantic that sounds, so you swallow against the sudden tightness in your throat and nod at him.
You start again, and suddenly it works. The chair is a podium. The crowd is real. Steve is somewhere out of sight, rooting for you. You get through the whole thing, and it feels great. You can hear Steve clapping for you through the relieved buzzing in your ears.
Then it all falls apart. When you let go, the chair falls over and smacks you in the face, and the little breeze from your flail of pain knocks the drawing down. Steve rushes over to help, but he bumps into you, and you both fall sideways onto the bed.
The giggles last for a glorious few minutes, and then he says, “Okay, since everything went sideways, can I make it worse?”
You’re lying on a bed with Steve Rogers and his smile is like an early sunrise, so you say yes.
“The concept is good, but you sound like you’re using big words to impress. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s not really us. Tony’s irreverent, Clint’s the salt of the Earth, and Bruce is the kind of scientist that puts everyone at ease, at least until he turns green.” Steve turns onto his back, but he doesn’t get up, which feels consequential, despite his criticism. “Nat’s public persona is standoffish but not pretentious, and I’m--”
“You’re folksy,” you interrupt, still stinging from the unfortunate truth of the word ‘pretentious.’ “The epitome of ‘plainspoken.’”
Steve shoots a look over at you, and you realize those two words are exactly what he meant.
“The guy next door,” you add. Inside, you’re crumbling a little bit. Does he think you’re pretentious? Are you pretentious?
Steve rolls to face you again, reaching out to brush his thumb gently across the place the chair had struck you. It’s covered by your hair, but he somehow knows exactly where it is.
“You still have a full day left of the conference before it’s your turn. I could have colored that drawing and given it to you tomorrow, but that wouldn’t have helped tonight.” He pulls his hand back, but sets it on the bed between you. “That’s what makes us a team.”
You’re confused, but comforted nonetheless.
“You paint with words. It’s not that different from art, and every artist chooses how much effort to put in each piece,” he explains patiently. “It’s the same for this. You’re representing everyone, and that means you have to save some of that energy for the physical part of it. Not everyone realizes that.”
“Oh, God,” you blurt out, sitting up. “You are a symbol, just like you said. You’re always on, even at the Compound! How much energy does that take?”
He looks up at you, and the truth in his eyes is painfully intimate. “It’s not as bad now. When I came out of the ice, it kind of felt like I was still in tights. Always exposed for the greater good.”
“I’m sorry,” you whisper. It’s your job to book him for events. You’re the one shoving him onto the stage.
“No, no, don’t do that,” Steve says, sitting up and framing your face with his hands. “It was worse before, when it was Tony or some random person at SHIELD sending me out. I trust you. This conference was your idea--”
You scrunch up your face with guilt at that, and Steve gets this look of determination on his face. The next thing you know, he’s leaning forward and kissing you. It’s electric, stage lights blaring, orchestra in crescendo, and the velvet curtain rolling closed on the triumphant final scene to the roaring of the audience applause.
Then he’s pulling back, standing, and running his hand over his face. “That was out of line, I’m sorry.”
“It was a masterpiece,” you say, looking up at him with your hands clutching the blanket and your heart in your eyes.
The way his nervous tension completely leaves his body is even more reassuring than the softly-spoken “Oh. Good,” he lets out. His encore wins all the awards your heart has to give: “I didn’t practice that at all.”
Joy colors your voice. “You’re a natural.”
Steve’s ears turn red, and he says, “Well, I should let you get back to it. It’s past one--”
“You could stay,” you rush to say, standing up and stepping past him to pick up the drawing. Behind you, he makes a strangling sort of coughing noise, and you realize what you’ve said. “To practice!”
That just makes Steve gasp your name, clearly amused and scandalized in equal measure, and you groan in frustration. Feeling giddy just destroys your cognitive abilities.
“The speech! What is it about this hotel??”
“A new medium. Canvas instead of watercolor paper. A speech instead of short stories,” he says, setting the fallen chair back upright.
“You know about those?” you ask, surprised. You’ve made a point of working on them only during your downtime.
He has the grace to look apologetic. “Tony made a comment once, that I’d turn up in one of your stories if I offended any world leaders, when I was sent to the UN Grand Assembly.”
“Shit, I forgot I threatened him with that one time when he was being an ass.” Your grumble ended in a colossal yawn. “What time does breakfast start tomorrow?” The conference is a multi-day affair, and missing the early meal had not set you up to stay awake through the panels today. “I won’t have any time to practice this tomorrow night and you’re right, I really need to clean up the wording,” you add, feeling your elation at the kiss drain away with worry.
“Then let’s keep at it,” Steve says, taking the drawing and setting it back up on the sheet. He turns and gives you as wicked a look as you’ve ever seen on his face. “The speech, I mean.”
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You wake up to the alarm with a sore neck, your dress pants digging into your hip, and a bed partner. He’s the farthest from a pain in the neck as a man can get, but falling asleep fully dressed with your head on his shoulder wasn’t the wisest decision you’ve ever made. You pull in a deep breath, trying to clear out the mental cobwebs scattered in happy glitter, and Steve tenses up under your head.
“I’m sorry,” you say immediately.
“Don’t be. I’m the one who should have left you to sleep.”
You sit up so he can slip out of bed, knowing that he needs to put distance between you for his own peace of mind.
“Be honest: have you ever voluntarily abandoned a woman who needs your help?” you tease. “In all seriousness, you were a huge help last night, and I’m sure that was outside your comfort zone. That was probably the most I’ve ever seen you talk outside of lecturing Stark!”
“I didn’t even notice,” he says, pulling the sheet off of the mirror expertly folding it over in the corner of the room.
He’s faced away from you, so you indulge in a back-arching stretch while muttering under your breath, “You have no idea how hot that is.”
“Right back at you,” Steve retorts, looking back at you with the sheet in one clenched fist. “I need to get going. Want me to pick up breakfast for you?”
You’re off script and floundering, trying to reconcile the sexy rasp in his voice with this attempt at professionalism. It’s exactly the kind of relationship you’ve always dreamed of, and you find your heart slipping further into romantic oblivion.
“Yes, thank you.”
“Thank you,” He says, holding out a hand to help you up. Once you’re standing, Steve holds your gaze and lifts his eyebrows in a very clear question. Heart pounding, you nod, and he takes your lips in a brief but fervent kiss. He moves back, pausing at the door. “I just thought of something, but it’s--”
“Tell me anyway,” you interrupt. “You don’t have to alter your wording for me.” It’s maybe too symbolic and cheesy, but you’re sleep deprived.
“I’m looking forward to another collaboration,” he says, flashing you a brilliant smile.
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Note: I may have to write a sequel with what happens AFTER, given that I impulsively wrote this and missed that the prompt was 'what happens after that' I feel so dumb haha
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edwardbonnets · 1 month ago
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#he wants that cookie so effing bad
bonus:
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