#i really hope you like it šŸ„¹
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beerok23 Ā· 4 months ago
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Runaway Groom
Time for some self-promotion for my new AU šŸ˜
[With the essential help of my beta angel @somewhere-in-wales šŸ„¹]
https://archiveofourown.org/works/56975446/chapters/144884281
A little excerpt under the cut
ā€œThis kind of groom isnā€™t an illusion, faithful readers. I wish he were! This man is very real. He lives in Tadfield, where he runs the family workshop. He is named after an angel, but it shouldnā€™t surprise you to know that his namesake is an obscure occult entity only ever mentioned in theĀ Buggre Alle This BibleĀ published in 1651. Itā€™s a rare manuscript containing three additional verses forĀ Genesis 3Ā where God herself addresses the angel ā€˜Aziraphaleā€™, the guardian of the Eastern Gate, who seems to have lost his flaming sword. Our very own angel is named Aziraphale Fell (it figures), AKAā€¦'The Runaway Groomļæ½ļæ½.ā€
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earththings Ā· 1 year ago
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š“œš“øš“øš“­š“«š“øš“Ŗš“»š“­ š“Æš“øš“» š“½š“±š“® š“·š“Ŗš“¶š“® š“šš“®š“µš“µš”‚ šŸ’ŽšŸ”®
š“”š“®š“ŗš“¾š“®š“¼š“½š“®š“­ š“«š”‚: @biteme-imripe
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swampybogg Ā· 2 months ago
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magicshop Ā· 10 months ago
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his smile could cure the world ā™” [for @morshiberna ā™”]
cr. 0613data
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latelierderiot Ā· 3 months ago
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ā€œHeā€™s our brotherā€ ā¤ļøā€šŸ”„
x
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myokk Ā· 3 months ago
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Honestly I just saw this ā€œmore posts like thisā€ andšŸ„¹šŸ„¹ idkā€¦itā€™s really cool to see all of these fanarts together!!!šŸ«¶
Lots of times I feel like Iā€™m still figuring out this style bc I just started drawing like this in April/Mayā€¦and even though I know I have a lot to learn, I feel like Iā€™m slowly evolving into an art style I lovešŸ’“
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seiwas Ā· 21 days ago
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Sel donā€™t be so hard on yourself about writing!! Youā€™ve been busy and itā€™s okay to do slow down on other things !!šŸ«¶
But Iā€™ll enter your lil game (only if you feel inspired) with oikawa + blissful
carla šŸ„ŗ i am hugging you!! thank you for the kind words šŸ„ŗšŸ’— and for indulging me with my lil game!!
contains: suggestive (possibly), expletives, use of baby, bj
oikawa + blissful
"yeah, thatā€™s it," oikawa sighs, a shudder reaching the tips of your fingertips, "right there, baby."
he melts under your hands; every movement you make is met with whines of audible bliss. it's no secret that oikawa is loud, in the bedroom especially.
your fingers drag over his head slowly, languidly, allowing him to revel in this moment for longerā€•you know this is the only thing he likes to take his time with.
when you press a little harder and pinch a little tighter, he groans, "fuck," with an exhale. his eyes struggle to stay open as his lashes flutter sleepily to kiss that delicate spot right under his eyes. warm brown blanketed in a physical lullaby.
you giggle, a soft satisfaction at how reactive he is under your touch. oikawa makes head massages sound like he's getting a blowjob.
he rouses awake from the subtle vibrations of your amusement, his head a deadweight on your lap. the perfectly messy mop of his hair is now tangled with your fingers.
"see? even my hair won't let you go," he'll tell you once he finds out, all dopey smile and dopamine in his system. it's a different kind of happy than when he's on the court, a kind that you cherish all to yourself, knowing it's one that he only shares with you.
"feeling better?" you hum, kneading around his temples a little bit more.
the moan he lets out is a loud enough response.
help me get back into the writing groove! send me a character + any word and i'll write a short blurb about it!
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enchantedchocolatebars Ā· 7 months ago
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"Woah... This is beautiful... Why would anyone throw this away?"
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zuzusexytiems Ā· 16 days ago
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Jean and Pieck have had their fair share of fights throughout their relationshipā€”arguably a healthy amount for the average couple.
Theyā€™ve never had one quite like this.
Read on AO3
Comments very appreciated šŸ„¹
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icey-wifeyy Ā· 1 year ago
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i SAW YOUR SHANE ART ON PINTERST AND THEN MY FRIENDS SENT ME YOUR TUMBLR AND I LOVE THE WAY YOU DRAW HIM
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AH THANK YOU! HERES A SHANE GIFT !
( Ā“ ā–½ ` )ļ¾‰ šŸŽā™„ļø
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suddencolds Ā· 1 year ago
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Foreign Home | [1/1]
hello!! I am back after 8 months of not-really-writing with an 8k word fic (which I cut down from 9k words). this is another OC fic w/ Vincent and Yves, who were introduced here!
anyways, this is very character-centric and establishes some things I wanted to establish about them / their world... I hope the little detour into character-development territory is okay.
Summary: Yves has told all of his friends that he's dating Vincent, so it's going to look increasingly suspicious if Vincent never shows up. Good thing Vincent is compellingly good at lying. Anyways, what could go wrong at a housewarming party? (ft. banter, fake dating, cat allergies)
ā€”
Yves spends three weeks turning down invitations.
Itā€™s lucky, he thinks, that heā€™s been able to stay in contact with so many friends from universityā€”that so many of them have settled here, in New York. Itā€™s less lucky considering his current circumstances:
Out of the people who made it to Margotā€™s New Yearā€™s party, almost all of them remember Vincent. Andā€”even more inconvenientlyā€”many of them seem set on inviting Yves and Vincent places.
Yves thinks up a dozen excuses. No, Vincent canā€™t join on our coffee outingā€”heā€™s got an important, un-reschedulable meeting with a client that Saturday. Sunday? His Sundayā€™s booked through until 5pm. I know, busy season is the worst to plan around. Or, I think Vincentā€™s going to be out for a business conference that weekend. The 22nd? I can check with him, but heā€™s taking a redeye flight the night beforeā€”I think heā€™ll be jet lagged.
The number of excuses he is capable of coming up with is unfortunately finite. Perhaps sorry, I think Vincent has an optometristā€™s appointment that afternoon isnā€™t Yvesā€™s best work, but he has to say something.
Really, itā€™s just more work to invite Vincent elsewhereā€”to explain that theyā€™ve played their role as a couple a little too convincingly. That his friends all want to meet Vincent, now.
Back during his days of rowing crew, Yves has given out his fair share of relationship advice to the underclassmen, which has unfortunatelyā€”according to Margotā€”ā€œcultivated an air of mystery about his personal love life.ā€ It was always him and Erika, until it wasnā€™t. (Ex-matchmaker Yves and his mysterious, highly coveted new boyfriend, Leon says, when Yves complains, which is how Yves decides he will no longer be consulting Leon on the matter.)
ā€œMy friends really like you,ā€ Yves says to Vincent, offhandedly, when he runs into him on the way back from lunch.
Vincent blinks at him.Ā 
ā€œYouā€™re saying that like itā€™s a bad thing.ā€
ā€œThey really like you,ā€ Yves says. ā€œThey want to meet you. They think weā€™re an interesting couple, and they keep pestering me for double dates and inviting you out to a whole bunch of events. Iā€™m running out of excuses as to why you canā€™t come.ā€
ā€œOh,ā€ Vincent says, deadpan, but thereā€™s a slight twitch to his lips, as if heā€™s trying not to laugh.
ā€œIā€™m dead serious,ā€ Yves says. ā€œI told Nora that you couldnā€™t make it to dinner because of an eye appointment. Now if I want to keep this up Iā€™ll need to photoshop you with new glasses.ā€
ā€œI am a little overdue for new glasses,ā€ Vincent says.
ā€œNot the point. Regardless, I need to keep this up until we stage a breakup.ā€
ā€œA breakup?ā€
ā€œA fake breakup. To our fake relationship.ā€
ā€œIs there someone else youā€™re interested in?ā€
ā€œNo,ā€ Yves says. ā€œBut Iā€™m preemptively saving you the stress.ā€
ā€œThe stress of playing your boyfriend?ā€ Vincent says. ā€œLast time, that just entailed going to a well-organized New Yearā€™s party. I wouldnā€™t consider that exceptionally stressful.ā€
ā€œThatā€™s just the beginning. Donā€™t tell me you want to be dragged along to every dinner party and every downtown outing and every birthday I go to in the foreseeable future,ā€ Yves says. ā€œOn top of working 60 hours a week, youā€™ll have to say goodbye to your weekends.ā€
ā€œSo thatā€™s why youā€™re plotting our breakup.ā€
ā€œYes,ā€ Yves says. ā€œIā€™d need to explain to everyone how I dropped the ball.ā€
ā€œIā€™m sure those new glasses mustā€™ve been the dealbreaker.ā€
Yves laughs. Truthfully, Vincent could wear the most terrible, unflattering glasses in the world and still manage to look like someone whom Yves wouldnā€™t bat an eye at upon spotting at a photoshoot. The fact that his current glasses actually complement him very well, and the fact that he knows how to dress himself is just salt to the wound. ā€œYes, thatā€™s the entire reason why I dated you in the first place. The glasses.ā€
ā€œIf you wanted to keep our false relationship up for a couple months,ā€ Vincent says, ā€œI wouldnā€™t mind.ā€
Yvesā€”who, until now, has been walking in the opposite direction of the floor on which he worksā€”stops walking. ā€œPardon?ā€
ā€œI like your friends,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œAnd more importantly, I donā€™t think it proves a point to Erika if youā€™ve just gotten into a relationship you couldnā€™t keep. So if you wanted to keep this arrangement for a little longer, I would be fine with it.ā€
Yves considers this.
Heā€™s asked more than enough of Vincent already. But Vincent is right. Heā€™s sure Erika must have her fair share of doubts about all of thisā€”about Vincent, about their fake relationship, about its longevity. She seemed skeptical, when heā€™d last seen her, that Yves couldā€™ve moved on so quickly. The worst thing about it is that he canā€™t blame her for that doubt. The worst thing about it is that heā€™d spent so much time accounting for his future with Erika that he hadnā€™t seen her start to slip away, hadnā€™t noticed the first sign of inadequacy, the first time her gaze lingered on someone else, the first time he ceased to be all that she wanted. He hadnā€™t steeled himself for a future without her, and now, half the time, it feels like heā€™s still playing catch-up.
If he wants to commit to this fake relationship, heā€™ll need more than one outing to show for it.
And, despite all odds, Vincent is offering just that.
ā€œOkay,ā€ Yves says, before he can think about how bad of an idea this is. It is really, really inadvisable. Heā€™s sure if he weighs his options for more than a few seconds, he will come to the conclusion that he should be shutting his mouth. ā€œIf youā€™re sureā€”and only if youā€™re actually sureā€”what are your plans after work next Tuesday evening?ā€
ā€œNothing as of now,ā€ Vincent says.Ā 
ā€œGreat. If you can make it, thereā€™s a potluck. Joelā€™s hosting. He recently finished moving into a new apartment, so I think itā€™s something of a housewarming party. He lives a little North, past the stadium, so I think Iā€™ll head there right after workā€”I can drive you.ā€Ā 
ā€œThat works,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œWhat kind of food does he like?ā€
ā€œIā€™m not actually too sure,ā€ Yves says. ā€œI think heā€™s a fan of spicy food. But honestly, I think heā€™ll be grateful if you bring anything at allā€”which you donā€™t have to, by the way. Youā€™re the esteemed guest, here.ā€
ā€œIā€™m sure Joelā€™s new apartment is technically the esteemed guest,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œBut Iā€™ll be there.ā€
ā€œOkay,ā€ Yves says. ā€œItā€™s a date. Iā€™ll make it up to you in any way you want, by the wayā€”if thereā€™s ever an instance where you need me to lie for you, Iā€™ll do it.ā€
ā€œDuly noted,ā€ Vincent says. For what Vincent would ever have to lie about, Yves canā€™t guess.
More importantly, he has a date for next Tuesday. Something about it is more exciting, even in its dishonesty, than it has any right to be.
ā€”
Itā€™s only a few moments after Yves presses the doorbell that Vincent emerges, holding a couple plates covered meticulously with aluminum foil.
ā€œI havenā€™t cooked for anyone in awhile,ā€ he says, a little sheepishly. ā€œI hope this doesnā€™t make a bad impression on your friends.ā€ ā€œAre you kidding? It smells really good,ā€ Yves says, and it doesā€”from the doorway, he can make out the scent of sesame oil, roasted garlic, ginger. ā€œTheyā€™ll definitely like it.ā€
Vincent looks off to the side. ā€œWeā€™ll see.ā€ It takes a moment for Yves to properly parse his expression for what it is.
It never occurred to Yves that Vincent might actually be nervous. At work, itā€™s rare to see Vincent even remotely out of his elementā€”he always volunteers to take on their more difficult clients, and even on the rare occasion that something falls out of his expertise, he picks things up quickly. Yves has seen him give presentations at conferences without a sweat, articulate as ever.Ā 
If Vincent had been nervous, those timesā€”over prestigious conferences, over negotiations with major clients, over other difficult points of contentionā€”it hadnā€™t shown. Either he wasnā€™t nervous at all, or he was just good at hiding it. But heā€™s nervous now, Yves realizes, which meansā€”Ā 
Vincent wants to make a good impression on his friends. It wonā€™t be his first time meeting Joel, but itā€™ll be his first time talking to Cherie, Joelā€™s fiancĆ©, or Giselle, one of Cherieā€™s friends from work. Mikhail and Nora will be there too. All in all, itā€™s a decently sized group, but Vincent has talked to larger groups of people before without so much as a shaky voice.
Something about itā€”about the seriousness with which Vincent regards this whole arrangementā€”is strangely endearing.
ā€œYou have nothing to worry about,ā€ Yves says, and means it in more ways than one.
ā€”
Joelā€™s new apartment, as it turns out, is already decently furnished, even though Joel had sent out the invitation with the disclaimer that everything is a mess, please bear with us.
ā€œWhen you said everything would be a mess,ā€ Yves says, leaving his shoes in a line at the door, ā€œI thought your apartment would actually be something other than spotlessly clean and well arranged.ā€
ā€œItā€™s easy to make things look neat if you move all of the clutter into the closets,ā€ Joel says.
ā€œItā€™s just a few boxes,ā€ Cherie says. ā€œBut it was tricky to figure out how to place things. Itā€™s a lot more spacious than the apartment we had in college.ā€
ā€œNo kidding,ā€ Yves says. ā€œItā€™s a seriously nice place.ā€ Back in their last two years of university, Joel and Cherie had gotten an apartment just a few buildings down from the apartment which Yves picked out with Mikhailā€”they had similar floor plans. Yves distinctly remembers the space: creaky floorboards, space heaters lined up against the walls to last them the winter; decent natural lighting, and never enough kitchen space.
Back then, he and Mikhail had had separate rooms, so their apartment became a spot in which Erika became a frequent visitor, and then, at one point, stopped visiting at all.Ā 
But thatā€™s not the point. The point is, the apartment Joel and Cherie have picked out is much nicer than the one theyā€™d had in collegeā€”for one, itā€™s more spacious, and the entire building has nice facilities and looks newerā€”and Cherieā€™s eye for interior design has only helped their cause.
ā€œIā€™m glad you were able to come!ā€ Cherie says, turning to Vincent. ā€œYves is always telling me about how busy you are with work.ā€
ā€œHeā€™s the one putting out all the fires,ā€ Yves says.Ā 
Vincent smiles, extending a hand for her to shake. ā€œCherie, right? Itā€™s nice to meet you. And youā€™reā€”ā€ He turns to Joel, with a slight sniffle. ā€œJoel. I think we met last time.ā€
Cherie squeezes his hand. Joel laughs and says, ā€œIā€™m surprised you remember my name.ā€
ā€œHeā€™s good with names,ā€ Yves says. An acquired skill from all the hours of networking, probably.
ā€œThatā€™s a useful skill to have, especially if youā€™re dating Yves,ā€ Joel says. ā€œI swear he knows everyone.ā€ He goes on to tell a story about how, back in university, Yves almost accidentally got elected as vice president for a business club heā€™d only shown up to once.
At some point into the conversation, Yves ducks into the kitchen to help with setup. He sets out the dish heā€™s broughtā€”salmon sliders with mango salsaā€”and the beef skewers that Vincent made earlier (heā€™s not sure why Vincent was worried in the first place, because the skewers look very competently made). After that, he busies himself with finding a way to keep everything temporarily covered until they eat.
Something soft and fuzzy winds around his ankles.
He looks down, and the soft and fuzzy thing looks back at him with pointy triangular ears. This is news to Yves.
ā€œYou guys have a cat?!ā€ He shouts from the kitchen, vaguely in the direction where Joel and Cherie should still be standing. ā€œSince when?ā€
ā€œSince a month ago,ā€ Joel shouts back.
ā€œHer name is Gingersnap,ā€ Cherie adds. ā€œGin for short.ā€
ā€œOh,ā€ Yves says, kneeling down to scratch her behind the ears. His hands are a little calloused from all the snow heā€™s been shoveling lately, but Gingersnap purrs anyways, evidently unbothered. ā€œWhat the hell, guys, now Iā€™m never going to be able to leave your apartment. Consider me a permanent resident.ā€
ā€œDonā€™t threaten me with a good time,ā€ Cherie says.
At some point, Gingersnap gets up, mewing, and heads out of the kitchen, and Yves resumes life as an active contributor to the potluckā€™s success. When he finishes reheating everything up, setting the table, arranging the dishes, and filling up two pitchers with iced water, he wanders back out into the living room. Vincent is there, alone, except heā€™s not really alone, becauseā€¦
Oh.
God.
Heā€™s kneeling down, unmoving, speaking to Gingersnap in a soft, low voice, holding out a hand for her.
She approaches him, a little tentatively, and then nuzzles her orange head into the crook of his hand. Vincent smilesā€”a soft, private smile. ā€œHi, Gin,ā€ he says.
Thereā€™s the low, lawnmower hum of a purr as Gingersnap rolls onto the ground to let Vincent continue petting her. Itā€™s a heartwarming sightā€”Vincent, from the office, crouched down to pet a cat thatā€™s smaller than his hand. Yves thinks he might cry.
Then Vincent withdraws his hand, reaches up with an arm to swipe at his eyes. Something jolts through his shoulders, a tremor so slight that Yves wouldnā€™t have noticed it if he hadnā€™t already been watchingā€”
ā€œā€”nGkt-!ā€
Gingersnap mews at him, perplexed but undeterred. ā€œSorry,ā€ Vincent says to her, quietly, ā€œIā€™m not tryingā€” toā€”ā€ Itā€™s all he can get out before heā€™s veering away again, this time with both hands tightly steepled over his nose forā€”
ā€œhhIHā€™ā€”GKKtt-!ā€
He sniffles softly, though the sniffle is immediately followed by a small, quiet cough. He reaches up with one hand to rub his nose. Yves watches his expression draw uneven, his eyebrows furrowing.Ā 
ā€œhhIHā€¦ā€
Whatever sneeze heā€™s fighting seems terribly indecisiveā€”but terribly irritatingā€”for the way he rubs his nose again, his eyes squeezing shut in ticklish anticipation.
ā€œHhIHā€¦ hhā€¦ HH-hhH-hHIHhā€”ā€
Ā He cups a hand over his mouth to muffle the sound, and not a moment too earlyā€”
ā€œā€”hIHhā€™iiIKKTSHh-!ā€His shoulders jolt forwards with the force of it, though it gives him barely a momentā€™s reprieve before his breath hitches again, sharply, urgently. ā€œIiIā€™DSZCHuuhh-!ā€
ā€œBless you,ā€ Yves says.
Vincent turns to blink at him. His eyes are a little red-rimmed and watering. Thereā€™s a thin flush over the bridge of his nose.
ā€œYou didnā€™t tell me you were allergic to cats,ā€ Yves says, rounding the corner to close the distance between them.
ā€œSlightly allergic,ā€ Vincent admits, turning aside with a liquid sniffle. ā€œItā€™s ndot - hhIHH-! - a big deal.ā€
ā€œI didnā€™t know Joel and Cherie had a cat,ā€ Yves says. ā€œIā€™m sorry. I wouldā€™ve told you if they did.ā€
ā€œItā€™s fine,ā€ Vincent says, with a laugh. ā€œI like her.ā€
ā€œYou might like her, but your body doesnā€™t seem to be a fan.ā€
ā€œItā€™s a good thing that I have a consciousness, so I can codtinue petting her.ā€ Vincent sniffles again, lifting one hand to rub his nose with his index finger. Yves does not know how to even begin to tell him what an inadvisable idea that is, but either way, he doesnā€™t have a chance to before Vincentā€™s eyes graze shut, and he turns to face away from Gingersnap before he jerks forward, catching a muffled - ā€œHhā€™GKK-t!ā€ - into a clenched fist.
ā€œBless you,ā€ Yves says. ā€œYou know, youā€™re really not going to make the situation any better if you keep onā€”ā€
ā€œnNGKT-!!ā€
ā€œā€”bless you!ā€
ā€œhhā€”hHhihā€™iiKKsHHhUH!ā€ The last sneeze is noticeably harsher than the othersā€”it sounds loud enough to scrape against his throat, which seems to be further evidenced by the small cough that succeeds it.
ā€œIā€™ll ask Joel if he has any antihistamines,ā€ Yves says.Ā 
ā€œItā€™s fide,ā€ Vincent says.Ā 
ā€œIf you insist on spending time with Gingersnap, wouldnā€™t it be better to spend it without having to sneeze?ā€
ā€œI would still have to sdeeze,ā€ Vincent says, as if heā€™s already experienced in the matterā€”briefly, Yves wonders how many cats he inadvisably plays with on a frequent basis. ā€œJust less.ā€
ā€œThat would be an improvement.ā€
Vincent looks away. ā€œAntihistamines mbake me tired,ā€ he says, after a little hesitation.Ā 
ā€œItā€™s a good time to be tired,ā€ Yves says. ā€œItā€™s not like you have any pressing work to get done.ā€
ā€œI want to make a good ibpression on your friends,ā€ Vincent says, wiping at his eyes with the edge of his sleeve. ā€œThatā€™s ndot going to happen if I fall asleep halfway through dinner.ā€
ā€œIf you did, Iā€™m sure no one would fault you for it.ā€
ā€œIā€™ll take something after we finish eating,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œIf things havedā€™t improved by then. ā€
ā€œOkay,ā€ Yves relents, andā€”since it doesnā€™t seem like Vincent is leaving anytime soonā€”takes a seat next to him on the rug. Itā€™s a compromise he can accept.
ā€”
Nora gets there next, followed by Mikhail and then Giselle. Itā€™s Yvesā€™s first time formally meeting Giselle, who turns out to be very tall and a little intimidatingā€”sheā€™s come straight from work, so sheā€™s dressed accordingly, and she talks with the sort of quiet authority that Yves knows is usually indicative of years of experience. Right before they sit down for dinner, Vincent ducks out into the bathroomā€”ā€˜I need to look at least marginally presentable,ā€™ heā€™d said, seeming like he was in a rushā€”so Yves saves him a seat at the table.Ā 
ā€œYves,ā€ Giselle says, taking another salmon slider. ā€œYou made these entirely from scratch? This is delicious.ā€Ā 
ā€œThanks,ā€ Yves says. ā€œTo be honest, it was a bit of a gamble. I wasnā€™t sure if the sauce was going to pair well with it.ā€
ā€œYves is really good at cooking,ā€ Mikhail says. ā€œThatā€™s half the reason why I roomed with him in college.ā€
ā€œSo whatā€™s the other half?ā€ Cherie says.Ā 
ā€œThe other half is that he lets me eat his food,ā€ Mikhail says.
Yves laughs. ā€œFor a second, I thought youā€™d have something nice to say about my personality.ā€
ā€œDonā€™t flatter yourself,ā€ Mikhail says.Ā 
ā€œYves is very good at cooking,ā€ Vincent says, emerging from the hallway. Yves blinks at him. Whatever heā€™d done in the bathroom has done wondersā€”he looks remarkably put together. Not a strand of his hair is out of place. His eyes are dry, not red, not teary, not irritated, his collar crisply upright, his voice devoid of congestion. The only telltale sign about his ailment is the slight bit of redness to his nose, but itā€™s winterā€”that could easily be chalked up to the cold.
He slips easily into the seat next to Yves, his posture impeccable. Yves does everything in his power not to stare.Ā 
ā€œI think heā€™s responsible for some of the best hot chocolate Iā€™ve had,ā€ Vincent continues. That remark is surprising, tooā€”repurposed from a memory as it is, it seems almost like something that could be genuine.
But Yves remembers how easily Vincent had lied, back on New Yearā€™sā€”how easily heā€™d drawn the fictitious threads between them, almost thoughtlessly, as if they had always existed.Ā 
I could make better hot chocolate, Yves thinks, before he can stop himself. I could really make the best hot chocolate youā€™ve ever tasted, if I just had time. Itā€™s an absurd thought, and one that he doesnā€™t have much grounds for. He had been pressed for time, back thenā€”he hadnā€™t known when Vincentā€™s ride was going to be arrivingā€”but even if heā€™d really, properly tried, even if heā€™d succeeded in making the best hot chocolate heā€™s capable of making, thereā€™s no guarantee that Vincent wouldā€™ve liked it.
Heā€™s surprised by the pang in his chest, now, the desire to make true something that he knows to be false, to be worthy of the compliments that Vincentā€™s so easily spoken about.
ā€œThatā€™s definitely an exaggeration,ā€ Yves says. ā€œTechnically, Mikhail didnā€™t even know that I knew how to cook when we signed the lease. The real reason why we roomed together is much more interesting.ā€
Itā€™s a story heā€™s told before, though Cherie and Giselle havenā€™t heard it before. Itā€™s easy to fall into it again: Mikhail and Yves met in their first year, over a group project in an intro to finance class. The two other members of their team had been dead weight, and at the time, Yves had thoughtā€”incorrectlyā€”that Mikhail was just as bad as the rest of them.
Itā€™s practically a comedy of errorsā€”a series of miscommunications had led them to each finish the project independently. Yves remembers the all-nighters heā€™d pulled for that, nervous and over-caffeinated, until the day before the presentation, where he found that Mikhail had notā€”unlike the other members of their groupā€”spent the last few weeks slacking off.Ā 
Beside him, Vincent goes still.
When Yves chances a quick look at him, he sees: a slight, almost imperceptible ripple to his expression, before it smooths out again.
He nearly backtracksā€”his first thought is that perhaps something heā€™s said is the source of Vincentā€™s irritationā€”but then Vincent turns his face away. Thereā€™s the slightest disturbance to the line of his shoulders, and thenā€”
ā€œā€”gkT-!ā€
The sneeze is barely audible, stifled as it is into a half-closed palm, though the gesture is subtle, tooā€”easily mistaken as Vincent simply looking away, resting his chin on his hand.
ā€œI canā€™t believe you guys are still friends after all of that,ā€ Nora says.
ā€œRight,ā€ Yves says. ā€œI was so ready to never talk to him again. But obviously, we still had to give the presentation.ā€
He talks about how, in a half-asleep effort to salvage the project work, he and Mikhail had found some way to relate their findings to each other, to loosely bind the disparate subjects into a coherent thesis. Mikhail talks, too, about how theyā€™d manipulated their presentation to get their combined work to seem sufficiently on topic.
Mikhail is halfway through his story when Yves sees Vincent jolt forward beside him.
He looks up just in time to catch the tail end of a sneezeā€”expertly stifled, just like the othersā€”into a clenched fist. This oneā€™s a little more forceful, even in its quietnessā€”it leaves Vincent hunched over for just a moment, his shoulders slightly slumped, before he straightens again, covertly lowering his hand.
Thereā€™s a slightly hazy, distant look to his features, as if whateverā€™s been bothering him hasnā€™t begun to let up yet.
Yves nudges him with his arm. Vincent doesnā€™t exactly jump at the contact, but he does freeze, his shoulders stiffening.
ā€œHey,ā€ Yves says, quietly enough that he doesnā€™t think anyone else should be able to hear. ā€œYou okay?ā€
Vincent nods.
ā€œYou sure you donā€™t want to take anything?ā€
Another nod.Ā 
ā€œI canā€™t tell you how little either of us proofread that paper,ā€ Mikhail is saying.
ā€œI reread it three months later,ā€ Yves admits. ā€œAnd heā€™s right. We really didnā€™t proofread it.ā€Ā 
But it was a winning proposal, even though theyā€™d both been too tired to realize it then. And still, Mikhail had still managed to hold a grudge against him for two long months. And then Mikhail had run into last-minute problems with his upcoming lease arrangement, and Yves had happened to find a decently priced two-bedroom apartment with no roommate, and heā€™d reached out half as a joke.
ā€œYou know those friends who say they can never room together?ā€ Mikhail is saying. ā€œLike, they hang out all the time, or theyā€™ve been friends for years, or they trust each other with their lives, or whatever. But the second you put their living habits in close proximity, everything goes to shit? I think we were the opposite.ā€
ā€œAre you sure it wasnā€™t just because you two never had a good enough relationship to ruin in the first place?ā€ Nora says jokingly.
She has a point. Yves is starting to think that all of the formative relationships in his life have all happened by accident.
ā€”
Vincent and Giselle get along very well, Yves notes, listening to the two of them talk. Halfway through dinner, they get into a heated discussion about the more outward-facing expectations at work, as Joel and Cherie exchange knowing glances. Giselle talks about feeling accountable for the team she managesā€”for knowing that if they donā€™t perform, sheā€™ll take the fall for them; for being careful not to disperse the stress from higher ups unevenly, for constantly feeling her way through how much work is reasonable to expect of them. Vincent talks about the stress of apportioning work to othersā€”the knowledge in his own competence and the knowledge gap when it comes to how others will handle things, the desire to take on more work alone to make sure everything is accounted for.
Nora, whoā€™d had an internship at a different firm after each year in college, weighs in too on the management styles sheā€™d been under, to what extent the expectations from leadership affected the dynamic between her coworkers.
Itā€™s interesting, Yves thinks, that they all have their own subset of worries, even when they come across as people who are so certain of themselves.
As the others speak, Vincent stops periodically to rub his nose with the knuckle of his index fingerā€”an action that always seems to keep the irritation at bay, but never seems to mitigate it entirely. For a moment, his expression goes hazy, his eyes watering ever so slightly, but it always lasts only a moment.
When Mikhail cracks a joke that has the entire table laughing, Vincent takes the opportunity to cough quietly into an upheld fist. When Cherie talks about her and Joelā€™s extremely mathematical efforts to fit everything into the car before moving, Vincent turns aside, raising a napkin to his face with a quiet, well-contained sniffle.
Itā€™s difficult to tell, at first. But his attempts to keep quiet, to succumb to his symptoms as inconspicuously as possible, take their toll on him. Every time he jerks forward with a near-silent stifle, Yves can tell, by Vincentā€™s expression when he emerges, that itā€™s just short of relieving.Ā  Every sniffle seems to only add on to the mounting congestion, in the long run. Itā€™s a slow, almost imperceptible unraveling.
And yet, when Yves asks about itā€”when he offers to ask the others for antihistamines, or when he offers to make the drive to a convenience store himself; when he suggests that they go out to get some fresh airā€”heā€™s always faced with the same nonanswer, the same dismissive, Iā€™ll be fine. The same persistent, Donā€™t worry about it.
So Yves doesnā€™t worry about it, for nowā€”at least, not outwardly.
ā€”
At some point after dinner, they disperse. Yves talks to Joel and Cherie about the apartment, about the pains of moving in, about the other places theyā€™d considered and about why this one had been at the top of the list. Then about the catā€” ā€œwe had been talking about getting one,ā€ Cherie says. ā€œAnd then one day Joel was wandering around downtown, and one of the pet shops there was holding an adoption event, and then when I got home there was a cat in the living room.ā€
ā€œHe didnā€™t call you to come pick out a cat with him?ā€
ā€œHave you ever heard of ā€˜ask for forgiveness, not permission?ā€™ā€ Joel says.Ā 
ā€œHe texted me before he brought her home,ā€ Cherie says, and scrolls through her phone until she finds a text that says: Would you kill me if I brought home a cat. Just asking for a friend. And hypothetically if we extended this thought experiment it would be an orange cat thatā€™s 2 months old.
ā€œThat sounds like a text from someone whoā€™s absolutely decided already,ā€ Yves says. ā€œAsk for forgiveness, huh? So howā€™s the forgiveness going?ā€
ā€œI let her name her,ā€ Joel says.
ā€œHeā€™s on litter box duty for the next six months,ā€ Cherie says.
On the other side of the room, Mikhail and Vincent are having a conversationā€”it could be because Vincent is the person in the room that Mikhail has talked to least, to date, but Yves has a feeling that itā€™s so that Mikhail can gain embarrassing intel on what Yves has been doing for the past few months.
Out of the corner of his eye, he sees Vincent turn away, his eyebrows drawing together, raising both his hands to his face to catch a sneeze into steepled hands. Then, not a moment later, his shoulders shudder forward with another.
ā€œTotally off topic,ā€ Yves says, to Joel and Cherie. ā€œDo you guys have any antihistamines?ā€
ā€œI think we have some Benadryl,ā€ Cherie says. ā€œIt should be in the bathroom cabinet, behind the mirror.ā€
He does find it there, eventuallyā€”next to a box of band-aids and a small cylindrical container of cotton swabs. Perhaps heā€™ll hand it to Vincent, discreetly, when heā€™s done talking to Mikhail. Vincent had said antihistamines made him tired, but now that dinner is over, it shouldnā€™t be an issueā€”Yves suspects people will start heading out soon, and heā€™ll be the one driving, anyways.
When he steps out into the hallway, Mikhail and Vincent are in the middle of a conversation. Itā€™s a conversation Yves has every intention of interrupting, and no intention of eavesdropping on, until he overhearsā€”
ā€œSo,ā€ Mikhail says, ā€œWhen you first started dating Yves, what was it that you saw in him?ā€
Yves winces. Thatā€™s certainly not an easy question to answerā€”he and Vincent donā€™t know each other all that well, and any planning they have done on the basis of their fake relationship has been almost entirely centered around logisticsā€”events, important dates, flagship moments in the relationship, trivia-worthy personal details. Notā€¦ this.
But Vincent just laughs, seemingly unfazed. ā€œHonestly, if I told you everything I liked about Yves, youā€™d want to date him too.ā€
ā€œThatā€™s a tall claim,ā€ Mikhail says. Yves is positively certain that no permutation of words in the universe could make Mikhail want to date him. ā€œYou canā€™t just say that and not give any examples.ā€
ā€œI guess Yves is a very considerate person,ā€ Vincent says, with a sniffle. ā€œIt actually confused me, at first. When I was growing up, after I moved here from Korea, I was brought up in the sort of environment where there was always an expectation for self-sufficiency. It didnā€™t matter how young I was, I guessā€”there were certain things I was expected to know, and certain things I was expected to teach myself.ā€
Something about his expression looks wistful, if not a little sad. But perhaps this is a trick of the light; perhaps his eyes are just watering from earlier. ā€œMy parents trusted me with a lot of things, but it was the kind of trust where they werenā€™t planning on filling in the gaps for me if I fell short.ā€Ā 
ā€œI know what you mean,ā€ Mikhail says. ā€œThat mustā€™ve been difficult.ā€
ā€œIt wasnā€™t easy,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œBut Iā€™m not telling you this because it was a burden to me, or anything. Back then, it was all that I had ever known. It was normal to me, then, because it was inevitable.ā€
ā€œYves is a very different person than I am,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œAt times, when I was growing up, it felt like kindness was always something that had to be calculated.ā€
He pauses, sniffling again, before he raises his arm to his face with a forcefulā€”
ā€œhIhhā€™GKT-! Hhā€¦ hh-HHihā€™NGKktshH!ā€
ā€œBless you,ā€ Mikhail says reflexively.
ā€œThadk you,ā€ Vincent says, sniffling. He lowers his arm. ā€œI was always taught that if you lend a hand to someone else, you have to make sure their success is not the thing that robs you of your spotā€”that sort of thing. But Yves is kind even without thinking about it. Heā€™s kind even when thereā€™s nothing in it for him.ā€
ā€œSo that was what made you develop feelings for him?ā€ Mikhail asks.
ā€œEventually, yes,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œAt first, I thought that we were irreconcilably different.ā€
ā€œWhat changed?ā€
ā€œYves is an easy person to like, romantically or otherwise,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œItā€™s a little disarming to be on the receiving end of his type of kindness. And I think thatā€™s ultimately what made me start liking him. Heā€™s just the sort of selfless person you canā€™t help but admire, if that makes sense. Itā€™s likeā€”when someone does so much for you out of sheer selflessness, at some point, you start wanting to be a part of their happiness too.ā€
Out of the corner of his eye, Yves sees a small orange blurā€”mostly fluff, on four short white legs, with two pointy earsā€”bound from the kitchen into the living room.
ā€œI get it,ā€ Mikhail says. ā€œThatā€™s an interesting answer. It makes me hopeful that Yves mightā€™ve stumbled into a relationship that will be very good for him.ā€
Thatā€™s a statement heā€™ll have to revise, Yves thinks wryly, in a few months, whenever it stops being practical for Vincent to keep up this act.
ā€œOh,ā€ Vincent says, blinking. ā€œWhat makes you say that?ā€
ā€œWhen he and Erika broke up, he wasā€”ā€ Mikhail pauses, briefly, and Yves is thinking about the many embarrassingā€”but completely, verifiably trueā€”ways he could finish off that sentence. ā€œā€”he was pretty upset,ā€ Mikhail says, instead, which Yves decides is suitably merciful.
ā€œLook, whatā€™s between them is between themā€”Iā€™m not going to claim I know all the ins and outs of their relationship. But given that Yves was living with me for much of the time that he and Erika were dating, Iā€™ve seen them interact more times than I can count.ā€
ā€œI donā€™t think Erika is a bad person,ā€ he continues. ā€œSheā€™s very ambitious, which I think was good for Yves back when they first started dating. But I donā€™t think she recognized those things about himā€”how much he cares for others, how much he gives people the benefit of the doubt, how much heā€¦ well, frankly, how much bullshit heā€™s willing to endure on his end. I think she took his kindness for granted, a little bit, and she certainly didnā€™t go out of her way to reciprocate.ā€
ā€œWhat Iā€™m saying is, Iā€™m glad he met you,ā€ Mikhail says. Beside him, something small and orange hops onto the couch theyā€™re standing next to. ā€œI can tell that what you said was sincere.ā€Ā 
If even Mikhail thought he was being sincere, perhaps Vincent is a little too good of an actor.
ā€œObviously, itā€™s early for me to be saying this, so you can take it with a grain of salt,ā€ Mikhail continues. ā€œBut I think you could be kind to him in the way he deserves.ā€
The sentence feels like a punch to the stomach.
Andā€”well.
Iā€™m glad he met you. I think you could be kind to him in the way he deserves.
Yves has really dug himself into this hole, hasnā€™t he?
Mikhail thinks that Vincent is good for himā€”Mikhail, one of Yvesā€™s closest friends, someone who is by no means quick to express his approval over whoever Yves is seeingā€”which means that when they inevitably stage their breakup, Yves is never going to hear the end of it.
Is it cruel to be taking Vincent to all of these events, to be introducing him to all of his friends, whenā€”after the impending breakupā€”Vincent might never see any of them again? Is it cruel that Mikhail likes Vincent enough to be hopeful that this is going to last?
Yves doesnā€™t have time to contemplate it more when three things happen.
Oneā€”Gingersnap, who is still perched at the very top of the couch, nudges her face against Vincentā€™s arm and mews softly at him.
Twoā€”Vincent stops what heā€™s doing to reach out slowly, cautiously, to scratch gently at the fur under her chin. Gingersnap purrs, leaning her head into his hand.
Threeā€”Vincent withdraws his hand, suddenly, as if heā€™s been burned, twisting away reflexively. He lifts his handā€”the same hand heā€™s been petting Gingersnap with (probably inadvisably) to his face, to cover a resoundingā€”
ā€œhhā€”hiHH-hHihhā€™iIZSChHH-uhh! snf-!ā€
The sneeze sounds ticklish and barely relieving, as if heā€™s been holding it in all afternoon.Ā 
Itā€™s only a few moments later that Vincentā€™s jerking forward with another ticklish, wrenching, ā€œhhā€¦ hhiHHā€¦ NgKT-!ā€”hhā€™hiiIIIKā€™TSCHhuhH! snf-! hiIhā€¦ hIIIH-IITSCHhā€™yyue!ā€
ā€œOh,ā€ Mikhail says, finally comprehending. ā€œYouā€™re allergic to cats?ā€
ā€œJust slightlyā€” hIhā€¦ hH- Hiihā€”hhHā€™nNGkT-!ā€ Vincent sniffles wetly, rubbing his nose with the back of his hand. ā€œSorry to - hh-! - cut our codversatiod short - hHā€¦ Iā€¦ hhiHhā€™IiKSHhuh! Excuse mbeā€¦ hHā€¦ Hhh-! Iā€™mb going to rund to the bathroomā€¦ hhā€¦ hhiIhā€¦ hh-HIihā€™iiIKā€™SHhUHhh!ā€
Yves ducks out into the kitchen before Vincent has a chance to head his way. He busies himself with removing a glass from the cabinet and filling it with water, Somewhere behind him, he hears the bathroom door click shut, hears the slightly muffled sound of a sneeze, then another.
He shuts his eyes.
Vincent had said that it was fine. Should Yves have insisted? Itā€™s Yvesā€™s fault, again, that Vincent is in this situation, but then again, he couldnā€™t have knownā€”both that Joel and Cherie would have a cat, and that Vincent would like her so much. Either way, Yves canā€™t help but feel partially responsible.
But would it be strange, now, to offer Vincent something to take for it, to openly acknowledge his affliction? Should he have done something earlier? Or should he wait to acknowledge it after they leave?
Against all doubt, he finds himself outside of the bathroom door.
Yves knocks.
Thereā€™s the sound of water running, inside, and then the sound of the faucet being turned to shut. Then thereā€™s a brief pause. Yves is contemplating knocking again when the door opens just a crack.
There, Vincent stands, his eyes a little watery still, his nose just slightly redder than usual, his hair slightly out of placeā€”heā€™s just washed his face, then.
ā€œYves,ā€ Vincent says.
ā€œUm,ā€ Yves says, holding out the glass of water and, next to it, the bottle of Benadryl. ā€œThought you could use these.ā€
Vincent takes the cup, a little hesitantly, and sets it on the bathroom counter. Then he takes the bottle of allergy medicine, unscrews the cap, and removes two small pink pills.
ā€œThank you,ā€ he says. Yves thinks heā€™s about to take a sip when he twists to the side suddenly, his eyes squeezing shut, snapping forward with a loudā€”
ā€œhIIHā€™IIKKSHhā€™hUh!ā€
The hand heā€™s holding the cup with trembles a bit with the action, but the water inside doesnā€™t spill.Ā 
ā€œBless you,ā€ Yves says, taking the cup from him, beforeā€”
ā€œhIHHā€¦ hh-Hhihā€™iISCHhhā€™Uhh!ā€
ā€œBless you!ā€
The only acknowledgment Vincent gives him is to take the cup back from him, sniffling, and down the pills in one quick, decisive sip.
ā€œTheyā€™ll take some time to take effect,ā€ Yves says, though heā€™s sure that Vincent knows that already, for the way he knew to take two, even without reading the label on the bottle. ā€œAre you okay?ā€
ā€œItā€™s been awhile since my last edcounter with a cat,ā€ Vincent says, sniffling.Ā 
ā€œYou forgot how bad it was?ā€
ā€œIt gets better with exposure,ā€ he says. And worse without.
Yves says, ā€œFor what itā€™s worth, Iā€™m sorry. I really didnā€™t know theyā€™d have a cat.ā€
ā€œEven if youā€™d known, I ndever told you I was allergic,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œItā€™s fine.ā€
ā€œI shouldā€™ve thought to check. Seriously, a housewarming partyā€”ā€
ā€œI told you, snf, I like cats,ā€ Vincent says, clearing his throat. ā€œSo itā€™s fine.ā€
Yves looks aroundā€”at the bathroom, which looks just as pristine as heā€™d left it earlier, except that the tissue box on the bathroom counter is a little askew. At the slight tiredness to Vincentā€™s posture, even as he looks off to the side, tilting his glasses up to his forehead to swipe at his eyes with his sleeve.
ā€œDo you want to get out of here?ā€œ Yves says.
ā€œI cad stay,ā€ Vincent says, as if he really is willing to, despite the side effects. ā€œDo you want to stay longer?ā€
I want you to be comfortable, Yves wants to say.Ā 
Instead, he says, ā€œI think Iā€™ve just about caught up with everyone. Besides, we have work tomorrow, and I think Cherie and Joel do too, so I donā€™t want to stay too late, you know?ā€
ā€œOkay,ā€ Vincent says.Ā 
ā€œIā€™m happy you came,ā€ Yves says, stepping past Vincent to put the bottle of Benadryl back into its original spot, where he found it. He snags the glass from the counter on his way out.
ā€œYour friends are a fun crowd,ā€ Vincent says, following him out.
Yves laughs. ā€œI think just between you and me, Mikhail has been dying to interrogate you about this relationship.ā€
ā€œHe did idterrogate me,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œHow much of it did you overhear?ā€
ā€œWhat?ā€
ā€œWhen you were standing out in the hallway.ā€
Oh. Well, perhaps he hadnā€™t been as discreet about eavesdropping as heā€™d thought. Yves says, ā€œOkay, you got me. I heard a good amount.ā€
ā€œI donā€™t think Mikhail noticed you there, if youā€™re worried,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œIn any case, it doesdā€™t matter if you overheard. It was just the same story.ā€
They step out into the hallway. Giselle has left, already, to be home in time for a cross-timezone call with a team that works somewhere halfway across the world. Yves bids everyone else a goodbye (Cherie and Joel thank him for coming, and Cherie hugs him and Vincent both on the way out; Nora asks Vincent to send her a recipe to his beef skewers, to which Vincent admits sheepishly that he stole from a cookbook, to which Nora says ā€œmaking it successfully is half the work;ā€ Mikhail says, ā€œIf you and Vincent get a place too, I want to be invited to your housewarming party.ā€)
On the way out, Yves grabs both of their coats off from where theyā€™re hanging in a closet next to the front door, and hands Vincentā€™s coat to him. Thereā€™s never much street parking by the apartment, so the car is parked a couple blocks down, and itā€™s cold enough to be worth bundling up.
ā€œYouā€™re very good at lying,ā€ Yves says, when heā€™s sure that the door is shut behind them.
Outside, itā€™s snowing just a little. Snow falls from the sky in thick white flakes. Vincent pulls his hood over his shoulders, sniffling a littleā€”though whether thatā€™s from the cold or from the allergies, Yves canā€™t be sure. ā€œIs that a compliment or an insult?ā€
ā€œDefinitely a compliment. I just mean, you play the part really well.ā€
ā€œSo instead of being a good boyfriend, Iļæ½ļæ½m a good fake boyfriend,ā€ Vincent says, lifting his sleeve to his face to muffle a cough into it. ā€œSomehow, that seems much less impressive.ā€
ā€œItā€™s arguably more impressive,ā€ Yves says. ā€œIt definitely requires a different subset of skills.ā€
Vincent is quiet for a moment. When Yves looks over, he sees Vincent raise both hands to his face, steepling them over his nose, his eyes fluttering shut.
ā€œhHhā€¦ hHhā€™iiiIKKSshhā€™uhh!ā€
ā€œBless you,ā€ Yves says.Ā 
ā€œNdotā€” hhā€¦ hHhā€¦ done ā€” hH-hhIhā€™nGKKTsHuuh! hHh-hHā€™IIZSCHHhhuh!ā€
ā€œBless you! Cats, huh?ā€
Vincent hums. Itā€™s snowed all through dinnerā€”the snow under their feet coats the sidewalk, powdery and untouched. Their shoes sink into it while they walk.
ā€œI didnā€™t know you used to live in Korea,ā€ Yves says.
ā€œItā€™s not a secret, snf-!,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œBut I ndever found an occasion to bring it up.ā€Ā 
Yves can think of a hundred things to sayā€”how itā€™s strange only learning this information secondhand; itā€™s strange to play the part of someone who knows Vincent and knows him intimately, and to know so little about him, at the core of it. Isnā€™t it like that, with coworkers? The only window he has to Vincentā€™s life is made up of the things Vincent has chosen to share with himā€”over small talk in the break room, or conversationally over their outings, or during longer drives.
He knows an assortment of trivia, like Vincentā€™s favorite color (green) or Vincentā€™s birthday (March 15th) or the number of siblings Vincent has (one), or when he had his first kiss (during his first year in university) or his least favorite chore (vacuuming) or how he spends his weekends (generally at the library downtown, catching up on work or working on his personal projects). But even that was only for the sake of having something to say if his friends asked himā€”of having a basic understanding of his supposed partner that Vincent could later corroborate.
ā€œWas it very different there?ā€
ā€œI moved here when I was pretty young,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œBut it was very different.ā€
When Yves looks over, thereā€™s something complicated to Vincentā€™s expression that gives him pause. ā€œBack then, I was young enough that everything was new to me. So the cultural shift wasnā€™t as pronounced for me as it was for the rest of the family. I think thatā€™s why they moved back, eventually.ā€
ā€œDid that happen recently?ā€
ā€œThey moved back just six years after we came here,ā€ he says. ā€œI was in high school at the time, so I stayed with my aunt to continue my education here.ā€
ā€œWas it difficult living here on your own?ā€
ā€œIs this useful to you?ā€
Yves blinks, taken aback. ā€œSorry?ā€
ā€œIs this information useful to you?ā€ Vincent says, looking over at him. His glasses have fogged up a little in the cold.Ā  ā€œDo you think your friends are going to ask about it?ā€
ā€œItā€™sā€”not exactly useful in that sense,ā€ Yves says, backtracking. ā€œI just wanted to know. But you donā€™t have to tell me if you donā€™t want to.ā€
Thatā€™s right, he reminds himselfā€”he and Vincent are only doing this for appearancesā€™ sake.Ā 
ā€œI got used to it,ā€ Vincent says, finally, which isnā€™t exactly an answer. ā€œItā€™s hard to say ifā€”hold on, Iā€” hh-!ā€
Yves sees him duck off to the side, raising his arm to his face.
ā€œBless youā€”!ā€
ā€œhh-Hhiihā€™IIZSCHhā€™uhH!ā€
The sneeze is muffled slightly into his sleeve. Vincent sniffles, keeping his arm clamped to his face for a moment, in trepidation, before dropping it to his side.
ā€œApologies, snf-!,ā€ he says, as if he has anything to apologize for. ā€œItā€™s hard to say if things wouldā€™ve been better if Iā€™d gone back with them to Korea. I just know things wouldā€™ve been different.ā€
Yves doesnā€™t know what to say to that. It feels like something that Vincent has thought about for years, something that Yves couldnā€™t even begin to comprehendļæ½ļæ½growing up here, alone. Away from his family, in a country foreign to him, with his family all the way on the other side of the Pacific ocean; staying with a stranger. To say that it had to have been difficult would be a vast understatement.Ā 
Had he doubted himself, then? Had it been his idea to stay here, in the States? Had his parents told him it was for the best? Had he argued with them on the subject? Had they listened?
ā€œDo you think youā€™re happy enough now to justify that decision?ā€ Yves asks.
Vincent is quiet for a bit. Around them, the snow continues to fall, silent and slow, listing upwards on every updrift. ā€œSometimes,ā€ he says.
ā€”
When they get back to the car, Vincent is quiet. The car is frigid, the window panes cold enough to fog up when Yves puts his hand on themā€”he puts the heaters on to the highest setting. If anything, being out of the cold seems to make Vincentā€™s nose run even moreā€”a fact which he carefully obscures, resting his face on the palm of his hand with a few muffled sniffles.
ā€œThanks again for coming,ā€ Yves says. ā€œI know Iā€”and everyone elseā€”already said that to you like a hundred times. But I mean it.ā€
ā€œItā€™s ndo problem, snf,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œIā€™ll be sure to avoid putting you into contact with cats in the future,ā€ Yves says.
ā€œThereā€™s ndo need for that.ā€
ā€œWhile weā€™re at it, is there anything else youā€™re allergic to?ā€
ā€œNot much,ā€ Vincent says. ā€œUnless you pland on getting rid of the entire season of spring.ā€
ā€œThatā€™s secretly why you chose an office job,ā€ Yves says. ā€œSo you could avoid all the pollen by staying inside all day.ā€
ā€œBusy season was - snf-! - idvented solely for that purpose,ā€ Vincent says.
Itā€™s barely a couple minutes into the drive when Vincent stifles a yawn into his fist.
ā€œAre you tired?ā€ Yves asks. ā€œI mean, you did say that thing about antihistamines making you tired.ā€
ā€œWide awake,ā€ Vincent says, beforeā€”moments laterā€”hiding another yawn behind a cupped hand.
ā€œEvidently,ā€ Yves says, which earns him a quiet laugh.
ā€œTell me if you ndeed me,ā€ Vincent says, leaning his head lightly on the passenger seat window. As if this is work, or something. As if Yves could have any conceivable reason to need him during the drive home.
ā€œNot at all,ā€ Yves says. ā€œAs a matter of fact, itā€™d probably be a good thing if you close your eyes. You wouldnā€™t have to look at all this traffic.ā€ Itā€™s a little past rush hour, but traffic is only just starting to clear up, and driving in the city at any hour has never been a particularly pleasant experience.
Vincent opens his eyes. ā€œDo you wadt me to help navigate?ā€
ā€œI want you to sleep,ā€ Yves says. ā€œIā€™m an expert at handling traffic.ā€
Itā€™s as if all this time, Vincent was merely waiting for permission. Yves isnā€™t certain if heā€™s asleep, but he certainly looks to beā€”when Yves sneaks a glance at him, his eyes are shut, his shoulders slack, and his breathing has evened out. Itā€™s an image Yves wants to thoroughly take inā€”the slow rise of his chest, his eyelashes fanned out over his cheeks.Ā 
Instead, he drives. Instead, he stares hard at the rows and rows of cars before him, at every traffic light, and tries not to think aboutā€”
Vincent, at the housewarming party, kneeling down to pet a cat smaller than his hand, despite being well aware of the consequences.
Vincent, calling Yves kind even without thinking about it, talking about himā€”about his best qualitiesā€”with near-artful dishonesty.
Vincent, walking beside him in the snow, talking candidly about growing up here; the unspoken understanding between them about how much he mustā€™ve given up.
That Vincent, the same Vincent from work, asleep in Yvesā€™s passenger seat, while Yves drives him home.
Yves canā€™t help but think that if he caught feelings for someone like Vincent, Erika would be the least of his problems.
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homeb0ys Ā· 5 months ago
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Whether it be blood or milk, or even bloodmilkā€¦itā€™ll always be yummers. šŸ©øšŸ„›
Tattoo is based off @homelanderbutbigā€™s commission I got done.
I knew I wanted to get a Homie tattoo but I wanted something different. So I settled for Vamplander. šŸ˜ˆ
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hekateinhell Ā· 8 months ago
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Chapter 1 - 5.4k
"And here I thought you were a good little girl who could listen to directions. Instead, you decide to turn around and make fools out of us both. But I am not unkind," Armand pauses to run her hand over the swell of Lestat's hip and down to the back of her thigh, fingering her exposed skin through the black fishnets.
"Perhaps you have been cruising through life on your looks alone because, from the sounds of it, nobody ever taught you any differentā€¦ not your friends, not your teachers."
Lestat's breath catches, goosebumps visibly rising on her skin.
"Not your mother."
[READ ON AO3]
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blessedmoonsoul Ā· 5 months ago
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hmmmmm. I think you guys need to stop acting like the bear's characters of colour are treated like props when they are a major part of the show's beating heart. we got to learn so much more about them this season. the show is basically an ensemble idk why you'd think they'd only focus on two characters? also anyone saying claire got more scenes than sydney is lying pls what are y'all talking about claire had like one dialogue scene the entire season pls be SERIOUS šŸ˜­
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myokk Ā· 5 months ago
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fast sketch of my Imelda oneshotšŸ«¶šŸ’“
remembering the snow
Word count: 3.300
Rating: G/T I donā€™t get the difference šŸ§ā€ā™€ļø
Imelda Reyes has never been one to do things by halves.
Her mother always talked about the circumstances of her birth with pride: Imelda came quickly as if she were eager to get out and see the world already, screaming even before she had fully left her mother's womb, determined to leave an indelible mark on the world.
The women in their village who had assisted the birth crossed themselves, chattering to each other in quick, soft, beautiful Spanish staccato about the baby who was already unlike any they had ever seen before. Strong and healthy and beautiful, her deep brown eyes already taking in her surroundings and watching them solemnly moments after her arrival.
Her father always talked about the circumstances of her childhood: running wild and free, flying before she could walk (a source of great pride), his little shadow who peppered him with endless questions about the world. He always brought her along to his work meetings much to everyone's delight; she was with him when he was offered the enviable position of Spanish Diplomat to the British Ministry of Magic.
At the age of five, they left the beautiful sleepy village where time hadn't seemed to exist. Imelda still dreams of long, hot, dusty days playing under the shade of orange trees, going to the market every two days with her mother draped in their finest silks, sleeping and lying around during the hottest part of the day, only leaving their house once the sun left its highest point and was about to disappear behind the mountains.
The older women in the village doted on her. If she thinks hard, she can recall their beautiful, wavering voices calling out to her as she raced past them: 'ten cuidado, cariƱo, te vas a mancar', 'ven aquĆ­, cielo, te quiero ver la cara tan bonita', 'mira cĆ³mo se estĆ” creciendo, se nota que va a ser una belleza de mayor'...voices filled with comfort and love. She never knew anything different then.
She's their only child. Her mother was always brushing her hair and humming, trying to get her to sit still and listen to her endless fairy tales as the sun bore down on them; her father, treating Imelda like the son he had always wished for but accepting and loving her all the same. Sometimes, her mother would let her out of the house before the sun became too strong and they would fly around the mountains and be free free free.
Arriving to Edinburgh at the age of five, Imelda hadn't even realized she didn't speak the same language as the other children around her. As with everything else, she jumped in headfirst. Her mother always jokes that she became fluent in English the second she stepped foot on Scottish soil. To Imelda, it does seem that way. She can't ever remember not speaking in the soft Scottish burr, reminiscent of the soft Spanish she had left behind and still spoke at home.
As a child, she never had problems forging relationships with whoever was around her. She was brash and inquisitive and irresistible, taking charge wherever she went. The other children flocked around her, hanging on to her every word.
It changed, though, when her mother got her cough. It started out harmless enough, a slight cough and headache before bed each night. When her mother woke up every morning, she would be fine. But going to bed early changed to going to bed even earlier and earlier until it was time to accept what the three of them were steadfastly ignoring: she was getting worse.
Imelda was nine. She remembers her mother drying her tears with gentle, soft hands, caressing her cheeks and whispering to her that it would be fine. That she wasn't gone yet: they still had time.
'No pasa nada, mi amor. Siempre estarƩ contigo.'
At Hogwarts, things changed even more. She was a Slytherin and proud of it, but she never quite fit in with her classmates. She wasn't one of them, hadn't grown up with them, and they made sure she knew it. Gone were the days of running wild: she turned her single-minded determination to her studies and quidditch and found herself excelling at everything she put her mind to. It all came easily to her and she had no time for anyone who could distract her.
She wasn't a complete loner. She had her quidditch teammates, her partners in various classes, but nobody she hung out with outside of classes. She always studied alone, learned alone, trained alone.
(Of course, the picture she paints to her father in owls home is much different. He has enough on his mind - a daughter struggling to make friends is a non-issue as far as Imelda is concerned. And besides: she's fine.)
Imelda was quite content with the way things were working out for her. She would never admit if she was lonely or not, and enjoyed every part of her life. Until her fifth year, when everything began to change. Gone were her rigid schedules and studying alone and discipline. A new girl was sorted into Slytherin and Imelda found she didn't hate the girl's company. The two of them laugh together at night while they braid each others' hair, Imelda teaches her Spanish, and they have started to study together.
The new student drags her around Hogwarts and Imelda finds herself actually enjoying herself and enjoying spending time with the classmates sheā€™s spent so many years ignoring.
Ā  This is when she meets Poppy Sweeting.
Well...Poppy swears that they met ages ago, during their first year when they were partnered together in Potions. Imelda has no recollection - that whole year was a blur - it was the year her mother succumbed to her illness - so she has to take Poppy's word for it.
She finds herself with friends for the first time in a long time. But, when the new student is running off with Sebastian doing Merlin-knows-what, things that Imelda definitely does not want to be a part of, she still finds herself seeking Poppy's company.
Poppy is sweet and fun and introverted in a way that Imelda finds familiar and comfortable: whereas Imelda turns to her studies and quidditch, Poppy often opts to spend time more time with beasts than humans. But there's something endearing about her earnestness and Imelda starts to find herself craving Poppy's calm company.
She always knows what to say when Imelda finds herself getting worked up over nothing.
Ā  On the train home for the winter holidays, as Imelda is striding down the long corridor in search of an empty cabin where she can read and concoct fail-proof quidditch tactics, Poppy calls her over to her carriage and asks Imelda to keep her company. She only needs to ask once. There's an unfamiliar fluttering in Imelda's stomach as she sits across from Poppy and the other girl beams at her but it's...well. It's not altogether unpleasant. They play exploding snap and exchange book recommendations and laugh together and...well, if Imelda's knee brushes against Poppy's occasionally or their fingers linger as they exchange essays to look over...
She can't be blamed, can she?
A letter from Poppy arrives over the break. At the sight of Poppy's small brown owl tapping the window with the letter in its beak, Imelda's heart starts racing and she runs over to the bird, grinning like a fool, but she pauses before opening it. Her fingers tremble as they hover over the wax seal.
Imelda's father is largely absent these days, a shadow of the man she had grown up with. She's noticed the difference over the summer too, of course, but the winter always feels different. More desolate; more harsh. They're nearing the four-year anniversary of her mother's death. It's impossible to ignore the fact that losing his wife has damaged his soul irreparably, and Imelda's seeing first-hand what being deeply in love can do to a person.
Maybe she'll put the letter aside and read it tomorrow.
Tomorrow bleeds into the next day turns into one week and before she can blink the bleak winter vacation with her father has ended and she's heading back to Hogwarts.
On the train, she walks past Poppy: the two of them make eye contact but Poppy flushes and looks out the window, tucking her honey-colored hair behind her ear and Imelda moves on to the next empty carriage. She pulls out some parchment and works on revising her Charms essay. It's for the best, anyway, she tells herself. For the best that she doesn't have any distractions. Their O.W.L.s are coming up and she's determined to get an O in every subject.
Ā  The month of January goes by in a flash. Between the insane quidditch schedule she's concocted for her team and the study sessions in the library, she keeps herself busy. The new fifth-year, her first real friend, starts to show concern for Imelda, gently trying to ask her what's going on as they braid each others' hair before bed.
Imelda doesn't want to bother her, though.
(She doesn't truly know what's the matter, anyways.)
She resolves to do a better job with keeping her emotions in check - her friend has enough on her plate, and Imelda doesn't want her to have to worry over something that's not even a problem in the first place.
She's fine.
Out of the corner of her eye in the classes she shares with Poppy, Imelda notices that she doesn't look as happy as she normally does. Her face is more pale and withdrawn; whenever Imelda's eyes flicker to her, her own gaze darts away.
Ā  With the beginning of February come a lot of blizzards, and they make Imelda remember the first time she saw snow.
Her parents always started the story telling her that she cried and cried and cried.
They had both run over to her, covering her with warm hugs and kisses, the tiny family huddled together in this foreign place where the people looked and spoke differently, where nothing was the same and she missed the old women who would give her mazapanes whenever she ran by, missed the tiny clouds of dust that would puff up as she ran and the hazy mountains in the distance and the hot, hot sun beating down while she played in the shade of the orange trees while her mother slept away the heat. Pulling her mittened hands off of her tear-stained face and telling her 'mira cariƱo, mira quĆ© bonita es la nieve. TĆ³cala, ya verĆ”s que no pasa nada...estamos aquĆ­ contigo...'
Her tears had soon dried and she was laughing and playing in the snow and she couldn't even remember what had made her so sad in the first place.
Imelda's sad now as she stares out the window.
Her mother isn't there anymore. She has no one to turn to in this self-imposed exile.
Four years ago today.
She's hidden herself away in an alcove, curled up, arms wrapped around her knees watching the snow swirling out the window. She canceled quidditch practice today due to the storm, much to everyone's surprise. Just last week, she had forced them to train in the freezing rain and today's snowfall is mild in comparison. But...today she doesn't have the energy. She's spent so much effort pretending that everything's fine when it's not and now she's sad and alone and confused.
She doesn't hear Poppy when she comes near.
The other girl crowds into Imelda's space, pressing against her in the alcove. The two face each other, and Poppy brings a gentle hand up to Imelda's face to brush away tears she hadn't even realized were falling.
"What -" Imelda starts saying, but a fresh sob chokes her and she can't. Poppy leans forward and wraps her arms around Imelda, pulling her into a close embrace. Imelda feels everything crumbling around her and she sobs into Poppy's shoulder - Poppy whispering reassurances and smoothing her hair, cradling Imelda as she cries and cries and cries.
They don't leave the alcove for another hour, almost staying out after curfew.
Ā  Imelda is subdued the next few days. The snow continues to fall until the whole castle looks like it's straight from one of the fairy tales her mother used to tell her as she brushed her hair. Imelda shows up for meals, shows up for classes, shows up in the study group, but she feels like she's just going through the motions.
She can tell her friend is getting worried, but Imelda can't confide in her. Her friend does small gestures anyways because she understands: saving Imelda a seat in class, asking her about quidditch, saving her favorite muffins for her at breakfast.
Maybe she talked to Sebastian about her worry because even he is being nicer than normal to Imelda, asking her if she wants to play wizarding chess with the two of them. Imelda doesn't really understand how or why they like playing the game so much - her friend is awful at it and Sebastian seems to enjoy the destruction and chaos more than actually strategizing. Even though Imelda hates the game - every move is painfully obvious and she can't understand how nobody else sees it like she does - maybe it would be nice to do something different.
Imelda freezes when they enter the Astronomy Tower to play: Poppy is there, waiting. For her. They haven't seen each other since she broke down humiliated and sobbing and she doesn't know what to do.
Sebastian looks between the two of them, brows furrowed, then leans down to their friend and whispers something in her ear. She nods and the two of them disappear, leaving Imelda and Poppy alone.
Poppy stands and Imelda can feel her heart start to hammer against her throat. Poppy walks forward slowly, only stopping when she's right in front of Imelda. When she speaks, her voice is high and sweet and Imelda realizes how much she missed her. "I-I'm sorry, I just didn't know how else I could talk to you. Will you come with me? I have something to show you."
Imelda nods mutely and Poppy takes her hand. They lace their fingers together and it's the first time - apart from a few days ago - that they have voluntarily touched each other. She feels Poppy's fingers tighten around hers and Imelda focuses on the feeling of soft knuckles under her thumb, but now...she's self-conscious for the first time about her quidditch-rough hands and maybe she should have listened to her friend when she tried to encourage Imelda to use some hand lotion.
Maybe Poppy will let go of her hand and leave in disgust.
But...Poppy doesn't do any of that. Every so often, she looks up at Imelda, smiling slightly. When they reach the Entrance Hall, she lets go of Imelda's hand and Imelda feels its loss with a pang.
Poppy opens the bag at her side and pulls out two huge yellow and black Hufflepuff scarves. As she's reaching up to wrap one around Imelda, she whispers: "sorry, I only have these. But yellow looks good on you."
Both of them flush and smile at each other and Imelda doesn't know how long they stand before Poppy grabs her hand again, making sure their fingers are laced, and then they are heading out.
Poppy looks more and more excited the closer they get to the Forbidden Forest, but Imelda's never set foot even remotely close to the forest, and she feels quite apprehensive at first. But, Poppy's excitement is exhilarating - Imelda can feel it rolling off of her in waves and despite herself, she begins to feel excited too. They still haven't spoken since leaving Hogwarts, but it's a comfortable silence. Imelda's glad for the scarf - their breath is puffing out in soft clouds as they breathe and it's quite cold - the freezing temperatures in Scottish winters are still something she's never quite gotten used to.
Their boots crunch through the snow-filled landscape - it's nearing dusk and the sky is turning a brilliant shade of orange and pink, but it gets obscured by the tree branches the further into the Forbidden Forest they venture, the golden light only showing in bursts now.
"Almost there," Poppy says breathlessly. She beams up at Imelda, whose breath catches at the sight, before turning back and pulling her faster and faster until they stop in a clearing. They've stopped in the middle, and Imelda looks around.
Here, they can actually see the sky and it is breathtaking in its beauty - the gnarled, naked trees around them twisting and reaching up as if they could try and grasp some of the beauty for themselves. The snow is perfectly smooth and untouched except for the footprints that the two of them have just left. Apart from that, the clearing is nondescript.
This is what Poppy had been so excited to show her?
Poppy gives no explanation for why she brought Imelda to the Forbidden Forest, but she's almost quivering in excitement - Imelda can feel the tension in the hand that's clutching hers tightly. The sun sets lower and lower, the two of them watching it as the colors around them start to fade and mute and then -
Poppy gasps in delight.
There -
A small, dancing, brilliant white light sparks to their left and disappears just as quickly.
"Look," Poppy whispers. Imelda glances over to her - she can barely make out her face in the dimming light, but Poppy seems to be glowing with happiness.
There - again -
More and more of the brilliant white lights appear, glowing and flickering on and off, and moving in almost a pattern, dancing around their heads. Imelda laughs as she watches the tiny creatures fly around them. It's magical and beautiful and -
"I found the snow sprite nest a few weeks ago, when the blizzards started, and I've been observing them since then. I...I wanted to show you and tell you about them the second I found out because I haven't stopped thinking about you but after...well, you know...I just wanted to cheer you up..."
Poppy trails off, looking uncertain when Imelda doesn't say anything in response.
She can't, even though she desperately wants to. Her mouth goes dry as she looks to the girl at her side, who has done all of this, for her.
Poppy looks impossibly lovely in the glow of the snow sprites, as they dance and spark around their heads in a beautiful waving pattern and Imelda doesn't even think as her hand goes to Poppy's cheek. Poppy stops rambling as she looks up into Imelda's eyes.
Then, before she can lose her nerve, Imelda leans forward and presses her lips to Poppy's. It's only the lightest of touches, but her heart is beating so quickly and Merlin, she can't believe she just did that. She quickly retreats, face flaming, but before she can get away Poppy reaches up to cup Imelda's cheeks with both hands and she pulls her forward, her mouth greedy, desperate, as they finally kiss.
When they finally pull away, breathing heavily as their foreheads rest against each other, Imelda can't help the huge smile that's threatening to split her face open. It mirrors the expression she sees on Poppy, her eyes bright and cheeks flushed and she is just so lovely that Imelda can't help but lean forward and capture her mouth again. Their lips mold to each other and it's the culmination of all of their stolen glances, touches, secret wishes.
Imelda Reyes has never been one to do things by halves, after all.
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fossilcrafts Ā· 11 days ago
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trick or treat! ^.^
maybe psychonauts? if not then mlp is fine!
idk anything about psychonauts so unfortunately i couldn't gather any clips or any ideas for it, so i just made you a fluttershy edit šŸ§”
you get ... a treat !
this is a little lazy and rushed I'm so sorry .. i almost fell asleep like 4 or 5 times while making it . why am i so tired ..
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