#regarding the matter of the enemies
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Brun: How are you feeling?
Saint-Chamans: You don't have to keep asking me that! Every time you ask me that my headache gets worse!
Brun: Sorry.
Petiet: It's weird seeing you as a guy...
Saint-Chamans: It's weird to be a guy again, though I like having my moustache back! I did kinda enjoy being a chick to be honest. I should read that letter again- Lameth has it, right?
Brun: About that. Lameth's left to look for you. And she's turned her phone off because she knows the marshal's going to be really pissed about it.
Saint-Chamans: ... Awww man.
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tÌ» ofÍ tÌčÍ
hÍÌÌźeÌč aÌÌŒÌŻuÌ”ḑi̶ÍÌe̱nÌÌŻcÌĄÌÌŻeÍ
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Saint-Chamans: No idea what you're saying little buddy but it's nice to have you back and working with us.
Brun: Before Bory and the marshal come back and start bombarding you with questions... what do you remember?
Saint-Chamans: It's kinda confusing... I'll write up a report about it but I think uh... Roi Nicolas wanted to hang out with me while he destroyed hell? I think some other people were with us but I can't remember who they were... my pages got all burned and scrambled. I feel so... crispy.
Petiet: I'm so jealous..!
#the duke of dalmatia's aides de camp#adc saint chamans#the duke of dalmatia's pet shadow monster#regarding the matter of the enemies
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đŽ
What about the servants of the Void?
Did you have any dreams about them since coming here?
Send đŽ for a dream my muse has had about yours
ive only met the one fucker and no i havent dreamed about him weirdly though!
i have dreamed about this other fucker in some kind of dog costume though but i cant remember what actually happens in there
dunno who the fuck he is!
#Anonymous#regarding the matter of the enemies#dispatches from the marshal#letters intercepted for the marshal's eyes
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But would you tho (Patreon)
#Doodles#SCII#Damned#Schuldig#ZEX#And again the Captain implied from offscreen lol#Two little things âȘ One that Actually happened and one speculation lol#I really like Schuldig :D He's the likeable asshole type and his quirk is very well written :)#I love how he gets on Zelnick's case about his wishy-washy-ness in regards to xenophilia generally and ZEX specifically hehe#Zelnick has no good answer for him! It's so cute hehe <3#But then he turns right around and is wishy-washy himself!! I get the feeling his frustration stems a bit from relating hahaha#Or maybe Zelnick's uncertainty influenced him! It's not such an easy decision to make when you're staring down the barrel is it now :)#Openly attracted to Max's body and flattered by ZEX's personality and outright attraction to him in turn but the alien aspect is too much pf#Sure right okay lol - I have no skin in this game so I'll have to take his word for it haha#Secondarily speculating around ZEX's attraction and standards lol it sounds like an oxymoron but no he is actually a bit picky!#Yes he loves humans generally but he is actually tempered by what mind inhabits what body! It's so interesting to me!#I think it's especially funny how his various desires are in conflict with each other haha#Like it makes sense that he controls himself around Fwiffo - poor thing would have a heart attack - but he genuinely seems less attracted!#Which makes sense to me as well âȘ Spathi and VUX share several traits and were on the same side during the War so he's familiar with them#And he's specifically attracted to differences and novelty - it all lines up!#And then there's also his pride lol he tries to make more friends than enemies of course but he still gets petty and patronizing <3#If he's actually upset with someone /he's/ the one who would need convincing! It's all very interesting :3c#And then there's the matter of his own body vs. Max's body - he's so upset at the metaphysical implications of cloning his consciousness#I've never thought of ZEX in the context of the ''Would you fuck your clone'' questionnaire but I guess I know his answer now haha#Though I still wonder what his reaction would be to Max :0 He's probably not close enough to be ZEX but he is /a/ ZEX - of a sort#All his introspection about the body he's in has my mental ears perked haha - pity and worry for the potential life he's replacing#Discomfort at possibly being Max in some capacity including continuing to be in his body but also of overtaking his life entirely#And of being backed into a corner - Max is pitiful as well as pitiable! Neither of them want to be Max Vyer really#He loves humans but how far does that extend when push comes to shove âȘ It's been interesting watching him fumble through it :)
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time is a flat circle where we watch a country go to another country and randomly will civilians because "what if they're the enemies haha we totally aren't clearing people out to steal their land" etc and we all go "wow thats fucking messed up, good thing it won't happen again!" and then the exact same thing happens right now and the same people somehow are just incapable of accepting that fact that we are living through history and letting the thing we said wont happen again fucking happen again.
#the same ideologies causing all the pain back then are still causing pain now.#you need to realise any retaliation no matter the initial cause that causes mass civilian death is historically regarded as a bad thing#maybe some natives attack the white people coming into their land? yeah lets genocide them.#vietnamese conflict that america barges in on because it has a huge fucking head about itself?#lets kill all the vietnamese villagers we see because anyone could be the enemy.#oh and if they fight back because theyre enraged about the destruction of their home and murder of their families? proof that we were right.#we should bomb them and kill them and gas them. all for anti communism!#their fault for fighting back!#extremists drive two planes into a building? well we just gotta go can start fucking shooting every arab civilian we see and start a war.#because its obviously their fucking fault.#oh and yeah lets drop a nuclear bomb on japan because theyre not surrendering fast enough. on all those civilians.#oh can the car bombings in northern ireland and stuff? yeah lets just go to a stadium full of people that just wanted to watch football-#-and start shooting.#<--actions that have been repeatedly performed forever and ever#<--and all of them only go down well with insane people who think deporting all immigrants or mandatory school gennital checks a good thing#warfare is fucking stupid and so is colonization. you have too little faith in the common person and too much in power hungry governments#dROOLING AT OIL. VIBRATING AND ROCK HARD FOR THAT SWEET FOREIGN OIL AND LAND. COMPANIES GIDDY WITH THE PROSPECT OF KILLING NATIVES.
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Are there any complete story hacks of PMD other than explorers of spirit? I've played that one but I have mixed feelings on it
#august.chr#pmd#(this is an easily googled question but i'm really just asking for recs)#i liked eots in some regards#i really liked the section when you are in hero's mindscape and all the enemies are the pkmn who they've deemed as well. an Enemy#and i liked playing a hero that had not only a more distinct personality but an unpredictable one#but i think the hack felt meanspirited in a way that wasn't even really fun in the context of playing a meanspirited character sometimes#particularly irt chatot i think bc like yea it's reasonable to get upset abt having 90% of your wages taken but idk. i remember it irking m#but i have a bad memory this is a flawed review. ANYWAYS that doesn't matter i'm just looking for new experiences
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i think one of the headcanons that brings me the greatest emotional damage is that whenever it's brought up, ren consistently AGREES that the smartest move would have been to destroy him.
#đđđ : đ”đ©đŠđș đŽđąđș đșđ°đ¶ đ¶đŽđŠđ„ đ”đ° đŁđŠ đŽđ° đŹđȘđŻđ„. â hc .â#( it's not even necessarily a matter of him being self destructive. )#( he still sees himself as a weapon in many regards )#( and it's objectively smarter to dispose of something that dangerous than leave it to fall into enemy hands. )#( ... which he eventually did. and all of the secrets his body holds along with him. )#( mind he still has his grievances. he was completely innocent; a child. )#( but between destroying or abandoning him he thinks the greatest ''mercy'' would have been putting him out of his misery. )
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Was talking to a liberal friend and seemed to strike a chord by telling them one of the reasons the Right is able to get so much shit done sometimes is cause they're all simply motivated by their hatred of us, of The Other. The don't need to be unified over succinct beliefs or stances, they just need hate.
While us libs and leftists, despite us being on the "same side", have very strongly held ideals and plans to fix issues so when someone isn't 110% on board with us we tend to infight over minute details and set ourselves back. We aren't united over one vague, overlapping "cause" like the right are with their hatred for anyone who doesn't conform.
Honestly we could learn something from them in this regard..
#but only in that regard nothing else#their ability to organize and unify despite what i suppose you could call their differing ideologies is admirable#theyre horrible people because of said beliefs dont get me wrong. they should all die#but that the details dont matter. the enemy of my enemy and all that.#simi speaks
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I'd say I need to do an analysis on Stephen and Thomas' relationship as well but...that takes some time. That will take a lot of time because i will be passionate about it. But when you realize the crux of their fall was Thomas and his Icarus complex, and then Stephen's pettiness and him pushing it way to far in the end --and then on each end, their lack of proper communication...
#there was also fear#on stephen's end#but on thomas' end#he also had to navigate in specific ways to keep those he loved safe#it was hard for him to be empathetic in a pack of vultures#but he gave stephen a few low blows - and that icarus complex made him think that he was better - more important than stephen#but no matter what - i dont think thomas would've ever done to stephen was stephen did to him#like#stephen is petty#stephen was the enemy that thomas didn't realize was his enemy#thomas regarded him as a fallen friend at the very least#and that was his mistake#he offered him kindness when at that point#stephen had felt crossed#thomas should've treated him as an enemy
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thinking very hard ab liam and forgiveness. liam and healing
#specifically in regards to hayden and brett. both introduced as antagonists for him. both turned out so important to him#hayden in a romantic way and brett in a friend and mentor way#thinking about the horror in his face when he first saw hayden vs the intense mourning when she left town and broke up w him#thinking about the anger when he first saw brett again and the way he was so close to violently lashing out#vs the way he put literally everything on the line trying to save brett and the way bretts death upset him so much that he#accidentally revealed himself to be a werewolf to a bunch of randoms (and by extention revealed the existence of werewolves)#thinking about how he is constantly healing from his past and making up with enemies but it never matters bc they get taken from him anyway
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ââč ⊠99% NOT LOVE ! | kinich x gn!reader
â in which two people notice what two people don't .
â i've gone absolutely batshit over him your honour. im going to now start writing for kinich like a crazed man dying of thirst in the desert. let it be known that streamer!au kinich, enemies to lovers with poacher mc and other ideas are coming up (no im not cheating on xiao shush)
mualani notices it.
"hehe."
and you hear it.
"so! there's a little..." she stares at you with the most serious face you've ever seen on the girl, acting suspiciously unlike herself. gesturing at you with exaggerated hand movements, then pointing toward who knows where, she eyes you. mischievously. "something that's 'going on', yea?"
and at first, you have absolutely no clue what she could be referring to. mualani is a sociable person, after all. her definition of "something" could range anywhere between a particularly cute baby saurian to an out-of-control-bonfire turned wildfire.
with the only eventful thing today being a brief morning surf session with sharky, you just sat there, never having felt more lost.
mualani grabs your shoulders in an iron grip, leaning forward to the point she's almost beginning to seem menacing. you can see the moment where she tries to think over something (which she never does quite successfully) before she straight up shouts:
"ah!! i'll just spell it out for you!! you. and kinich. bestie. spill."
.
.
.
ajaw did more than just "notice" it.
"you..! kIINICH, did you seriously have to-"
"noisy."
"selfish assh- ALMIGHTY DRAGONLORD K'UHUL AJAW HAS HAD ENOUGH OF THE DISRESPECT! TIME AND TIME AGAIN, yOU'VE-"
"once again, ajaw. be quiet."
"sure sure, and pretend i didn't see you and that someone do a little smoochy-smooch, huh?! UGH, now you've asked for it- KINICH AND LOVEY DOVEY, SITTIN' IN A TREE, K-I-S-S-I-N-"
ajaw was what you would call a "witness". though, most would use that term in regards to one seeing a crime or heinous event take place â this event was nothing of that nature.
well, as far as kinich was concerned, the matter was simple. you'd ventured all the way to scions of the canopy to give him a gift, (claiming it was for the time he'd helped you after a couple of yumkausarus hadn't enjoyed your fruit offering and instead decided to off you), and he'd refused to accept it. he wasn't one to receive reimbursement for others, and he didn't particularly like talking either â it was a well-known fact, almost law in natlan, that if the malipo ignored your words, all you need do was apologize and continue on.
well, you did exactly the opposite.
"no thanks."
"...sorry?"
"i don't need it."
"haha, so 'malipo' kinich's rumored no-nonsense nature really proved to be true! now come over here so i can give you my fucking gift!"
you were rather adamant about giving it to him. the reason? you'd bought the gift on a whim after seeing it being sold by a passing merchant, advertised as "80% only today if you buy within the next like 4 minutes" and you'd immediately dropped every mora you had. it was the most useless little thing ever, and you didn't want it at this point, but.. the deals. how could you return such an item???
naturally, you handed it off to the man you'd seen for a good two minutes before he flew, or did whatever his thing was, away. the man had remembered furrowing his brows the slightest, listening to ajaw's persistent yellings of "IT'S AN OFFERING TO ME, TAKE IT" and feeling an oncoming headache. "i said i didn't.."
as he turned to walk away, three unfortunate(?) things occured.
a rock under your shoe and a very graceful process of falling to the ground
kinich looking back (his mistake)
a kiss...?
oh, and two extra.
4. ajaw had saw it all. 5. and mualani, who had saw you from a distance and was coming to greet you, was faced with a sight she could not process.
...Now that he thought over it again, was the matter really "simple"? kinich's job was what he considered simple â split 70% to investigation, 10% to final decision, and 10% to execution, well portioned and planned out.
then, this...
.
.
.
"girlie, you've seriously got the wrong idea. i'm telling you, we aren't dating!"
"mmmokay. of course! because not-dating people kiss allll the time!"
you paused for a moment, remembering kinich's even tone, stern gaze, and... ah, a face that deserved a gold medal.
"it's only 99% not love, okay mualani? but if it wasn't..."
.
.
.
"... and it's 99% not love, ajaw."
(a/n) darling im back from jail part 2. daddys home part 2. not funny? ok. HIHIHIHI ive bene really built like a sun dried raisin lately but kinich is the healing holy water that has saved me i will write more for him in the future because i love him a stupid amount its like the first time in a decade I've written for just ONE character and AND AND
I THOUGHT HE WOULDNT OCME HOME BECAUSE I ONLY HAD 68 WISHES OUT OF MY ORIGINAL LIKE 100+ AND RUINED MY CHANCES BECAUSE OF REALLY REALLY WANTING MuALANI (i love her sm) BUT. BUT BRO CAME HOME. ON THE FIRST 10 PULL AND WON THE 50/50 JUST LIKE MUALANI DID (or is it 45/55 now idk) LIVE LAUGH LOVE KINICH !!
[ tags: ] @manager-of-the-pudding-bank, @iamdedinside, @ilyuu-archive, @falors, @swivy123, @scara-is-my-wife, @lupicalbestwolf, @justyoureader,@fiannee, @aether-darling, @aioniela, @avensuersa, @dainsleif-when-playable, @intpessimistic
( dm or comment to be added ! i might miss ur comment so just to be sure, leave a comment on the actual masterlists page on my pinned ^ ^ )
#â
ËËË mondaymelon#astronetwrk#kinich#kinich x reader#kinich x you#kinich x y/n#x reader#genshin impact#genshin impact x reader#genshin fanfic#genshin imagines#genshin x you#genshin x reader#genshin impact fluff#x gn reader#genshin oneshots#genshin impact x you#genshin fanfiction#genshin impact imagines#genshin headcanons#fanfiction#fanfic#reader insert#genshin kinich#genshin natlan#natlan#kinich genshin#genshin impact kinich#mualani#ajaw
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Sex from a guy who doesn't remotely want to be touched by anyone
#my beautiful maybe related maybe not idc children stone and issues#mytext#unrelated to the content of the post but not to concept in itself. i'm not sure how to articulate this well enough#but you know. horrors you read during pride month (and not) and whatnot and divisions and shit but. it is genuinely so. Sooo Gwaaaah#that so many different people who Should all be united For a common goal against a common enemy#can share experiences and wishes and feelings etc that are so similar no matter how different their sexualities or gender identities may be#(in this context in regards to sex)#sitting here thinking. eheh spiritually holding hands with some gay/bi people and some trans people and some ace people etc#and then you come here and See Things#and the ''right. we're never letting go of the push for assimilation in favour of the acceptance of diversity and intersectionality'' hits
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𧚠BessiÚres
Send 𧚠for my muse to start an argument with yours
... The domesticity of your other selves concerns me, Istria, and I must ask if you-
BessiÚres: You... do not need to question my commitment, Monsieur le Maréchal.
We cannot have half-measures here. We must know our duty. Everything is at stake. The enemy slipped through your grasp, Marshal!
BessiĂšres: It is hardly because I possess... some inner desire to retire that Roi Nicolas escaped!
Yet it is undeniable that your return was sparked by a coincidental rendezvous with a self that you very well might envy, and I do not believe that you caused the incident that lead to Ney's rescue mission, but the enemy might very well have taken advantage of you!
BessiĂšres: ... We... are having this conversation in the echo of your home village, Monsieur.
That fact does not escape me. I am thankful for this, yes. And it is because I cannot give this up that I approach you with such concerns.
BessiĂšres: ... My other selves are not relevant to my mission, Dalmatia, and they do not reflect on my resolve.
See to it that they do not.
#Anonymous#(( ooc: they're both lying ))#(( this was tricky! i'm trying to have soult offend all three bessies at once ))#the duke of dalmatia's correspondence#guest starring the duke of istria#regarding the matter of the enemies
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the strongest (gojo x wife! reader)
gojo can't help but feel annoyed that he feels concern for the wife he swears he doesn't care for.
warnings: arranged marriage au, gojo refers to you as his wife, enemies to lovers (?), gojo tells you to lift up your top, slight angst, he's really bad at feelings okay, image from loving yamada-kun at lv999 (part of gojoâs wife series)
The lines of intrigue and fear are often blurred. It explains why we admire fire from afar, careful not to get too close in hopes of not getting burned. It explains why we find peace in parts of the ocean and tense up in deeper parts. It also explains why Gojo Satoru seeks your presence yet pushes you away the moment he finds himself feeling something other than indifference or vexationâitâs never hatred though. The strongest canât envision himself ever hating his wife and it scares him.Â
Heâs not sure that can be said about you. Gojo wouldnât be surprised if you grew to hate him after the treatment you put up with.Â
Your marriage is what you call a âmarriage of convenienceâ and Gojo made sure you remembered that. He wasnât always so distant with you. Back then, you mightâve considered him a friend but time did its bidding and you two drifted apart, your time together merely a memory. Now fast forward a few years and you were wedded to him, taking up his surname and sleeping in the same house as himâin separate rooms of course.Â
Your steps on the wooden floors were silent as you intended not to make a single noise at such a late hour. You sighed, feeling the weight of your heavy shoulders drag you down.Â
Gojo might be considered cruel to you but the elders were on a different level. They knew this mission would be too much for you yet they sent you on it as punishment for speaking your mind the last time everyone gathered.Â
At that time, your husband had an unfamiliar gleam in your eyes as you voiced your thoughts on the matter of Itadori. Heâs a nice kid, you thought when you first saw the pink-haired boy.Â
Taking away his youth wouldnât be fair. After all, he didnât choose to have the Ryomen Sukuna use him as a vessel. Yet, sentiment doesnât do well with the higher ups and they made sure you knew your place with the mission they sent you on.Â
You inhaled sharply, wincing as you felt the bruise on your rib with your palm. There was blood soaking your tights, little cuts littering your legs. Youâre so tired you canât find it in yourself to even eat. Then again, you needed to be in your best condition tomorrow since another mission was sent out of you and specifically you. Those in power always make sure itâs clear that they are in power. Your voice of opinion meant nothing to their beliefs in tradition or what you liked to call, âbackward thinking.â Thatâs one thing you and your husband could agree on.Â
âOw,â you wince for the nth time as you open the fridge, scanning the items. Mochi. Ice-cream. Leftover cake. Perhaps it wouldâve been wiser to go grocery shopping a day prior so you could have a proper meal. This was the kind of stuff Gojo could live on but you couldnât. Closing the fridge, you opt for instant ramen instead. Not the best choice in regards to healthiness but cracking an egg in there meant more protein and it also minimized the spice levels.Â
Youâre halfway in between preparing the noodles when you feel a presence right beside you and soft breathing besides your ears. âYouâre home,â your âhusbandâ mumbles, his eyes half-lidded from just having woken up.Â
âGod! Satoru!â You gasp, flinching away from and only realizing how close he was. For someone who claimed he wasnât interested in you, he didnât know what personal space was. âHow did you know I was home?â
âYour cursed energy leaked in,â he shrugs his shoulders, peering down at you without the constraints of his blindfold or shades. You gulp as his eyes flit up and down your appearance, causing your insides to tense up in a sudden wave of self-consciousness. Being scrutinized by the six-eyes himself wasnât much fun and youâre suddenly aware of the fact that your hair is disheveled and your face is sweaty from just having come home from a grueling mission.Â
You donât even notice the glint of rage that crosses his hues before he masks it. âWho did this to you?â
âHuh?â You blink, coming to your senses that your body was bloodied up and battered from having fought a curse. âOh it was just a mission. Itâs normal to be hurt on missions.âÂ
Gojoâs been living with you for nearly half a year now and he knows youâre more than competent when it comes to shaman duties (not that heâd ever tell you). He knows you return home by 7 p.m.., and never at hours well past midnight. He knows that you usually only get injuries on your back because you get careless at times. But now, he sees cuts everywhere and heâs not sure if youâre running on adrenaline or if youâre too tired to notice.Â
His eyes glance at the way you press a palm on your rib, subconsciously squeezing the area as if hiding it from him. âLet me see.â
Your surprise is immediate and he wouldâve felt a strange fluttering in his stomach if not for this concern he was experiencing for you. You smile. âSee what?â
âYour injury. Let me see it,â he says again, pressing on the hand you hold close to your ribs, narrowing his eyes as you hiss in pain. âDonât be stubborn (Name).âÂ
His voice is different from the cheery one he often uses and youâre left leaning further into the kitchen counter, acutely aware of the fact that his taller frame wasnât allowing you to escape. His eyes widen the slightest once he gets a glimpse of your flustered expression as you peer up at him and he only realizes what he was asking from you. Part of him tells him to ignore this and pretend his concern for you was brief. Yet, part of him screams at him that he was your husband, so he should feel the right to be worriedâeven if he was months late.Â
He sighs, tilting his head. âIâm just going to look. I promise I wonât do anything else,â his voice is oddly tender as he speaks to you, a contrast to the usual nonchalance youâre used to.Â
You gulp and let out a shaky sigh, giving in when your fingers reach to pull your top up for him to see the bare skin that you canât even say is spotless or void of marks. Multiple wounds litter your skinâsome faded, some new. Youâre scared his gaze would show some signs of judgment or disgust but youâre left bemused when you see how his eyebrows furrow and his lips purse. For a second, you allow yourself to be deluded by the fact that he might be worried but you quickly abandon that thought, averting your eyes from him.
You can see how he pieces everything together. From the way you rebelled against the elders and how they saw it as a means to punish you. He does it so quickly that you can only blink when his blank expression morphs into something different. You almost feel relieved from the fact that his expression of pure anger wasnât directed at you and rather those who sent you on the mission.
Itâs almost natural how he slides the top further up, mapping the extent of the bruise with his eyes. His hands are warm and calloused. Theyâre also gentle, tracing the bruise carefully to not hurt you. âIâll kill those old bastards,â he chuckles with a sneer. âThey have some nerve letting my wife take this mission without me.â
You frown as you see his anger first-hand. âSatoruââ
âWhy didnât you go to Shoko?â He interrupts, gently holding on your waist to prop you on the counter while he stands in between your legs. He watches you intently, in search of answers.
You feel somewhat embarrassed as his hand still lifts your top up to see the bare skin but donât comment on it. âI didnât want to bother her so late at nightâŠâ
For the first time since today, you see him flash a genuine smile, as if exasperated by your reasoning. âBut youâre fine with bothering me?âÂ
âThatâs different!â You say, a pout slowly forming on your lips and he canât help but feel drawn to you even if he doesnât want to.Â
He laughs as you pull your top down with a huff, finding it cute that you were so bashful. âBecause Iâm your husband?âÂ
You go silent and for a second, Gojo thinks heâs messed up for mentioning that. Despite being your husband, heâs not the greatest at doing his job. Heâs not callous or spiteful towards you, instead taking on more of a cold and aloof attitude towards you. Even so, he thinks that hurts just as much as a few insults.Â
Heâs about to pull back but your voice draws him back to you. âYeah. Itâs because youâre my husband.â
Gojo canât stop himself from glancing at your lips at that single statement. He was today years old when he realized he was a man of simple tastes. All you had to do was tell him that he was your husband and heâd want to kiss you until your lips turned red. He considers himself lucky that you didnât see that slip-up of hisâthough he wouldnât have minded if you did.
He breathes out a sigh, propping his chin atop your head while his fingers draw circles around your hips. âI wonât let them hurt you.â
Itâs a vow he swears to keep.Â
âI know,â you whisper quietly enough for him to hear. âYouâre the strongest after all.â
He thinks itâs funny that even as the strongest, he feels weak when he feels your fingers play with his sleeves. No words are said after that and a comfortable silence drifts between you two. Itâs like the barrier between the two of you is cracking once you feel his lips press gently against your forehead and you think it's his way of sealing the promise.Â
Gojo Satoru thinksâor rather he knows that he wouldnât mind living the rest of his life with you. And he knows that he should fix his behavior around you and stop running away. That way, instead of a kiss to the forehead, he can finally give you one on your lips.Â
#gojo satoru x reader#gojo satoru#gojo x reader#satoru gojo#jjk x reader#jujutsu kaisen x reader#jujutsu kaisen#arranged marriage#i'm in my jjk phase bye
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chapter 2: the aftermath a bridgerton!au
pairing âžș duke!satoru gojo x fem!reader
summary âžș dearest gentle reader, a new season is upon us as the ton gets ready for a season filled with drama, heartbreak, and passion. after being crowned diamond of the season, heir to a dukedom mr. satoru gojoâžșonly looking to marry just to secure his inheritanceâžșhas his sights set on you, the easiest (and most obvious) option. later, when you catch his saying unsavory things about you on a terrace when he least suspected it, you swear to never marry gojo. as london's fashionable set goes through yet another wedding season, will there be hope for scandalous gossip, hate, and thinly veiled insults, or will we witness blooming love and passion?
warnings âžș nsfw, enemies to lovers, bridgerton au, angst, fluff, eventual smut, jealousy, misogyny, regency era au, gojo being infuriating, reader also being infuriating, both of them are clueless honestly
chapter summary âžș after an eventful first ball after your debut, you continue the season with thinly veiled vexation towards gojo. but fate is not on your side; you and gojo keep encountering each other, matching fire with fire (7.8k)
a/n some parts of this chapter broke my brain to write but i kind of had fun! as always thank you to @/sinn-claire for beta reading :p i was going to say i'll try to have weekly updates but i don't want to jinx it lol
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Dearest gentle reader,Â
It appears that Her Majesty has bestowed the coveted title of this seasonâs Diamond upon none other than Miss Itadori, who has indeed lived up to her newfound acclaim as the incomparable of the year. At the latest ball, our shining Diamond was quite occupied, with suitors lining up in such numbers that one might have thought them to be queuing for the royal throne itself. Furthermore, blooms were budding between many of the debutantes and gentlemen, includingâŠ..
...Yet, one particular couple captivated the attention of all: none other than Mister Satoru Gojo and our seasonâs Diamond. After having kept his words sparse and his attentions limited to none, Mister Gojo appeared utterly taken with Miss Itadori, conversing with her intimately on the dance floor. It seems your humble Author was indeed correctâžșMister Gojo has entered the marriage market. However, the exclusivity he has adopted may not deter the determined maidens he seeks to avoid, for the Ambitious Mamas will no doubt perceive his selectiveness as a challenge to be overcome.Â
One cannot help but wonder if an announcement of particular interest will be made at the upcoming Gojo country house party. Although your Author has not yet laid eyes upon the guest list for the Duchess Gojoâs anticipated gathering, reliable sources suggest that nearly every eligible young lady of marriageable age will be journeying to Kent next week. The country house party is known to be a perilous affair. Married individuals often find themselves enjoying the company of someone other than their spouse, while the unwed frequently return to town betrothed with surprising haste.
Indeed, the most unexpected engagements often follow closely on the heels of such rustic diversions.
âž» LADY WHISTLEDOWNâS SOCIETY PAPERS
Satoru had no intention of squandering his time this seasonâžșor at any time, for that matter.
The notion of love matches held little appeal to him, despite witnessing such a union firsthand in his own parents. Make no mistake, the Duke and Duchess Gojo enjoyed a happy marriage, and Satoru held both his father and mother in the highest regard. Yet, he was perfectly content on his own.
Being one of the strongest bachelorsâžșboth intellectually and physicallyâžșhas been Satoruâs destiny. Ever since his ancestors had been blessed by the royal family with the dukedom, the Gojo family had made its goal to be the most powerful nobility and the closest to the royal family. (Which is still maintained in the status quo, because the Queen dotes on Satoru, inviting him for tea every fortnight. The Queen lavished him with overly sweet biscuits, and in return, Satoru provided her with the latest gossip from court).Â
But this responsibility doesnât get fulfilled without independence; one had to accept the solitary truth that to be truly great was to remain unswayed by the fleeting pleasures of the worldâžșlove included.
Satoru had little time or interest for the other vices that tempted men of his station, such as lust. Contrary to the whispers circulating among the ton, Satoru had never indulged in the life of a rake or frequented brothels as many of his acquaintances did. Really, the allegations were, in truth, merely just a byproduct of his appearance and demeanor; with a young man with the stature, face, and eligibility of Satoru, the public would immediately like to slap on the label of ârakeâ due to his arrogant personality. Moreover, any encounters he had witnessed between men and womenâžșwhether dropping his friends off at brothels in his carriage after an evening at the gentlemanâs club or overhearing flirtations at partiesâžșstruck him as shallow and an utter waste of time, especially when he was already a week behind on the ledgers and other official matters his father had entrusted to him. (He did have one indulgence, however: a weakness for gluttony, with an array of sweet confections as his loyal companions during long, sleepless nights.)
Marriage was an even greater burden. The thought of being accountable for a wife, and eventually children, seemed like a daunting task to Satoru. With sleepless nights spent on covering just a fraction of the business his father must do as a duke, Satoru was tired. He was exhaustedâžșexhausted from the weight of responsibility, from striving to meet his fatherâs expectations, from seeking the Queenâs approval, from worrying over what Whistledown might print about him, and from the gossip of the businessmen with whom the Gojo family dealt.Â
And yet, despite this weariness, Satoru was gripped by an insatiable obsession with perfection, an obsession that only deepened his fatigue. He craved approval, power, and the flawless execution of his dutiesâžșdesires that gnawed at him even as they threatened to consume him.
Which is exactly why he needed a perfect wife. A wife that was capable, could handle bothersome peopleâžșwhich he was steadily losing the patience to deal withâžșand a reliable companion. Someone that would reduce his stress, not add to it.Â
Satoru had spent all day lurking in the shadows as best as he could; being the most eligible bachelor did mean that brothers and sisters were coming up to him, singing praises of their debutante in an effort to capture his interest. But Satoru knew all too well that the loudest families often had the most to compensate for.
As ladies in white paraded before the crowd, many buckling under the weight of judgment and attention, Satoru prowled like a jungle cat, staying hidden in the throng, biding his time, and waiting for the right moment to strike.
What he noticed first about you was your way of carrying yourself. Even Auntieâžșthe Queenâžșwho, after seeing countless of girls today, had been incredibly bored, dragged her eyes over you in slightly more interest than she did for others. The moment you stepped through those grand doors into the court, it was evident to everyone that your stride was that of someone who understood her role and position in lifeâžșa confidence that set you apart from the other debutantes. Satoruâs eyes raked over you, observing you as your chest rose slightly as you took a breath in.Â
And then you smiled.
Satoru's eyes widened, just imperceptibly, as he watched your expression as you made your way to the Queen. He made sure to shake his expression off to a more nonchalant one as he watched your form walk. Lesser men than Satoru would die for your smile. Men, out of all traits a woman could possess, cherished a pretty visage the most. Yet, what your smile conveyed went beyond mere beauty; it embodied innocence and the qualities most esteemed in a demure bride (which Satoru knew was just all a show, but it was indeed indicative of your skill to put up appearances, hence deeming you a reliable companion).
The corner of the young man's mouth rose. When the Queen declared you the diamond of the season, Satoru knew he had found his quarry.
When the ball came, Satoru acted similarly: observing from behind, staying in conversation with his friends and other noble men that did business with the Gojo family as he prowled the ballroom, waiting for the right moment to ask you for your hand. And then Naoya came in when you were finally alone, away from all the incompetent men that dared to think they had a chance to court you, and Satoru almost laughed snarkily at how easy it all was.Â
Approaching you, saving you from Naoyaâžșit was all a perfect construction of his. Dancing, he noticed your steps were carried out with a practiced perfection and grace, and your responses to his questions displayed a respectable level of intellect. He could tell your responses were practiced and simple, your constitution and demeanor a result of much effort into presenting yourself as best as you could. But what does it matter, when you do it so perfectly?
Maybe it was a bit naive of him, but you seemed to glow when conversing with him. It amused him, as he kept watching your pretty eyes as you kept smiling while he kept throwing difficult questions at you. It was all expected, however. Satoru knew he was blessed with the brilliant blue Gojo eyes and eccentric fair, white hair; he was the most eligible bachelor for not only wealth and power but reproductive capabilities and opportunities as well. Which lady wouldnât want to be mother to his cute and beautiful blue-eyed babies?
After witnessing such mediocre men who paled in comparison to Satoru, surely you must be smitten. Gojo could see right through you: you, the diamond, have been looking for a man as meritorious as you, and you had found it in Satoru.Â
So why were you acting this way?
When you wake up in the morning and get ready for suitors, it is as you expected; there are multiple carriages outside your doorstep, and there is a line from the drawing room, extending all the way down the stairs. When Choso stumbles into the drawing room, where you and your mother are enjoying tea, he is clearly unhappy at the selection of men waiting to be let in to call upon you.Â
âThis is absurd!â Chosoâs hands raked over his hair in an effort to process the scene he had just witnessed. âWhy do I see Naoya waiting outside?â
Your nose crinkled in distaste. âWell, dear brother, I certainly cannot control which suitors call upon me. He mustâve enjoyed our conversation yesterday. The enjoyment, however, is one sided.â
Chosoâs eyes widened comically. âYou had a conversation with him yesterday?â He then turned to your mother accusingly, who was reading a Whistledown while sipping on her tea innocuously. âThis would not have happened if I was there, Mother. This is your fault.â
Your mother continued drinking her tea nonchalantly, waiting for a few beats to grace him with a response. âI prefer this, my son, to no visitors out there because our dear Lord Itadori scared all the bachelors away with his pickiness.â Then, her eyes flashed. âAnd donât give me that tone.â
You snickered behind your palm as Choso visibly deflated.
 âKuna! Get back here!â
Pitter patters of small paws started to get closer and closer, as heavy footsteps followed it. Yuji and the family corgi, Sukuna Jr., burst into the room. Eyeing the biscuit in your hand, Kuna made his way directly to you, panting at your feet. A pet given affectionately by your-not-so-affectionate older brother, Sukuna, when he left for his year long trip around Europe, Kuna was the cutest little puppy. You and Yuji loved to spoil him, clearly shown as Yuji patted him while breathing heavily. You cooed as Kuna licked your fingers while inhaling the biscuit you had presented him.Â
âWell,â your mother stood up, having finished her tea, and began ushering in the maids to clear the table. âIt seems our morning will be quite busy. Youâd best be prepared for a long day, my dear.â
Choso was still grumbling as he took a seat across from you, his eyes narrowing at the sight of the long line of suitors outside. âIâm keeping an eye on that Naoya fellow. If he so much as looks at you the wrong wayâŠâ
You raised an eyebrow at your brotherâs protectiveness, feeling both amused and touched. âChoso, I appreciate your concern, but I can handle myself. Besides, with Kuna here, I doubt any of these gentlemen will get too close without proper approval.â
As if understanding the conversation, Sukuna Jr. barked enthusiastically, his tail wagging as he looked up at you with bright, expectant eyes. You smiled and scratched behind his ears, watching as his tiny body wriggled with joy.
Yuji, still catching his breath from the chase, flopped onto the chair beside you, shooting a grin at Choso. âCome on, big brother, give her a break. Itâs not every day our sister gets declared the diamond of the season. Let her enjoy it.â
Choso crossed his arms, still unconvinced. âIâm just saying, if any of these men donât meet my standardsâžșâ
âYour standards?â you interrupted with a teasing lilt. âChoso, Iâd never find a husband if I had to meet your impossible standards. Besides, you should be more concerned about finding someone yourself.â
Chosoâs cheeks tinted with a slight blush, but make no mistake; he was hot with anger, ready to make a snarky retort. Your mother, who had been overseeing the maids, turned her attention back to the conversation with a soft smile.
âYour sister is right, Choso. Itâs her time to shine, and as her family, we should support her, not make things more difficult.â She gave him a pointed look before turning to you with a gentler expression, and he backed down as he always does for your mother. âNow, my dear, are you ready to begin receiving your guests?â
You took a deep breath, nodding as you steeled yourself for the hours of polite conversation and careful navigation of the social battlefield ahead. âAs ready as Iâll ever be.â
âGood,â your mother said, her voice laced with both pride and encouragement. âRemember, you are the diamond of the season. There isnât a man out there who wouldnât be lucky to have you.â
You offered a weak smile. âLetâs get this over with.â
As you walked toward the sofa where you would be talking with suitors, Kuna trotted alongside you, his presence a comforting reminder.With Yuji and Choso trailing behind, and your mother leading the way to open the door, you braced yourself for the onslaught of admirers waiting beyond the door.
But as you straighten your posture, in anticipation to greet the first suitor, you couldn't help but glance down at Kuna, who stared up at you with wide, curious eyes. You chuckled softly.
âWell, Kuna,â you whispered, âletâs see who passes your test today.â
Gojoâs gaze wandered down to Sukuna Jr. in your lap as you stroked his fur, and he gave you a saccharineâžșyet strainedâžșsmile. âMust this dog bear witness to our conversation?Â
As if sensing Gojoâs unfriendliness, Kuna started growling, and you could feel the rumble deep in his stomach. You met Gojoâs sweet smile with one of your own. âYes.â
Gojo blinked, and the smile on his face faltered. You noticed that this was one of the first time Gojoâs ever expressed an emotion outside of smugness, and you count this as your personal win.
âWell,â he hesitated, and then a smile was on his face as if that stumble didnât happen. âYou look wonderful this morning, Miss Itadori.â
Your eyes flashed at his audacity to talk behind your back and try to fool you with flattery. âOn the contrary, I think I look rather simple.â
Gojo, none the wiser as to what you were referring to, waved his hands. âNonsense.â
Before you could respond, Kuna let out a low, rumbling growl, his sharp eyes fixed on Gojo. The sound was subtle, but in the quiet of the morning, it was unmistakable. Gojoâs gaze flickered down to the small dog, and his smile tightened ever so slightly.
You gently scratched behind Kunaâs ears, calming him, though his gaze never left Gojo. âI apologize on behalf of my dear Kuna,â you said, your voice light but nonetheless pointed. âHe tends to be wary of many, particularly those he believes to be with ulterior motives.â
Gojo nodded, unfazed, and looked down at the dog in question. Upon eye contact, all your efforts to calm Kuna went to naught as the dog stood up, tense and teeth almost bared fully, to stare back at Gojo defiantly. Gojo, to his credit, was starting to be a little wary and was giving the pup an impassive stare.Â
âYou know, I have an affinity for dogs. There are many pups that I have spent my entire childhood with.â He offered a chuckle and moved his hand to pet Kuna. âDogs do have a way of sensing things, donât they?â That was clearly the wrong decision because the dogâs growl grew louder, and suddenly, he snapped at Gojoâs hand. Before Kuna could sink his teeth into Gojoâs hand, however, Gojo smoothly withdrew it out of his reach.Â
âProtective, isnât he?â Gojo laughed, but his stare towards Kuna was veering more and more into a glare. He tried to disguise his irritation by suavely adding, âAdmirable. Iâm glad he has protected my lady so well.â Gojo then grabbed your hand to give you a small kiss on the back of it while keeping eye contact. You had to divert your eyes elsewhere to avoid coloring your cheeks; while you knew this was just another one of Gojoâs pretenses to charm you, you were still fazed by it.Â
You cleared your throat and tried to uphold the conversation. After all, it would be outright rude to keep throwing thinly veiled insults his way when there were others in your company; he also had the potential to spread further malicious rumors about you if you showed attitude. You mustered up a fake smile, and offered, âHe was a gift to me and Yuji offered by my older brother, Sukuna, when he went traveling,â you offered.Â
âIs that the brother you hoped to follow to Europe?â
You blinked and faltered. You didnât expect him to remember that tidbit from your conversation at the ball last night. While most of the preferences you had asserted were artificialâžșsupplemented to you by your tutor, who had drilled what fake preferences of yours would woo menâžșyou truly did gain enthusiasm for the languages because you hoped to prove your helpfulness to Sukuna in an effort to run away from your inevitable debut. At the time, you were rebelling against anything your mama said, avoiding anything associated with being paraded around like an animal, put on display for men. âYes,â you said slowly, âYes, it is.âÂ
Gojo smiled, this time a little more genuine at the fact it was his first time receiving an authentic response from you this morning, rather than something covered with a fake smile. Just as he leaned in slightly, probably preparing to make another smooth remark, Kuna, who had been shifting in your lap, suddenly stilled, his face buried in your lap and tail facing Gojo. For a moment, you thought he might be settling down.
And then it happened.
The largest fart ripped through the room out of Kunaâs arse, which was pointed directly in Gojoâs face. While you were not a scholar studying physics, you were aware that the air dynamics did not do Gojo any favors in preventing the smell from hitting him direct-on. Gojoâs eyes widened in surprise, and his suave expression faltered entirely as the smell quickly followed, filling the air around you both.
You could feel the heat rushing to your face in your effort not to laugh out loud. Trying to keep your composure, you gently patted Kunaâs belly, who was now face up, tongue lolling out in bliss. âOh, dear,â you muttered, your voice strained with the effort to suppress a laugh.
Gojo, for once, was at a loss for words. His eyes were tearing up, probably at the smell; whenever you and Yuji spoiled Kuna with those biscuits, he dropped nasty-smelling dungs, and you knew Gojo wasnât spared at all. The arrogant bachelor, who always seemed to have a witty response ready, was now at a loss of words as he weakly gazed upon the weak little poot! poot!s that escaped Kuna as you continued patting his stomach in an effort to relieve your pupâs digestive system.
At Gojoâs expression, you had to take quiet, deep breaths in an effort to rein in the cackles that were threatening to overcome you. You resorted to covering your mouth as you strained, âAs you can see, my Kuna is quite expressive, and he seemed quite eager to show you that.â
He offered you a strained smile. âHe does indeed generate quite a bit of wind.â At that, you could no longer hold back. Genuine laughter wracked through your figure, hurting your ribs as you tried to quell it with a hand to the mouth, but no avail. Your muffled laughter was still loud, and when the giggles subsided, you wiped your tears and threw an apologetic look at Gojo, preparing to express your regret.Â
But you stopped at the sheer wonder he contained in his face as his gaze fixated on your lips, which were drawn back in the ghost of the smile you had while laughing riotously. Without allowing you much time to dwell on it, he stood up and dipped his head in a little bow. âWell, I have been taking quite a bit of your time, Miss Itadori. I better let other suitors have their chance.â He kissed the back of your hand. âI hope to see you at the horse race tomorrow.â
âLikewise.â You couldnât help but spy some red coloring Gojoâs alabaster cheeks as he made his way to the exit. As you greeted the next suitor, the imprint of a certain manâs lips continued to tingle on your hands.Â
âI told you he was a rake,â Nobara muttered as she scrubbed your arm with an intensity that matched her outrage. After hearing what Gojo had said about you, she was livid. Unfortunately, your skin was bearing the brunt of her frustration.
âWell,â you mused, trying to distract her, âwhat rumors have you heard that make you think that?â
âMomo told me a few months agoâžșâ Nobara paused, her hands hovering over the various bottles on the counter. âWhich scent would you prefer for your hair?â
âSandalwood,â you replied.
Nobara nodded and poured some of the rich liquid into her hands before massaging it into your scalp. You closed your eyes, feeling the tension from the day's exhausting and dull conversations slowly melt away under her skillful fingers. âMomo mentioned that heâs often out late at night, which seems suspicious. But now that I think about it, Momo isnât the most reliable source,â Nobara added, her tone shifting to one of skepticism.
You quirked an eyebrow. âWhy do you say that?â
âThereâs talk that she attempted to lure another maidâs husband into an affair,â Nobara replied, her hands now working the shampoo through your hair with a practiced ease. âShe even tried to gain access to his quarters.â
You gasped. âHow scandalous!â
âI know,â Nobara said, her hands now massaging the back of your neck with a gentler touch. âSo, who knows how much truth there is to her gossip. But still, Gojoâs behavior is less than honorable, donât you think?â
You sighed, gazing up at the ceiling with a mix of frustration and resignation. âHe was gossiping about me with other men, calling me all sorts of horrible thingsâžșâsimple,â of all things. And yet, he has the audacity to want to call upon me?â
âYou know,â Nobara mused as she continued her task, âHe sounds the exact opposite of what some of your books would imply.â
You hummed in agreement, recalling the radical works you kept hidden beneath your bed. Your mother would be appalled if she ever discovered them, but you often sought solace in political writings that challenged the rigid expectations of society. âI know. And that is precisely why I have no intention of encouraging his attention this seasonâat least, not before I ensure his complete and utter humiliation.â
âBut do take care. His connections to the Queen are quite strong.â
You drew back from Nobara's hands, much to her chagrin. She gave you a glare while you exclaimed, "What?"
âSurely youâre aware that the Gojo dukedom is among the closest to the royal family?â
You fervently hoped your mother hadnât caught wind of Gojo's status. Yet, the way she had been observing youâžșsubtly scrutinizing you in the drawing room while feigning interest in a suitor awaiting his turnâžșsuggested otherwise. She had certainly noticed Gojo's growing interest, and the thought of her getting involved, fixating on a match with him, filled you with dread. Drawing your hands over your face, you moaned, the very notion of her scheming to pair you with Gojo weighing heavily on your mind.
âBut that should hardly be a concern if youâve begun to distance yourself from him, correct? You have been creating some distance, havenât you?â
Your silence spoke volumes, and Nobara, ever quick to discern your hesitation, gasped in exasperation. âYou cannot seriously be considering giving this gentleman any encouragement, can you?â
"No, no, itâs not that,â you replied, massaging your temples in frustration. âItâs just that my mother is probably ecstatic at the prospect of securing a match between me and Gojo.â
âBut surely, if she knew the things heâs been saying behind your back, she would understand.â
You tried to open your mouth to respond, but it felt as if your throat had closed up. Would she really? A match with Gojo would mean elevated status for the Itadori familyâžșa duchess for a daughter. What worth is there in being the diamond of the season if not to secure the most advantageous match? The very thought made your chest tighten with the suffocating realization that your mother might very well advocate for the union, despite Gojoâs duplicity.
âIâžșâ you swallowed. âIâm not sure.â Before Nobara could interrupt, you stood up and reached for your robe.Â
Nobara's brow furrowed as she watched you stand up. "Where do you think you're going? Youâre not done with your bath, and your hair is still full of suds!" She reached out to stop you, her hands hovering as though unsure whether to pull you back into the tub or grab the robe you were now clutching.
You forced a small, tired smile, grateful for the distraction. âI need just a moment. The water's gone cold, anyway.â
âOh, nonsense! Youâll catch a chill if you get out now. Sit back down,â Nobara insisted, her protest tinged with genuine concern. She placed a firm hand on your shoulder, guiding you back toward the warm water.
With a reluctant sigh, you allowed yourself to be coaxed back into the tub. The momentary reprieve from the conversation was a relief, and you welcomed Nobaraâs determined focus on completing your bath. She picked up a sponge, her earlier frustration melting into concentration as she scrubbed your back.
âWell, we can discuss that scheming rake later,â she muttered, more to herself than to you. âFor now, letâs get you properly cleaned up before your mother comes looking for you. Sheâd never forgive me if I let you appear anything less than perfect.â
You nodded with a lump in your throat, grateful for the change in topic, even if only temporary. The soothing rhythm of Nobara's hands working through your hair, the warmth of the bathwater, and the familiar, comforting routine helped ease the tightness in your chest. For now, the troubling thoughts of Gojo and your mother's ambitions could be set aside.
âNow, hold still,â Nobara said, her tone softening as she rinsed the last of the soap from your hair. âWeâll have you looking radiant again in no time.â
The conversation was left unfinished, hanging in the air like a question that neither of you was quite ready to answer. But for now, the silence was a welcome refuge.
"Do you have any notion of how impossible it is to charm a lady when there is a pup expelling such foul air right beneath your nose?" Satoru lamented, leaning back in his chair and raking a hand through his tousled hair. The trio gathered at the table presented a rather unusual sight: Satoru, visibly discomposed; Nanami, calmly sipping his drink as ever; and Suguru, nearly doubled over in laughter at his friendâs misfortune.
âWould you pleaseâžșSMACKâžșcease your laughing?!â Satoru glared at Suguru, who seemed to be of no hope, now with tears in his eyes as he clutched his stomach and the back of his head, which Satoru had just hit.Â
âTruly, your vanityâžșhaaahâžșyour vanity was in need of humbling,â Suguru managed between breaths, still snickering behind his palms.Â
Satoru glowered, crossing his arms and staring daggers into his drink, as if his gaze alone could break the fine glass. âMy pride had already suffered enough. She was positively frigid.â
Nanami hummed. âPerhaps sheâs merely discerned your true nature.â
âIt defies comprehension,â Gojo groaned, ignoring Kentoâs statement. âWhat kind of lady disparages her own beauty as âsimpleâ? I cannot fathom what has caused her such vexation. Only the night before, she was utterly taken with me!â
Suguruâžșwho had now calmed downâžșwas in the midst of wiping his tears when he suddenly stopped. âYou donât suppose it had anything to do with your careless words, do you?â
Kento eyed the pair in front of him with an accusatory side eye. âAnd what precisely did you say?â
 âSatoru, in his usual fashion, could not contain his tongue. Out on the terrace, with the garden as witness, he spoke rather unkindly, referring to the diamond as âsimple and dull.ââ
âNonsense,â Satoru waved his hands, dismissing the idea. âThe lady would never wander the gardens at such an hour in the night unchaperoned.â
âI suggest you reconsider.â Kento gave him a stern look and continued, âI happened upon her last night, emerging from the gardens, and she appeared rather disheveled.âÂ
This revelation gave Satoru pause, but if there was one thing certain about Satoru Gojo, it was this: his arrogance was such that he could scarcely fathom anyone, least of all a lady, finding his charm anything but irresistibleâžșeven if that very lady had overheard him uttering defamatory remarks about her. And this lady was one he could not let go of, unless he wanted to wave good-bye to his future.
âI am confident all will be well,â Gojo exhaled, his lips curving into a Cheshire smile. âEven if she did overhear, surely a few well-chosen sweet words will surely set matters right.â
(He was most grievously mistaken.)
âHow many of those biscuits do you suppose we could finish?â Yuji was eyeing the biscuits from his seat next to you in the pavilion where you and your family were sitting. Out promenading with the other families of the ton, it was a scenic and beautiful day for you to mingle with even more suitors. The joy!
âCertainly less than me,â you remarked, sipping on your tea smugly. By the irritated pout on his face, you knew you were successful at getting a rise out of your younger brother. Knowing your mother wasnât in sight, you quickly darted for the jam-filled biscuits, and your brother quickly followed in tow; soon, you were both stuffing your faces silly with the sugary treats.
âYou two are incorrigible,â Choso scrunched his nose from where he sat across from you, arms crossed. âThereâs no need to inhale those biscuits. What if someone sees?â
Yuji stuck out his tongueâžșnow adorned with biscuit crumbsâžșand continued gorging, while you snickered at your younger brotherâs pettiness.
âMiss Itadori.â
You began coughing wildly, caught off guard, and hastily straightened your posture to greet your guest. You turned to see Lord Ino, who offered you a slight nod before acknowledging your brothers. âLord Itadori. Mister Itadori.â
âLord Ino, nice to meet you on such a fine day.â You try to put a smile on your face as best as you can, even though you were caught off guard. âHow do you find todayâs weather?âÂ
Takuma grabs the back of your hand to kiss it. âI find it wonderful for the prospect of promenading. Do you care to do so with me?â
âOf course,â You stand up and link your elbows with Takumaâs.
âWeâll be thirty paces behind you, sister.â You both turned to look at Choso, who was giving Lord Ino his inevitable protective glare. Given Inoâs acceptable station, Choso hadnât immediately protested, unlike the many suitors he had chased out of your manor the day before. He grabbed Yuji by the elbow, who, with cheeks comically inflated like a chipmunk hoarding acorns, was promptly dragged away. âYuji, get up.â The last you saw of your brothers was Yujiâs futile protests, his mouth too full to be coherentâžșinevitably sending some crumbs flying onto Chosoâžșand Choso swatting him for it.
As you began your walk with Lord Ino, the conversation naturally turned to the upcoming horse race. âAre you looking forward to the race this afternoon?â you asked, trying to keep the conversation light.
âI am,â the lord replied. âAnd you?â
âVery much so,â you said, a hint of excitement in your voice. âI have a feeling that the less popular horseâžșBlaze, was it?âžșmight surprise everyone. The conditions seem just right for an underdog victory; the track is soft and warm, which would favor Blazeâs build.â
Lord Ino glanced at you with a polite but unconvinced smile. âBut Thunder has higher odds and more bets. Itâs as simple as that.â
You couldnât help but bristle at the word âsimple,â a word that had recently come to grate on your nerves. You pressed on, though, determined to keep the conversation pleasant. âI suppose thereâs some truth to that, but sometimes thereâs more to a race than just the odds and popularity.â
Ino chuckled softly. âWell, a good mentor and friend of mineâžșDuke Nanamiâžșagrees with the odds, and His Grace is someone I deeply respect. I tend to follow his leadâžșthe duke has a way of teaching lessons without hindering oneâs growth.â
Before you could respond, the sound of a trumpet blared in the distance, signaling the start of the race. You looked at him, giving him a courteous nod, gesturing in the general direction Choso and Yuji were supposed to be in. âIt seems the race is about to begin. I must rejoin my family.â
You curtsied as he bowed, and you watched as he walked away, leaving you momentarily alone. You took a deep breath, trying to dispel the lingering irritation from the conversation. Just as you began looking for your family, you felt a presence approaching.
You turned to find Lady Mei Mei and her entourage closing in. Their expressions were a study in artful contempt, laced with curiosity and barely concealed amusement. The atmosphere between you was thick with unspoken competition, each woman silently gauging the otherâs position on the social ladder.Â
âMiss Itadori, what a nice surprise!â Lady Mei Mei remarked, her tone dripping with false sweetness. âIt appears you are alone and unchaperoned in a garden yet again! At least, according to what the rumors say. Was it part of yet another one of your charming ploys to get what you want?"
You met her gaze with cool composure, not giving her the satisfaction of a visible reaction. "I have no clue what you're talking about."
Lady Mei Mei tilted her head slightly, her eyes narrowing as if appraising a particularly interesting specimen. "Really?" she mused, drawing out the word as though savoring it. "Itâs just that Lord Gojo hasnât spoken with you all day. Even if Whistledown commended you in the last issue, I wouldnât expect his interest to linger." The two ladies flanking herâžșunremarkable save for their sycophantic attachment to Mei Meiâžșgiggled behind their fans, as though she had delivered a crushing blow.
You allowed yourself a small, almost imperceptible smile, one that didnât reach your eyes. "So Iâm assuming he called upon you?" you questioned sweetly, your voice laced with feigned politeness.
For a fleeting moment, Lady Mei Meiâs carefully curated composure slipped, the faintest flicker of irritation crossing her face before she regained control. She leaned in slightly, her voice lowering to a conspiratorial whisper meant for you alone. âNone of the suitors will be interested in you any longer. The Queen may have mistakenly proclaimed you the diamond, but a pretty face, empty smiles, and hollow words can only last so long.â
âWhatever would be most convenient for you to believe.â Her words were empty and her threats dull, but you couldnât help but let it compound on the irritation you had experienced today. But you knew better than to let your tongue loose; you were quite impulsive when you had started, and you didnât want to start any scandal anytime soon. Instead, you held your ground, trying to maintain your composure (outwardly, at least) as Lady Mei Mei and her entourage turned to leave, their laughter echoing in your ears.Â
You tried to implement a few things your tutor had ingrained in you: taking deep breaths and setting your posture correctly. However, as you stood there, collecting yourself, the last thing you needed seemed to manifest before you: Satoru Gojo.
His tall figure approached you with that familiar, self-assured stride, his eyes glinting with mischief. "Ah, Miss Itadori," he greeted, a sly smile playing on his lips. You were already irritated, and it took all your will-power to stifle a groan.Â
"I couldnât help but notice you were conversing with Lord Ino," he remarked casually.
Give him a smile. "Indeed, we were enjoying a promenade. It is, after all, what young ladies and their suitors are expected to do."
âQuite the choice in company!â
KEEP up the smile. Â "He is a nobleman, and I am of noble descent. I fail to see your point, Mr. Gojo."Â
Gojoâs smile was quick and cutting. âOh, Iâve no particular quarrel with Lord Ino. Itâs simply that heâs hardly the sort Iâd expect to see on your arm. After all, heâs practically Nanamiâs lapdog.â
You felt the familiar irritation rising within youâžșand you were fighting for your life trying to keep a smile on your faceâžșbut you kept your tone measured. "And what, pray tell, are you implying by that, Mr. Gojo?"
"Itâs quite simple, reallyâžș"Â
But your patience, already worn thin, snapped at that word.
"My good sir, do you not think it rather dishonorable to speak ill of others behind their backs?" Gojo began to respond, but you cut him off. "Itâs curious how quickly opinions can change, is it not? Just the other evening, you seemed to hold me in rather low regard. Tell me, do you often dismiss people as âsimpleâ when they fail to meet any of the lofty expectations you have set? Or do you perhaps truly believe yourself to be at a station higher than others?"
Gojo stiffened, the smile slipping from his face as your words hit their mark. Before he could respond, Choso appeared at your side, his protective presence a welcome relief.
âIs there any problem, sister?â Choso asked, his tone polite yet firm as he glanced at Satoru, his eyes narrowing slightly.
Gojoâs gaze flicked to Choso, his irritation clear as he opened his mouth to make a cutting remark, and you couldnât thank the gods enough for Chosoâs mother hen tendencies. But the words faltered when he recognized who had interrupted. For a brief moment, surprise flashed in his eyes before he masked it with a tight-lipped smile.
You seized the moment, turning to Satoru with a sweet smile. âI think our time is up, Mister Gojo,â you said, your voice laced with venom.
Satoru hesitated for just a fraction of a second before nodding curtly, his expression unreadable. âOf course. Until next time, Miss Itadori.â
With that, he stepped back, allowing you and Choso to walk away toward where people were gathering for the race. As you moved through the crowd, you could feel Satoruâs gaze lingering on you, but you didnât look back.
âThat horse appears rather stout, does it not?â Yuji squinted against the blazing sun as he observed the horses from his seat beside you in the grandstand. âWhy has it garnered so many bets?â
Choso, seated protectively on your other side, kept a steady arm linked with yours. His presence was reassuring, though your irritation was directed at the figure seated just below you. Satoru Gojo, to your endless chagrin, was sitting with Lady Mei Mei, who had all but forced her way into the seat beside him. Though he tried to appear indifferent, his signature flirty remarks flowing with ease, you noticed the subtle signs of irritation crossing his face. Whether it stemmed from Lady Mei Mei's advances or from your earlier exchange, you couldn't be sure. You refused to meet his gaze, though you could feel his eyes on you intermittently as the crowd waited for the race to begin.
âMen can be quite foolish at times,â you remarked hotly, your voice carrying just enough to be overheard. âSome people value the superficial and materialistic over true substance, much like they do with horses. Blaze, for instance, has the qualities that truly matter.â
You could almost feel Gojoâs gaze intensify, and despite yourself, you glanced in his direction. Lady Mei Mei, ever the actress, feigned a stumble, exclaiming with a coy smile, âThese crowds are rather rough on a lady!â
You scoffed inwardly at her transparent attempt to press her bosom against Gojoâs arm.
âOh my,â Gojo drawled, his voice oozing concern. âWe canât have that, can we?â Ever the gallant gentleman, he interlaced his arm with hers. âHere, for extra protection. I wouldnât want a pretty lady shedding tears beside me.â
Mei Meiâs smirk was as satisfied as a serpent after a meal, and she batted her eyelashes coquettishly. âIf I were to cry, would you console me?â
âOf course,â Gojo replied smoothly. âThough I might find myself crying should my horse lose. The bets Iâve placed are rather substantial.â
A flirtatious giggle escaped Mei Meiâs lips. âThen I shall cheer with all my might, so you neednât suffer any losses, my lord.â
You were perilously close to tearing your hair out.
âI appreciate your enthusiasm, my lady,â Gojo said, taking her hand and kissing the back of it with exaggerated flourish. âBut rest assured, I am quite confident of a victory today. Thunder is swift and cunning, far superior to that... other horse. Itâs simple, reallyâThunder will win.â
Your composure cracked. âYuji,â you called, your voice sharp. Your brother, who had been lost in thought, snapped to attention. âDespite the other horseâs popularity, Blaze possesses the one quality universal to all champions: speed and diligence. The track conditions are in its favor.â
Yuji, caught off guard, blinked in confusion. âYes, of course, sister,â he mumbled, clearly unsure of why you were addressing him.
âAnd anyone who thinks otherwise,â you continued, raising your voice slightly, âis bound to lose their money. Sorely and simply.â
Gojo matched your tone, his voice ringing out. âBut of course, itâs all in good fun. Thereâs no need for hostility over a sport, is there? Both horses are fine contenders, though I remain convinced Thunder shall emerge victorious.â
Mei Mei tittered, parroting his sentiments, but you could hardly see straight for the anger coursing through you. Unable to hold back, you retorted, âHowever, it is, after all, still a race. And Blaze will win.â
By now, your exchange had drawn the attention of those around you, including your brothers. Choso and Yuji exchanged puzzled glances before Yuji asked weakly, âAre you still talking to us, sister?â Meanwhile, Chosoâs protective instincts flared, his gaze darting suspiciously between you and Gojo.
Before you could reply, the horses lined up at the starting gate, and the crowd collectively rose to their feet, including Gojo. âSteady now, Thunder!â he called out, his voice brimming with confidence.
Not to be outdone, you shouted, âCome on, Blaze!â
The bell rang, and the horses surged forward, the crowd erupting in cheers. Blaze and Thunder quickly pulled ahead, the two horses locked in a fierce battle for the lead. Thunder was currently ahead, its sleek form cutting through the track with precision.
âSteady, Thunder! Keep the lead!â Gojoâs voice was full of excitement, urging his horse onward.
Your heart raced with frustration as Blaze lagged slightly behind. âYou can do this, Blaze!â you urged, your voice rising above the din. Without thinking, you began whistling sharply, drawing alarmed looks from your brothers. The stares from the crowd meant nothing to you as you focused solely on the race.
Blaze, as if responding to your encouragement, began to accelerate, its powerful strides eating up the ground between it and Thunder. You noticed Thunderâs pace faltering, fatigue setting in, while Blaze surged ahead, pulling into the lead with a quarter of the race remaining.
Now it was Gojoâs turn to whistle, his voice tinged with desperation. âStraight to the finish line, Thunder! Donât let up!â
But Blaze only widened the gap, its momentum carrying it farther ahead. You couldnât contain your laughter, a joyous sound that bubbled up from within as Blaze crossed the finish line first, with Thunder trailing behind.
âGoddamn it,â Gojo cursed under his breath, his frustration palpable. You clapped your hands in delight, your laughter ringing out.
With deliberate grace, you placed your hands on your hips and turned to Gojo, flashing him a triumphant smile. âIâm so glad the âsimpleâ horse won,â you said, your voice dripping with satisfaction. âIt seems Iâve finally bested a duke.â
Gojoâs blue eyes bore into you, their intensity searing, but you met his glare with a boisterous laugh, savoring the victory as the crowdâs cheers and claps echoed around you. Until it was only the two of you, staring each other down.
Gojo âžș 0, you âžș 1.
Now, Duchess Gojo had always had a penchant for gossip, no one escaping her eye and observation. Of course, it was now the Whistledown era, for the unknown author could observe far more than the high-profile duchess, who was the receiver of much praise and attention due to her sonâs eligibility. But this eligibility had only been achieved because of her ability to direct the tide based on her reconnaissance, and in all her years, no could match her sass and direction. Except one.Â
"You know, Lady Itadori," the Duchess remarked, her tone laced with feigned pensiveness, "the Gojo manor in the countryside has been dreadfully quiet, and, if I may say, it has been quite some time since we last enjoyed a proper tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte.â
The two ladies stood together near the stands, choosing a more secluded spot from which to observe the horse race. Lady Itadori, her closest confidante, met the Duchessâs gaze with a gleam in her eye. "Indeed, I must agree."
For a moment, the two women stood in silence, their eyes surveying the scene before them. From the ladies flirting shamelessly to the gentlemen scrambling for the favor of the seasonâs debutantes, they were like spectators at a grand circus. Yet, their attention was drawn to a particular act.
Raising her fan to her lips, Lady Itadori whispered conspiratorially to the Duchess, "I might add, my diamond has been spending a considerable amount of time in your sonâs company."
The Duchess met her friendâs eyes and laughed lightly. "How many days do you wager it will take in the manor?"
Lady Itadori, now fully smirking, gave a delicate shrug. "It took you and the Duke but four days."
prev. the debutante | next. the manor
general masterlist | series masterlist
a/n: reader is hearing boss music rn
forced proximity whatttt
gojo when kuna ripped one in his face
comment, reblog, and send in an ask to let me know ur thots :3 memes are also appreciated <3
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The Aftermath-Blood and Cheese part two
summary | The after math of blood and cheese.
pairing | Aemond x Wife!Fem!Reader
tags | mentions of death, grief, swearing, infanticide, murder, talks of pregnancy and birth. Not proof read.
w.c | 2.0 k
note(s) | please ignore my lack of political or architecture knowledge in regards tp the rooms in Kings Landing or Driftmark. also! Fuck you Criston Cole.
____________________________________________Â
âHave any of my letters to my daughter been answered?â Rhaenyra asked calmly. The messenger anxiously shifted from his heels. âNo, your grace.â Rhaenyra nodded solemnly. Within the past couple weeks, her daughter had not responded to any letters that sheâd had sent. Of course, Rhaenyra felt that something was wrong, âmotherly instinctâ Daemon had so gracefully commented when she had confided in him one night about her fears.Â
âDo tell me if anything comes?âÂ
âOf course your grace.â With a bow, the servant moved out of the way so that Rhaenyra could make her way downstairs.
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The looks Rhaenyra got when she entered the meeting room were nothing short of sympathetic. Daemon sat in his chair, his legs crossed and a look of boredom on his face. Jace stared at his mother as she walked, as if words had been stuck on his tongue. Rhaenyra looked between everyone until she couldnât handle the prolonged stares and discomforting silence for much longer.Â
âWhat is thisâŠsilence? Has Aegon struck?â Rhaenyra asked, slowly making her way to her seat. When no one answered, she turned and looked towards Rhaenys, who, at eye contact, quickly looked towards Daemon. âWell?âÂ
âItâs troubling news, your grace. The princessâ son, Baelon, was murdered in her arms not but a few weeks ago.â Rhaenyra smiled slightly, disbelief coursing through her mind as she laughed.Â
âMurdered? He was only six months old! He had no enemies-â Rhaenyra stopped, seeing the solemn looks everyone held. Her face dropped, and she breathed out slowly as the smile faded from her face. âMyâŠgrandson is..dead?â Rhaenyra asked, her voice slightly shaky.Â
âYes. Murdered, your grace,â Rhaenys stopped, looking up towards her queen. âThe greens think that you were behind this heinous crime.âÂ
Rhaenyra paused and a disbelieving glare settled on her face. Her? Her?!
âMe? They think me responsible? I have not but lost my own son! And to think I would inflict such a grievous pain on my daughter-â Her voice cracked, and suddenly she found herself too weak to stand. She slowly sat down, holding a hand over her stomach as the realization set in.Â
Daemon looked down, his jaw clenched, his own gaze set away from Rhaenyra. He had not meant for this.Â
____________________________________________
âYou did this?!â Rhaenyra yelled, slamming her hands on the table where Daemon sat. The room had cleared, and now, Rhaenyra stood, barding her husband as she held back tears.Â
âAs I have said-â
âI said I wanted Aemond! Not my grand-â She stopped, her voice breaking as she turned away from Daemon. Daemon rolled his head to the side before he spoke, too calmly for Rhaenyraâs liking.Â
âIt was an accident.âÂ
âAn accident that cost me yet another loss!â Rhaenyra yelled, her glared piercing into Daemon. Once her eyes locked with Daemon's, a deep seated feeling of dread and anxiety fill her. How could he be so careless, so calm about the matter of her grandsonâs death?Â
âYou barely know the child!â Daemon refuted. Rhaenyra stopped, and she breathed slowly to ground herself before she spoke. Though it did not help. Daemon spoke softer, and he looked at her with a hard gaze. âIt was an accident.âÂ
âAccident or not you killed an innocent child, Daemon! My sweet girl-â Rhaenyra stopped, placing a hand on her mouth as she felt the tears start to bubble up in her eyes. She turned, holding back a sob as she tried to imagine how her innocent, sweet daughter could have possibly felt and reconciled with the death of the babe she worked so hard to conceive.Â
âI may not have known the babe personally. I may have only held him perhaps once but it is not the boy that I am sad for! This-This mistake that you made has not only cost me lost support from the great houses, utter humiliation, and griefâŠbut you have cost me my first born daughter!â Rhaenyra took a breath, and when Daemon said nothing she wiped the tears from her eyes and spoke slowly, turning back to face him. âMy daughter thinks that I have done this. That I ordered the murder of an infant boy, Daemon!âÂ
âYour daughter knows you better then-âÂ
âMy daughter may know me better than the ground that I walk on, Daemon but you underestimate a mother and her grief. You cannot possibly understand the conclusions that will be drawn from her mind when she hears that this happened in my name.â At this Daemon goes quiet. He looked away from Rhaenyra as she continued.Â
âMy daughter is grieving. And in her grief she will blame no one but herself. But the moment that she hears of the hideous rumor that I did this? Her grief will be overcome with anger and she will resent me!â With no more words left to say, Rhaenyra quickly turned and walked away.Â
In the solace of the castle halls she broke down, sobbing heavily. She leaned against the nearest wall for support as she shook her head. Rhaenyra was unable to wrap her mind around how her precious little girl could be grappling with this grief. ____________________________________________
You were in the nursery, as you always were these days, when Crison Cole passed by. When Rhaenyra had given birth to you all those years ago, he felt a mix of emotions, but the top one was anger. He had let himself go, a moment of weakness in his own words. When Rhaenyra spoke your name, the anger grew even more.Â
As you grew the relationship between you and Ser Criston grew apart. You held no resentment towards him for a while, trying to be an understanding âdaughterâ.Â
Criston stopped, seeing you on the floor next to the crib. He felt sadness, of course he did. But more than that he felt guilt. Perhaps if he had been there, perhaps if he wasnât occupied he could have saved your innocent son.Â
And in truth you blamed Criston more than anyone. He was the head of the Kingsguard, but more than that he was your father. Even though he stayed up at night trying to deny you as his own, biologically you were his and no amount of self inflicted drunkenness or denial could change that.Â
Criston stood at the door, opening his mouth to speak, before you interrupted him.Â
âWhere were you, Ser Criston?â At the sound of your harsh, irritable voice, he stopped. The words he meant to speak suddenly lost in his throat as he cleared throat with a cough. He spoke your name softly, taking a step forward but you picked up a nearby book and threw it at him. âMy son would not be dead if you had not been fucking my mother-in-law!â
âPrincess-âÂ
âNo!â You stood, walking towards him fast as you glared at him. He had never seen you so angry, with such a look of pure hatred in your eyes. âIf you had done your fucking job I would not have lost my son!â You went to hit Cristonâs chest, but Aemond came quickly, holding his arms around you tightly as he pressed a soft kiss to your head, as if the anger you felt in your chest could be resolved with the feather light weight of a kiss.Â
âTake your leave Ser Criston.â Aemond spoke harshly, and Criston went to speak, but Aemond looked up at him, glaring with his one good, tear filled and red eye. âI said leave, Ser Criston.âÂ
Criston Cole bowed, and he left quickly. He was willing to blame anyone but himself for his grandsonâs death. Anyone but himself.
____________________________________________
Two years. It took you two years to fully grasp your mind around the fact that your baby was truly gone. It took Aemond a matter of months, but he still felt the loss, deep within his heart. He would stand outside of the nursery as you laid by the crib and sobbed. He would stand outside of your chambers and listen as you screamed and cursed your mother, Criston, anyone you could verbally blame.Â
You couldnât even be intimate with him without breaking down into sobs. And truly, Aemond did not wish to be intimate. He wished to be there for you, a supporter that you needed and not just some mindless lustful husband. So he waited, and he waited patiently. Holding you while you cried, escorting you out of the Red Keep when the courtâs children would run about.Â
By the third year, long after you had let your husband back into bed, you became pregnant. A gift from the gods, you were sure. And when you finally gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl whom you named Viserys and Visenya.Â
Aemond loved the twins, with his every breath he loved them. But, he felt some disconnect from you. You seemed more connected to your daughter than your son. When Visneya would cry you would go running, but if Viserys cried, you would hesitate, before ultimately having Aemond go to the boy.Â
____________________________________________
You were in the nursery, staring down at Viserys as the babe slept. He had such an uncanny resemblance to Baelon that it made you physically sick. You could not hold the babe, much rather opting to hold his sister than him. Holding Viserys felt like holding Baelon, and when you thought of holding Baelon, all you thought about was the night that he was taken from you.Â
Aemond knew this. How could he not. He himself had a hard time with Viserys. Viserys reminded him of his failure to protect his first son. At first that is. Sooner than later Aemond would grow fond of the babe, promising himself, and both of his children, that he would never fail them. That he would come to them every night and bid them a goodnight.Â
On the night that you stood in the nursery, staring at your son, Aemond came. He leaned against the frame for a while until he heard the boy start to whimper. He came closer to the crib, and he saw the baby boy reaching out towards you, seeking the neglected embrace of his mother.Â
âHe wants you, my love.â Aemond spoke gently, knowing that if he raised his voice too much, heâd accidentally frighten you. He watched you closely, watching your conflicted face as you shook your head.Â
âPerhaps you could-â
âMy love, please. I cannot take him forever.â You nodded at his words, knowing that it was true. You took in an uncertain breath before you shakily reached down into Viserys crib and picked him up.Â
You felt like a new mother, holding a babe you barely even knew even though you carried him for eight months. You stared down at the squirming babe, and all you saw was Baelon. Baelon, Baelon, Baelon-
Aemond came behind you, wrapping his arms around you and supporting Viserys under your own arms. Your breath stopped, tears filling your eyes as you felt the embrace.Â
âYouâre okay, my love. Iâm here.â Gods you relished in those words. For the past three years Aemond had been your rock, your anchor, taking you back down from your swirling thoughts and telling you that you were okay.Â
Taking a deep breath, you looked down at your baby boy, and for the first time in three months you saw Viserys. You saw Viserys. The thought almost made you sob; All these months, being detached from the very human you created made you feel like the worst mother in the world. But then, he smiled at you. You felt your whole resolve weaken at the sight of your sonâs smile.Â
You resented Criston Cole, for not being there as a father, for not being there the night Baelon was murdered. However, this innocent little creature didnât resent you, he simply missed you. He could feel no hate, no resentment for your own trauma. The thought of being so easily forgiven by this little innocent life made your heart swell and your eyes tear up.Â
Instinctively, you pulled away from Aemond and you started to rock the boy. Viserys smiled, the same, lopsided smile Aemond had. Your heart swelled and you smiled down at the boy as tears filled your gaze. Viserys reached up, holding his tiny hand to your nose as he giggled. You looked at this boy, no longer thinking of the life you had lost, but the ones that you had gained.
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Hope it was up to everyone's standards!!
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Why they're smearing Lina Khan
My god, they sure hate Lina Khan. This once-in-a-generation, groundbreaking, brilliant legal scholar and fighter for the public interest, the slayer of Reaganomics, has attracted more vitriol, mockery, and dismissal than any of her predecessors in living memory.
She sure must be doing something right, huh?
A quick refresher. In 2017, Khanâââthen a law studentâââpublished Amazonâs Antitrust Paradox in the Yale Law Journal. It was a brilliant, blistering analysis showing how the Reagan-era theory of antitrust (which celebrates monopolies as âefficientâ) had failed on its own terms, using Amazon as Exhibit A of the ways in which post-Reagan antitrust had left Americans vulnerable to corporate abuse:
https://www.yalelawjournal.org/note/amazons-antitrust-paradox
The paper sent seismic shocks through both legal and economic circles, and goosed the neo-Brandeisian movement (sneeringly dismissed as âhipster antitrustâ). This movement is a rebuke to Reaganomics, with its celebration of monopolies, trickle-down, offshoring, corporate dark money, revolving-door regulatory capture, and companies that are simultaneously too big to fail and too big to jail.
This movement has many proponents, of courseââânot just Khanâââbut Khanâs careful scholarship, combined with her encyclopedic knowledge of the long-dormant statutory powers that federal agencies had to make change, and a strategy for reviving those powers to protect Americans from corporate predators made her a powerful, inspirational figure.
When Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, he surprised everyone by appointing Khan to the FTC. It wasnât just that she had such a radical visionâââit was also that she lacked the usual corporate law experience that such an appointee would normally require (experience that would ensure that the FTC was helmed by people whose default view of the world is that it should be structured and regulated by powerful, wealthy people in corporate boardrooms).
Even more surprising was that Khan was made chair of the FTC, something that was only possible because a few Republican Senators broke with their party to support her candidacy:
https://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_votes/vote1171/vote_117_1_00233.htm
These Republicans saw in Khan an ally in their fight against âwokeâ Big Tech. For these senators, the problem wasnât that tech had got too big and powerfulâââit was that there were a few limited instances in which tech leaders failed to wield that power in the ways they preferred.
The Republican project is a matter of getting turkeys to vote for Christmas by doing a lot of culture war bullshit, cruelly abusing disfavored sexual and racial minorities. This wins support from low-information voters whoâll vote against their class interests and support more monopolies, more tax cuts for the rich, and more cuts to the services they rely on.
But while tech leaders are 100% committed to the project of permanent oligarchic takeover of every sphere of American life, they are less full-throated in their support for hateful, cruel discrimination against disfavored minorities (in this regard, tech leaders resemble the corporate wing of the Democrats, which is where we get the âSilicon Valley is a Democratic Party strongholdâ narrative).
This failure to unquestioningly and unstintingly back culture war bullshit put tech leaders in the GOPâs crosshairs. Some GOP politicians actually believe in the culture war bullshit, and are grossly offended that tech is âwoke.â Others are smart enough not to get high on their own supply, but worry that any tech obstruction in the bullshit culture wars will make it harder to get sufficient turkey votes for a big fat Christmas surprise.
Bidenâs ceding of antitrust policy to the left wing of the party, combined with disaffected GOP senators viewing Khan as their enemyâs enemy, led to Khanâs historic appointment as FTC Chair. In that position, she was joined by a slate of Biden trustbusters, including Jonathan Kanter at the DoJ Antitrust Division, Tim Wu at the White House, and other important, skilled and principled fighters like Alvaro Bedoya (FTC), Rebecca Slaughter (FTC), Rohit Chopra (CFPB), and many others.
Crucially, these new appointees werenât just principled, they were good at their jobs. In 2021, Tim Wu wrote an executive order for Biden that laid out 72 concrete ways in which the administration could actâââwith no further Congressional authorizationâââto blunt corporate power and insulate the American people from oligarchsâ abusive and extractive practices:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/13/post-bork-era/#manne-down
Since then, the antitrust arm of the Biden administration have been fuckinâ ninjas, Getting Shit Done in ways large and small, workingâââfor the first time since Reaganâââto protect Americans from predatory businesses:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/18/administrative-competence/#i-know-stuff
This is in marked contrast to the corporate Demsâ champions in the administration. People like Pete Buttigieg are heralded as competent technocrats, ârealistsâ who are too principled to peddle hopium to the base, writing checks they canât cash. All this is cover for a King Log performance, in which Buttigiegâs far-reaching regulatory authority sits unused on a shelf while a million Americans are stranded over Christmas and whole towns are endangered by greedy, reckless rail barons straight out of the Gilded Age:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/10/the-courage-to-govern/#whos-in-charge
The contrast between the Biden trustbusters and their counterparts from the corporate wing is stark. While the corporate wing insists that every pitch is outside of the zone, Khan and her allies are swinging for the stands. Theyâre trying to make life better for you and me, by declaring commercial surveillance to be an unfair business practice and thus illegal:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/08/12/regulatory-uncapture/#conscious-uncoupling
And by declaring noncompete âagreementsâ that shackle good workers to shitty jobs to be illegal:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/02/its-the-economy-stupid/#neofeudal
And naturally, this has really pissed off all the right people: Americaâs billionaires and their cheerleaders in the press, government, and the hive of scum and villainy that is the Big Law/thinktank industrial-complex.
Take the WSJ: since Khan took office, they have published 67 vicious editorials attacking her and her policies. Khan is living rent-free in Rupert Murdochâs head. Not only that, heâs given her the presidential suite! You love to see it.
These attacks are worth reading, if only to see how flimsy and frivolous they are. One major subgenre is that Khan shouldnât be bringing any action against Amazon, because her groundbreaking scholarship about the company means she has a conflict of interest. Holy moly is this a stupid thing to say. The idea that the chair of an expert agency should recuse herself because she is an expert is what the physicists call not even wrong.
But these attacks are even more laughable due to who theyâre coming from: people who have the most outrageous conflicts of interest imaginable, and who were conspicuously silent for years as the FTCâs revolving door admitted the a bestiary of swamp-creatures so conflicted itâs a wonder they managed to dress themselves in the morning.
Writing in The American Prospect, David Dayen runs the numbers:
Since the late 1990s, 31 out of 41 top FTC officials worked directly for a company that has business before the agency, with 26 of them related to the technology industry.
https://prospect.org/economy/2023-06-23-attacks-lina-khans-ethics-reveal-projection/
Take Christine Wilson, a GOP-appointed FTC Commissioner who quit the agency in a huff because Khan wanted to do things for the American people, and not their self-appointed oligarchic princelings. Wilson wrote an angry break-up letter to Khan that the WSJ published, presaging their concierge service for Samuel Alito:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-im-resigning-from-the-ftc-commissioner-ftc-lina-khan-regulation-rule-violation-antitrust-339f115d
For Wilson to question Khanâs ethics took galactic-scale chutzpah. Wilson, after all, is a commissioner who took cash money from Bristol-Myers Squibb, then voted to approve their merger with Celgene:
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4365601-Wilson-Christine-Smith-final278.html
Or take Wilsonâs GOP FTC predecessor Josh Wright, whose incestuous relationship with the companies he oversaw at the Commission are so intimate heâs practically got a Habsburg jaw. Wright went from Google to the US government and back again four times. He also lobbied the FTC on behalf of Qualcomm (a major donor to Wrightâs employer, George Masonâs Antonin Scalia Law School) after working âpersonally and substantiallyâ while serving at the FTC.
George Masonâs Scalia center practically owns the revolving door, counting fourteen FTC officials among its affliates:
https://campaignforaccountability.org/ttp-investigation-big-techs-backdoor-to-the-ftc/
Since the 1990s, 31 out of 41 top FTC officialsâââboth GOP appointed and appointees backed by corporate Demsââââworked directly for a company that has business before the agencyâ:
https://www.citizen.org/article/ftc-big-tech-revolving-door-problem-report/
The majority of FTC and DoJ antitrust lawyers who served between 2014â21 left government service and went straight to work for a Big Law firm, serving the companies theyâd regulated just a few months before:
https://therevolvingdoorproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/The-Revolving-Door-In-Federal-Antitrust-Enforcement.pdf
Take Deborah Feinstein, formerly the head of the FTCâs Bureau of Competition, now a partner at Arnold & Porter, where sheâs represented General Electric, NBCUniversal, Unilever, and Pepsi and a whole medicine chestâs worth of pharma giants before her former subordinates at the FTC. Michael Moiseyev who was assistant manager of FTC Competition is now in charge of mergers at Weil Gotshal & Manges, working for Microsoft, Meta, and Eli Lilly.
Thereâs a whole bunch more, but Dayen reserves special notice for Andrew Smith, Trumpâs FTC Consumer Protection boss. Before he was put on the public payroll, Smith represented 120 clients that had business before the Commission, including ânearly every major bank in America, drug industry lobbyist PhRMA, Uber, Equifax, Amazon, Facebook, Verizon, and a variety of payday lendersâ:
https://www.citizen.org/sites/default/files/andrew_smith_foia_appeal_response_11_30.pdf
Before Khan, in other words, the FTC was a âconflict-of-interest assembly line, moving through corporate lawyers and industry hangers-on without resistance for decades.â
Khan is the first FTC head with no conflicts. This leaves her opponents in the sweaty, desperate position of inventing conflicts out of thin air.
For these corporate lickspittles, Khanâs âconflictâ is that she has a point of view. Specifically, she thinks that the FTC should do its job.
This makes grifters like Jim Jordan furious. Yesterday, Jordan grilled Khan in a hearing where he accused her of violating an ethics officialâs advice that she should recuse herself from Big Tech cases. This is a talking point that was created and promoted by Bloomberg:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-06-16/ftc-rejected-ethics-advice-for-khan-recusal-on-meta-case
That ethics official, Lorielle Pankey, did not, in fact, make this recommendation. Itâs simply untrue (she did say that Khan presiding over cases that she has made public statements about could be used as ammo against her, but did not say that it violated any ethical standard).
But thereâs more to this story. Pankey herself has a gigantic conflict of interest in this case, including a stock portfolio with $15,001 and $50,000 in Meta stock (Meta is another company that has whined in print and in its briefs that it is a poor defenseless lamb being picked on by big, mean ole Lina Khan):
https://www.wsj.com/articles/ethics-official-owned-meta-stock-while-recommending-ftc-chair-recuse-herself-from-meta-case-8582a83b
Jordan called his hearing on the back of this fake scandal, and then proceeded to show his whole damned ass, even as his GOP colleagues got into a substantive and even informative dialog with Khan:
https://prospect.org/power/2023-07-14-jim-jordan-misfires-attacks-lina-khan/
Mostly what came out of that hearing was news about how Khan is doing her job, working on behalf of the American people. For example, she confirmed that sheâs investigating OpenAI for nonconsensually harvesting a mountain of Americansâ personal information:
https://www.ft.com/content/8ce04d67-069b-4c9d-91bf-11649f5adc74
Other Republicans, including confirmed swamp creatures like Matt Gaetz, ended up agreeing with Khan that Amazon Ring is a privacy dumpster-fire. Nobodies like Rep TomM assie gave Khan an opening to discuss how her agency is protecting mom-and-pop grocers from giant, price-gouging, greedflation-drunk national chains. Jeff Van Drew gave her a chance to talk about the FTCâs war on robocalls. Lance Gooden let her talk about her fight against horse doping.
But Khanâs opponents did manage to repeat a lot of the smears against her, and not just the bogus conflict-of-interest story. They also accused her of being 0â4 in her actions to block mergers, ignoring the huge number of mergers that have been called off or not initiated because M&A professionals now understand they can no longer expect these mergers to be waved through. Indeed, just last night I spoke with a friend who owns a medium-sized tech company that Meta tried to buy out, only to withdraw from the deal because their lawyers told them it would get challenged at the FTC, with an uncertain outcome.
These talking points got picked up by people commenting on Judge Jacqueline Scott Corleyâs ruling against the FTC in the Microsoft-Activision merger. The FTC was seeking an injunction against the merger, and Corley turned them down flat. The ruling was objectively very bad. Start with the fact that Corleyâs son is a Microsoft employee who stands reap massive gains in his stock options if the merger goes through.
But beyond this (real, non-imaginary, not manufactured conflict of interest), Corleyâs judgment and her remarks in court were inexcusably bad, as Matt Stoller writes:
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/judge-rules-for-microsoft-mergers
In her ruling, Corley explained that she didnât think Microsoft would abuse the market dominance theyâd gain by merging their giant videogame platform and studio with one of its largest competitors. Why not? Because Microsoftâs execs pinky-swore that they wouldnât abuse that power.
Corelyâs deference to Microsoftâs corporate priorities goes deeper than trusting its execs, though. In denying the FTCâs motion, she stated that it would be unfair to put the merger on hold in order to have a full investigation into its competition implications because Microsoft and Activision had set a deadline of July 18 to conclude things, and Microsoft would have to pay a penalty if that deadline passed.
This is surreal: a judge ruled that a corporationâs radical, massive merger shouldnât be subject to full investigation because that corporation itself set an arbitrary deadline to conclude the deal before such an investigation could be concluded. Thatâs pretty convenient for future mega-mergersâââjust set a short deadline and Judge Corely will tell regulators that the merger canât be investigated because the deadline is looming.
And this is all about the future. As Stoller writes, Microsoft isnât exactly subtle about why it wants this merger. Its own execs said that the reason they were spending âdump trucksâ of money buying games studios was to âspend Sony out of business.â
Now, maybe you hate Sony. Maybe you hate Activision. Thereâs plenty of good reason to hate bothâââtheyâre run by creeps who do shitty things to gamers and to their employees. But if you think that Microsoft will be better once it eliminates its competition, then you have the attention span of a goldfish on Adderall.
Microsoft made exactly the same promises it made on Activision when it bought out another games studio, Zenimaxâââand it broke every one of those promises.
Microsoft has a long, long, long history of being a brutal, abusive monopolist. It is a convicted monopolist. And its bad conduct didnât end with the browser wars. You remember how the lockdown turned all our homes into rent-free branch offices for our employers? Microsoft seized on that moment to offer our bosses keystroke-and-click level surveillance of our use of our own computers in our own homes, via its Office365 bossware product:
https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/25/the-peoples-amazon/#clippys-revenge
If you think a company that gave your boss a tool to spy on their employees and rank them by âproductivityâ as a prelude to firing them or cutting their pay is going to treat gamers or game makers well once they have âspent the competition out of business,â youâre a credulous sucker and you are gonna be so disappointed.
The enshittification play is obvious: use investor cash to make things temporarily nice for customers and suppliers, lock both of them inâââin this case, itâs with a subscription-based service similar to Netflixâsâââand then claw all that value back until all thatâs left is a big pile of shit.
The Microsoft case is about the future. Judge Corely doesnât take the future seriously: as she said during the trial, âAll of this is for a shooter videogame.â The reason Corely greenlit this merger isnât because it wonât be harmfulâââitâs because she doesnât think those harms matter.
But it does, and not just because games are an art form that generate billions of dollars, employ a vast workforce, and bring pleasure to millions. It also matters because this is yet another one of the Reaganomic precedents that tacitly endorses monopolies as efficient forces for good. As Stoller writes, Corleyâs ruling means that âdeal bankers are sharpening pencils and saying âGreat, the government lost! We can get mergers through everywhere else.â Basically, if you like your high medical prices, you should be cheering on Microsoftâs win today.â
Ronald Reaganâs antitrust has colonized our brains so thoroughly that commentators were surprised when, immediately after the ruling, the FTC filed an appeal. Donât they know theyâve lost? the commentators said:
https://gizmodo.com/ftc-files-appeal-of-microsoft-activision-deal-ruling-1850640159
They echoed the smug words of insufferable Activision boss Mike Ybarra: âYour tax dollars at work.â
https://twitter.com/Qwik/status/1679277251337277440
But of course Khan is appealing. The only reason thatâs surprising is that Khan is working for us, the American people, not the giant corporations the FTC is supposed to be defending us from. Sure, I get that this is a major change! But she needs our backing, not our cheap cynicism.
The business lobby and their pathetic Renfields have hoarded all the nice things and they donât want us to have any. Khan and her trustbuster colleagues want the opposite. There is no measure so small that the corporate world wonât have a conniption over it. Take click to cancel, the FTCâs perfectly reasonable proposal that if you sign up for a recurring payment subscription with a single click, you should be able to cancel it with a single click.
The tooth-gnashing and garment-rending and scenery-chewing over this is wild. Americaâs biggest companies have wheeled out their biggest guns, claiming that if they make it too easy to unsubscribe, they will lose money. In other words, they are currently making money not because people want their products, but because itâs too hard to stop paying for them!
https://www.theregister.com/2023/07/12/ftc_cancel_subscriptions/
We shouldnât have to tolerate this sleaze. And if we back Khan and her team, theyâll protect us from these scams. Donât let them convince you to give up hope. This is the start of the fight, not the end. Weâre trying to reverse 40 yearsâ worth of Reagonmics here. It wonât happen overnight. There will be setbacks. But keep your eyes on the prizeâââthis is the most exciting moment for countering corporate power and giving it back to the people in my lifetime. We owe it to ourselves, our kids and our planet to fight one.
If youâd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, hereâs a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/14/making-good-trouble/#the-peoples-champion
[Image ID: A line drawing of pilgrims ducking a witch tied to a ducking stool. The pilgrims' clothes have been emblazoned with the logos for the WSJ, Microsoft, Activision and Blizzard. The witch's face has been replaced with that of FTC chair Lina M Khan.]
#pluralistic#amazon's antitrust paradox#lina khan#business lobby#lina m khan#ftc#federal trade commission#david dayen#microsoft#activision#blizzard#wsj#wall street journal#reaganomics#trustbusting#antitrust#mergers#merger to monopoly#gaming#xbox#matt stoller#the american prospect#jim jordan#click to cancel#robert bork#Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley#microsoft activision#fuckin' ninjas
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