#revitalizing shampoo
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healthyuyrt · 4 months ago
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Revitalize Your Pet Hair With Life Abundance Revitalizing Shampoo
Healthy Food For Pets offers Life Abundance Revitalizing Shampoo, a premium grooming solution designed to enhance shine and softness in your pet's coat, ensuring a healthy, vibrant appearance and feeling for your furry friend. For more information visit:- https://healthyfoodforpets.com/shop/uncategorized/lifes-abundance-revitalizing-shampoo
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beautyfineshopparis · 1 year ago
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African Pride extra shine braid sheen spray 355ml.
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yousseferqa · 9 months ago
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SCALP PURIFYING Microbiome Shampoo
; Opens a new tab
Our hydrating detox shampoo is formulated with our exclusive 7-year aged vinegar and microbiome-targeting ingredients to help clarify your scalp and wash your hair without stripping away essential moisture.
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sovrn.co
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sscplherbals-blog · 1 year ago
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Revitalize Tresses: Intense Repair Shampoo by SSCPL Herbals
Restore, replenish, and repeat with our intensive repair shampoo – your secret weapon for achieving healthy, lustrous hair. Experience the transformative power of SSCPL Herbals' hair care, nurturing your locks to their full potential. Explore more at www.sscplherbals.com
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seelanmarket · 1 year ago
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Cantu Avocado Hydrating Cream Shampoo 400ml.
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healthyfoodforpets · 1 year ago
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Benefits of Life’s Abundance Revitalizing Pet Shampoo
Pamper your precious pet with a revitalizing botanical infusion of organic rosemary and sage. Enhanced with the nourishing essences of coconut and palm kernel oil, Revitalizing Shampoo naturally cleanses and beautifies coats. Even a small dollop of this conditioning formula works into a luxurious, foamy lather, to deeply cleanse and leave coats silky, fragrant, and tangle-free. The luscious scents of mango and kiwi mingle with energizing citrus notes to bring out a natural shine. Natural antioxidants from organic rosemary and sage help prevent damage from weathering and environmental factors. Its natural emollients help soften hair and give the coat more body. To know more in detail about Life's Abundance Revitalizing Pet Shampoo visit Healthy Food for Pets.
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jackalopesao3 · 4 months ago
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HCs For What The Obey Me Cast Smell Like đŸŒčđŸŒŒ
Characters: everyone that has had a face reveal
This has been in my drafts for over a year. I finally finished it. Enjoy!
Lucifer
A cologne with a signature mix of fresh scents with some notes of leather. When he’s tired, he’ll occasionally switch to a cool cologne with minty notes to perk himself up. There’s also a faint aroma of tea or coffee in him depending on what he’s brewing to stay awake to burn the midnight oil to finish his endless work.
Mammon
Money Hmmm
a luxury cologne for sure! We all know he has a taste for high end items. I think he’d go for an old school fragrance, maybe something citrusy with a hint of tobacco.
Leviathan
Say it with me: Axe Body Spray
When Asmodeus yeets his axe into the void like the good little brother he is, he will gift Leviathan with cologne he thinks he will like. This means anything that comes in an anime-style container. So Leviathan’s scent will vary.
Satan
New book smell, old book smell, catnip - it depends on what he’s up to. I don’t doubt for one second he always has at least one pouch of catnip on him. He probably has some nice cologne too courtesy of Asmo or his various connections in his social circles.
Asmodeus
He likes to burn vanilla, sandalwood, and amber scented candles and incense so he has those scents on him. Asmo also has a variety of colognes and perfumes so his scent changes almost daily.
Beelzebub
Beel could smell like the most heavenly cupcakes ever baked or the greasiest burger ever fried. It all depends on what he just ate. Because of how much the boy eats he tends to smell like the food he ate.
No one is to give him food-scented cologne because he will just eat the bottle. He uses neutralizing scents to bathe so the scents don’t get in the way of him enjoying his food later.
Belphegor
Fabric softener with notes of lavender. He needs the softest of sheets with the most relaxing scent possible. Sometimes he’ll opt to use a lavender and eucalyptus scented pillow mist too so that scent will cling to him.
Diavolo
A woody cologne to go along with his naturally smoky scent from his constant use of fire magic. Sometimes he changes it up with warm scents like cinnamon and ginger or something lively like citrus.
Barbatos
If he were to wear cologne at all it would be something very subtle with notes of bergamot that closely matches earl grey tea. The notes are calming yet revitalizing at the same time. Sometimes it’s whatever pastries he’s just baked. He smells sweet and warm. Barbatos can also smell very clean like tea tree oil with notes of mint. It just depends on what he’s doing at the time.
Simeon
Most mornings he smells like pancakes since he’s constantly making them for Luke. Simeon also likes refreshing scents with minty notes or anything with an “ocean” or “sea” label as it helps him to relax and focus on writing.
Solomon
He is constantly burning sage, patchouli, nag champa, or frankincense to cover up the smell of his various potions and experiments so he smells like an incense hippie shop. (I highly approve btw!)
BUT I could also see this weirdo quickly spritzing Old Spice on himself as well.
Luke
Little angel baby bakes a lot so he smells sweet with notes of whatever it is that he’s baking or like the pancakes he loves to eat!
Thirteen
It depends on her mood! Some days it’s strawberries like her favorite strawberry shampoo and body wash. Other days she goes for something different like amber or a floral scent.
Mephistopheles
On days he pulls all nighters working on the newspaper, coffee: black, medium roast. Besides that he wears a posh cologne brand with notes of rosewood and tobacco.
Raphael
Pine trees and woody notes with a hint of spice. Is it cologne, his body wash, or his natural scent? You’ll have to ask him!
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drghostwrite · 10 months ago
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My House, My Rules
Pairing: Arizona Robbin’s x Wife!reader
Summary: You and Arizona are married attendings, you’re both performing ground breaking surgeries along with you revitalizing the role of Cheif of surgery, after an extremely long week all you want is alone time with your wife but you’re fellow surgeons seem to get in the way outside of work to.
Warnings: 18+, little angst, smut to fluff
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Ding
 you heard your phone go off with a text, you figured if it was urgent they would call, so you let it lay on its respective side of the counter while you chopped veggies for your pico de gallo. Tossing some peppers into the bowl you heard it go off again ignoring it. You felt as gentle hands wrapped around you from behind, Arizona leaned her head between your strong shoulders her arms wrapped tightly around your torso, she relaxed her breathing letting it fall in line with yours.
“Hey baby
” you trailed tossing the last of the tomatoes in the bowl and cleaning your hands with the towel over your shoulder, she squeezed tighter around you. You turned in her arms letting her rest her head on your chest, gently wrapping her in your arms and kissing her head, the smell of her shampoo and perfume mixing was intoxicating.
“I’ve missed you.” She whispered, it killed you
 seeing the impact this was having on the both of you. You had recently accepted the role of head of emergency medicine which meant paperwork and meetings on top of your existing case load, which is hard enough to manage. Arizona was so proud and extremely patient but it had been a week since you’d had a moment alone together.
“I know, I’m so sorry
 Can I make it up to you?” You whispered in her ear.
“What do you have in mind?” She said looking up to meet your eyes, a shy smirk as she played with the buttons on your shirt. Before you could explain your phone started going off.
Ding
 Ding
 Ding,Ding
 you rolled your eyes ignoring it. Turing your attention back to your wife, but before you could go any further your front door burst open, revealing Shepard, followed by Grey, Christina, April, and Karev.
You pulled Arizona against you holding her as they made their way into the kitchen
 you couldn’t tell what they were taking about as they were all yelling at once telling different stories. Arizona looked up at you and stepped aside and she saw your face drop, it was a face she’s seen too many times in your ER, it was your take charge face.
“Okay, everyone shut up!” They all stopped talking at once, you were never one to raise your voice so when you did it caught peoples attention.
“What the hell is going on?”
“I just drove
” Derek said a hand swiping over his tired eyes.
“I’m here to watch the cat fight.” Alex said excited as Yang punched his arm causing him to jerk away.
“It started with Kepner
”
“Did not!!”
“Oh did to!!!” They all started yelling again.
“Okay!!!
 Look I don’t care what happened or who did what
 I don’t even give a damn as to why you are standing in my kitchen right now, what I am concerned about is my gorgeous wife that is standing here with me that I haven’t been able to be with in over a week
 So please get the hell out of my house so I can spend the night with my wife.”
they all looked at you shocked and quickly exited the house as fast as they entered, you followed to lock the door, Derek turned with a silent thank you before closing the door behind him.
you returned to the kitchen to see Arizona standing there, a smile across her face, “You know that was really sexy, I love it when you take charge.”
“oh do you?” You said smirking kissing her soft lips.
“Mmhmm
” she said pulling at you shirt buttons again.
“Well then forget dinner for tonight we can heat it up later.” you said pressing against her, her back pushed into the stove as you leaned and quickly ghosted your lips before turning everything off. You leaned down kissing her again and running your hands along her body. You lifted her up seeing her on the counter, she pulled the buttons apart and quickly pushed your shirt off your shoulders not breaking the kiss, you pulled at the jeans she wore tossing them to the side and wrapping her legs around you. She ran her fingers over the simple black bra that you wore taking in the sight before her, she quickly pulled off your old Harvard t shirt that she was wearing throwing it to the side, revealing the matching navy bra and panty set.
She kissed you again as your hands explored her body, you hoisted her up wrapping her legs around your torso as her hands ran through your hair one arm thrown over your shoulder as you carried her upstairs to your room trying not to break the kisses.
you placed her on the bed and slipped off your jeans, she looked at the sight before her, you on top of her in your black bra and matching simple black panties, the scar on your abdomen from the shooting, she ran her soft fingertips over the strong muscles that she so admired. She undid your bra sliding it off and taking in the sight before her she ran her hands, gently along your nipples, she looked back up making eye contact with the beautiful woman above her.
you bent and placed bruising kisses on her lips only pulling away to catch your breath letting you lips ghost only mere centimeters apart, your eyes trailing hers. She lifted her leg pressing her thigh against your hip as you ran your hand down her thigh and up her side. You bent down placing kisses on her stomach, your skilled hand unhooking her bra and tossing it aside, you kissed up her body, placing kisses on her breast but before you could go any further she flipped you over. She sat in your lap before working her way down to your legs, gently parting them and pulling your underwear off, tossing them behind her.
“You my love, have already done enough
 let me take care of you.” You tried to open your mouth to talk back but she quickly quieted you, by running her hands down your inner thighs. You felt every nerve tingling as she kissed up your thighs, her fingers slid over your slit quickly ghosting over your clit before she inserted one and then two, she wrapped her soft lips around a nipple and you arched your back into her already teetering on the edge. Her fingers pumped in and out slowly at first only picking up pace as you moaned into her kisses.
“Arizona
 baby
 Oh god
 I’m
”
“Hold on love.” She said moving her mouth down to your clit, her fingers kept moving in and out as she pulled it into her mouth, she knew exactly what she was doing and in a couple seconds you would be seeing stars.
“Arizona
” you moaned with a high pitched whine, your hands one tightly gripped the sheets the other tangled in her hair as she pushed you over the edge. You felt your muscles tighten and then release as you climaxes she pulled her fingers out letting her mouth take over and coax you back down, that was until her nose ghosted over your clit and she heard your whimpers and pressed a little harder, the aftermath causing your legs to tremble. She crawled back up your body laying on your chest.
“Thank you.”
“for what, you did all the work.”
“I just wanted you to know you were loved and I wanted to do this, you’ve worked so hard all week you needed to relieve some stress.”
“well in that case it’s your turn next.”
“in the morning
 can we just lay here for now, i just wanna lay here and enjoy my wife.”
“whatever makes you happy baby.” You smiled as you both laid there in each others arms tangled in your own bodies.
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lee-lucius · 1 year ago
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Tickletober Day 2: Accidental
Summary: When Spinner agrees to help Shigaraki take care of his scars, neither of them expect it to take a ticklish turn.
Word Count: 1,899
Day 2 is done! I want to write for a bunch of different fandoms this month, and I was so excited to get to write for one of my favorite ships! (I love them sm I swear---) Anyway, I hope you enjoy these cute, sappy boyfriends! 💙
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"Are you
 ready?" Spinner asked, voice hushed and hesitant, wrestling with his nerves.
Shigaraki hummed in affirmation, running a hand through his wet, slightly knotted hair before shoving it into a messy bun, just good enough to keep it from hanging onto his neck. He looked lovely. Nestled in an oversized dark sweatshirt, he settled himself down on the couch with his back to his boyfriend, fiddling with his sleeves. He never could stay still.
"Right," Spinner swallowed, eyeing the nape of his neck. The scars were better now. Healing. With enough persuasion, the League had managed to get Shigaraki to avoid scratching for the past few days, allowing his old wounds to close. It hadn't been easy to break the habit he'd had for
 Spinner didn't know how long, but he was managing. And when it got especially bad, Spinner was always there to hold his hands, much to both of their embarrassment.
A bath, they decided, would help wash away any of the dead skin before they tried to revitalize it, using a lotion Kurogiri had given them. Shigaraki had asked Spinner to help him apply it; he didn't know why Shigaraki needed the help, but he agreed.
Maybe it was a mistake. He didn't think it would be, until Shigaraki had left for his bath, while Spinner tried very hard not to think about what he was doing. Those few minutes were all it had taken for the panic to set it.
And it was only growing worse, being this close to him, the scent of his coconut-shampoo absorbing him, watching his small, nimble fingers toy with the loose strings of his sweaters—
"Spinner?" Shigaraki called, drawing his attention away from his thoughts.
He mentally berated himself, cringing at how much time must have passed. With a deep breath, he tried to gather himself as much as he could. It wasn't a big deal, really. It was only the most intimate thing that they would be doing since they started dating. Arguably, even the most intimate since before they were dating.
No—he shook himself out of his thoughts, holding back a sigh and opening the bottle. He needed to stop thinking. So, finally, he tucked a stray strand of hair behind Shigaraki's ear, ignoring the spark that shot through him at the contact.
"Sorry. I'll—I'll just
" he trailed off, but Shigaraki seemed to understand as he half-nodded, bun bobbing up and down, almost coming loose. 
Smiling, Spinner squirted a glob of lotion into his hand, and slowly, gently, with trembling fingers, he reached out to apply it to his neck.
Shigaraki flinched at the cold sensation, tensing before slowly relaxing into the touch. Physical contact was still a largely foreign concept to him. In his relationship with Spinner, and the rest of the League, he'd gradually grown to become more accustomed to it, but it was nothing like this. Perhaps that explained the heat rising to his cheeks and the odd tingling sensation where Spinner touched him.
As Spinner continued his work in silence, clumsily massaging the lotion onto Shigaraki's dry skin, the sensation quickly grew annoying. The tingling lingered long after Spinner had moved to a different section of his neck and even spread down his back, like little shocks of electricity shooting down his spine. 
But it wasn't completely unbearable, at least not yet. Only because he knew the reason it was taking so long, that his partner was lovingly and painstakingly trying to alleviate his pain however he could, so Shigaraki would sit through it.
That didn't mean he would be still, though. His lips, for whatever reason, wobbled and were forced into a small smile that, thankfully, Spinner couldn't see from his position. 
Unfortunately, he did notice when Shigaraki's occasional twitches grew in frequency and intensity, until he was practically shaking. Spinner stilled his hands, pulling back and allowing Shigaraki a moment to collect himself before asking, "Are you alright?"
"Fine," he mumbled, reaching up halfway to his neck before he stopped himself. 
Spinner took Shigaraki's hand in his, gently squeezing it. "Did it hurt?"
"No. It just felt
 weird."
"Should I stop?"
"You're almost done, aren't you? Just finish it."
He hesitated before nodding. "Alright, turn around so I can get the front."
Shigaraki repositioned himself, and Spinner swallowed again, eyes darting around the room as he tried to find anything other than his partner to focus his attention on. 
It was easier before, when he didn't have to stare right at his gorgeous boyfriend and think about how he was touching him and how else he wanted to touch him and—focus. 
Focus. He just needed to focus.
He was already halfway done, and it hadn't been that bad. He could do this. 
So he started again, pushing back his nerves and trying not to think too hard about it. That's why it took him longer than it should have to notice; he didn't realize what was going until it happened. 
Shigaraki giggled.
Just barely. Quiet, so quiet Spinner almost didn't hear him, and raspy. It was the most beautiful thing Spinner thought he had ever heard.
He stopped, more out of shock than anything, and stared at Shigaraki. 
Shigaraki, whose hands desperately clutched his sweatshirt, pinkies up, whose mouth curled in a hesitant, twisted imitation of a smile, whose eyes squinted, body tense, and actively avoided meeting Spinner's eyes.
He knew what it was, but it took him a long moment to manage to form the words. Finally, Spinner sputtered, "You're ticklish?"
Oh.
"Is that what it is?" he asked, more to himself than anything. 
Tickling was something he could vaguely recall from his childhood in more pleasant moments with his mother and sister, not that he liked to dwell on those memories. He had barely remembered what tickling was, let alone that he was ticklish, but he supposed it made more sense than anything else.
Spinner stared, wide-eyed and slack-jawed. This, this was the most shocking moment of his life. Even more than when he'd left his everyday life to join the League, than when Shigaraki had actually returned his confession, because Shigaraki Tomura, the leader of the League of Villains, his boss and boyfriend, was ticklish.
"What?"
Spinner clamped his jaw shut; again, he'd been staring for too long. He shook his head, speechless and struggling.
"Nothing," he managed, resisting the urge to say something about how cute that was. "Do—should I keep going?"
"Go ahead," he grunted, willing himself not to react this time. It had been embarrassing enough when he laughed.
It was more hesitant this time; Spinner's touch was lighter, likely trying to save Shigaraki from more embarrassment, but it only made it worse.
The tingling sensation had returned, more intense than before. It felt like it was spreading throughout his whole body, making his skin stand on edge. He wanted to shove Spinner's hands away or scratch himself, anything to relieve the feeling. 
Spinner couldn't help but smile as he watched his boyfriend, who had a growing grin of his own. With a sudden burst of courage, he slowly reached his hand up to gently cup Shigaraki's face. He tilted his chin upwards, angling it so he had better access to his neck.
They both flushed. Shigaraki sank into the touch, instantly forgetting his annoyance as he was held in a way he hadn't been for years. Spinner left his hand in place long after it wasn't necessary, a nervous excitement shooting through him. It was closer than they had ever been. So close that if he leaned in another few inches, they'd be kissing. 
They still hadn't actually had their first kiss. Not yet. And now that Spinner was looking at his lips, he couldn't seem to look away.
Even when his lips parted and another hushed giggle poured out as Spinner continued applying the lotion. Then he bit his lip, eyes squinting and nose crinkling through his attempts to hold back his laughter.
Spinner felt his heart beat faster. God, he wanted to hear more. He moved his hand from Shigaraki's neck, unable to resist shooting it down to squeeze his side. 
With a loud curse, Shigaraki jolted with another burst of rapid giggles. Spinner laughed fondly, snaking his hand down further to shove it under his sweatshirt and tickle Shigaraki's bare skin, while his other hand remained cradling his face. 
"Whahahat ahare yohohou dohoing?"
"I thought we covered this. I'm tickling you."
"Whihihy?" he squirmed, trying and failing to dislodge Spinner's fingers from his side, but there wasn't much he could do without rolling off the couch or risking accidentally using his quirk.
"Well, because you're
" his blush deepened, "you're
 really cute like this."
Shigaraki huffed. It wasn't
 completely miserable. It was definitely annoying, but it left him feeling oddly sentimental, and Spinner was enjoying himself. So, he figured he could sit through it for a few more minutes.
He was wrong.
His laughter shifted from soft giggles to full-blown cackling as Spinner clawed at his stomach, making him thrash as much as possible. There was no way to even try to hold back his laughter; the strange feeling completely absorbed his body, leaving him absolutely helpless. 
Spinner cooed, staring at him in awe as he brought his other hand down to squeeze at Shigaraki's thigh, making him shriek as he arched backwards away from his touch. 
This, he knew, was something special. Shigaraki wouldn't let just anyone do this, share such an intimate moment with him, and Spinner felt incredibly happy. He felt a lot of things. But most of all, he felt deeply and completely infatuated with his boyfriend.
Suddenly, he stopped. He paused, letting Shigaraki catch his breath,  before he brought both of his hands back up to hold his face.
"Can I kiss you?"
Shigaraki blinked at him, looked into his eyes, looked away, and almost brought his hand back up to his neck, before he lowered it and met his eyes again.
His voice was as hoarse and softer than Spinner had ever heard as he breathed, "Yes."
His lips were rough and chapped and firm against his; they tasted like the chamomile tea Spinner had brewed for them earlier. He felt himself leaving his body, melting, molding into Shigaraki's, feeling himself fit into every crevice and curve of his body. The kiss deepened, and suddenly his hands were in Shigaraki's hair, tangling in its knots and unfurling the sorry excuse for a bun, and Shigaraki's hands, always careful, were around his neck, then his waist, and on his chest, everywhere, beckoning him, pulling his closer, entwining them deeper together, until he couldn't breathe and couldn't tell Shigaraki's body from his own.
Then they pulled back, one of them or both, Spinner couldn't tell, and they were breathless and giddy, smiling then laughing then going back for more and more and more.
It certainly wasn't a bad first kiss,  or second, or
 however many they shared. And after they'd both had their fill and settled back down, Spinner leaned against him, still wholly infatuated and unbelievably lucky to be with him.
Then, he remembered what they were supposed to be doing. "I still have to put it on your face."
Shigaraki sighed and grumbled, "Fine," but there was still a smile on his lips and flush on his skin.
At least this part wouldn't tickle. Probably.
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lenialenient · 2 months ago
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Fuck it, first 6 Real Jobs chapters under the cut
1 - Neither beautiful nor well written
A dark purple filter dims the crowd that makes up the bulk of the hall. Every seat is filled as the light remains on Julia and Julia only.
“Hi,” she says into the microphone bubble in front of her mouth. It resonates all the way to the last row, all four walls, and the double door entrance. Julia smiles sheepishly. The crowd smiles back. She takes a moment to breathe.
“As some of you might know,” Julia says, but is interrupted by another wave of star-struck cheers and whistles. “Yes, yes, thank you, thank you so much.” She starts over. “As some of you might know, I’m a writer and a poet and I wrote a little something called The Secret of Neverward–” Cheers. Jubilation. People with Neverward shirts rise from their seats. People raise their Neverward posters into the air. “And I am, obviously, extremely successful. Mad successful. And they ask me: Julia! How come you’re so successful? Well, I’m here to tell you!”
Julia clicks on a PowerPoint via a tiny remote in her hand, then grabs a bottle of revitalizing color-protection shampoo from the shower basket and squeezes a dime-sized amount into her palm.
“This right here is not what the writing process looks like.” Julia points at the screen behind her. The PowerPoint shows a photo of herself at a desk in a room with a large window, smiling a toothpaste-advertisement smile into the camera, one hand confidently placed on an old-timey typewriter, the other hand holding a cup of coffee up to her lips. It draws a sensible chuckle from the purple crowd.  
“In actuality,” Julia says while massaging the shampoo into every centimeter of her pink-stained scalp, “it looks more like alarm clocks set to four-thirty in the morning. It looks like drafting scenes in the notes of your phone while on public transport, because every second counts. And also-” Julia turns up the water, picks up the showerhead, and starts rinsing, “I drink green tea rather than coffee.”
The audience laughs.
“Honestly, it’s healthier, and it gives you almost the same effect.” Julia smiles ahead and her reflection in the shower screen smiles back, water dripping from her lashes. She lets the hot water run over herself a bit longer.
“When I wrote Neverward,” she says, “it was sandwiched between jobbing at Subway and studying for my linguistics degree. I had no money. I had no guarantee anyone would want to read it. I had no time. I made time anyway. Because that’s the thing-”
Julia shuts the water off and watches the showerhead’s stream turn into a drizzle. The bathroom’s quiet now. “I knew that I wanted to create something meaningful, and to get this piece of myself out there in the world where it could be meaningful for someone else, too. That was what I really wanted.”
Carefully, she steps out of the shower. “Once you have a goal, a real goal,” she whispers, “you can start working toward it. You can start to figure out how to get there. And once you know how to get there, there is only one more thing you need. Determination.”
Julia dries herself off and wraps the towel around her torso. With it firmly trapped underneath her arms, she shuffles across the part of the apartment’s living room that’s actually the living room and to the part of the living room that’s actually the kitchen. She boils water.
Clipping her hair down to a crisp 5mm last week easily shaved ten minutes of blow-drying and ten minutes of styling off her morning routine. Not to mention, it saves her two hair washing sessions a week. No one can tell whether her hair is greasy if it barely exists, and that’s valuable, valuable time. Dress, cardigan, tights – laid out the night before. Another pair of tights because chub rub has chafed through the inner thigh area. Finally, Julia sits down at the kitchen/living room table with a mug of green tea.
The tiny desk in Julia’s room can’t rival the magical feeling of a common area before anyone else is awake. Hayal is the only possible encounter at five in the morning, should she drag herself out of her room on a quest for coffee. She’d give Julia that specific look and say “you really don’t need to sleep, do you?” and Julia would answer: “Oh no. Absolutely not.”
Julia closes her eyes and takes a breath, hands hovering above the keyboard.
Okay. Go.
She opens her mailbox.
Nothing. No subjects in bold, no names that haven’t been sitting there already, not a single message with a Re: in the subject line. Face illuminated by the white shade of empty inbox, Julia taps her fingernail on the laptop’s surface. She refreshes just in case, then scrunches her lip. Fine.
Still drumming on the laptop, Julia moves the cursor to the Sent tab, takes a sip of green tea, and leans in close. Then, she opens the Word document she wrote the email in.
Is this a pointless exercise? It might be. Pretty sure it’s not acceptable to send a query letter to an agent twice, even when the words have been switched out for better words.

 not just a whodunit with superpowers but an analysis of what makes humans lose their humanity. She deletes humans and writes people. Sure, it was a word play, but it made her sound like a psychopath.
It’s fine, one of these days she’ll have to send more queries anyway.
Actually.
The entire sentence feels like something an unpleasant person would write. Not just a whodunit – who does she think she is?

it’s a whodunit with superpowers.
Julia takes a sip of tea.

 a whodunit with superpowers where every superpower fits into

 a whodunit with superpowers where every character’s unique power fits perfectly into the murder case, making it a mystery until the end

 until the very end

 until the end

 a whodunit with superpowers where every
Julia paces the kitchen. “A whodunit with superpowers
” The stove time display tells her that about twenty minutes ago it turned six. “A whodunit. With superpowers.” She catches the eye of her reflection in the microwave. “What the hell. You’re just saying words.”
With a fresh cup of tea, Julia sits back down in front of the whodunit with superpowers. She closes her eyes, shakes her head to rearrange her thoughts, and goes back in. Calmly, she reads the paragraph she’s been working on, whispers along. Then she reads the paragraph again, slower this time.
Julia leans back into the chair, all the way, as if she could merge into the backrest. Her eyes burn. She uprooted the entire paragraph. The sentence is nicer, but the rest doesn’t fit anymore. Everything’s just pieces, nothing’s connected. The query letter is falling apart in front of her eyes.
Julia reaches for the backspace button and knocks over the mug with her elbow. It sends a stream of green tea trickling down the side of the table and Julia watches. Watches, until two hot tears run down her cheeks and she wipes the mug off the table and listens to it break on the wooden tiles.
She sits there until it’s seven, waiting for this feeling to pass. There’s been a sob, maybe two, but she’s breathing now.
She takes another, deep breath.
She moves the cursor to the little x in the top right corner and closes her mailbox.
She closes the document and doesn’t save the changes.
She cleans up the shards from the floor and slides them into the trash bin.
She blots up the tea. She closes her laptop.
Julia sits there, pointless and still, as the room progressively sheds the night and the gray becomes lighter. Three hours gone to waste. Nothing got done today.
It’s quiet. Julia sits.
Then she stands up, grabs her Subway uniform, her university backpack, and leaves for work.
2 - That white canvas must be turned into something
Hayal wakes up dehydrated, disoriented, and with a side of that headache that presses down onto your nose bridge. She shifts in her bed, rustling the sheets, but doesn’t manage to get up. Sweeping her arms across the mattress, she feels for her phone, then for her charger, plucks it in, and finally unglues her eyelids to look at the time. It’s 13:38. Hayal puts her phone face-down and burrows herself in her blanket.
The fact that she didn’t have to be anywhere was such a cathartic thought to wake up to in the first weeks post-uni.
Several minutes pass.
Hayal groans and pulls the phone into her cocoon. There are things. So many. The little bar at the top of the screen is littered with icons. Instagram and Twitter, four new emails. Four? Hayal resists the urge to shut the whole thing down. Air starts to become scarce in her blanket shell, and she strikes a deal with herself that she’s allowed to break out of it as soon as she’s answered those goddamn emails. She slows her breathing, and the sound of her overgrown nails hitting the phone screen takes over.
Two people are inquiring about new commissions and two people are inquiring about commissions that are overdue. One week and two days, respectively. Hayal goes into her notes and copy-pastes her answer templates. She tells the first two people what she’d charge and that she’d be happy to accept their commissions on those terms. She updates the other two on the status of their art pieces and asks them to be patient just a few days longer.
Finally, she wrestles herself out of the blanket. For another several minutes she lies there, head on her pillow, eyes closed, and breathes in the recycled air as long as it still feels fresh. She’s won that battle, let’s not lose that grip. Get up. Get some water, don’t let dehydration make a home here.
Hayal rolls off the mattress and manages to catch herself just before stepping on the drawing tablet on the floor. God, that would have been fatal. She makes a mental note to either put it away properly next time she passes out for the night or pull back the curtains before she tries to navigate her room. She knows neither of these will happen.
Tablet under her arm, Hayal emerges from her door and squints into the kitchen/living room. “Morning.”
“Morning,” replies the green-dyed weirdo at her kitchen table without so much as raising an eyebrow. “How long have you been going for?”
“Don’t know. Five or six. Seven, maybe?” Hayal drops the tablet on the couch and trudges over to the overstuffed cupboard to pry out a can of instant coffee powder. “I see the SAI interface when I close my eyes.”
Kiwi hums thoughtfully and returns to the academic discipline of distressed typing.
While the electric kettle labors, Hayal fills a glass with tap water and sips it looking over Kiwi’s shoulder. “Do you think you’ll ever be tired of writing Stasi papers?”
“I’m legally not allowed to be tired of writing Stasi papers, I think.”
Kiwi’s sacrificing a lot of typing speed on account of the fact that only one of his hands is actually on the keyboard. With the other, he attempts to simultaneously text what Hayal can only guess are several people.
Hayal spoons a generous amount of coffee powder into the communal Stay strong, Friday’s coming! mug Kiwi got from his parents. While pouring hot water, she takes a moment to mourn the broken espresso maker. “Julia’s gone already?”
“Yeah, Subway.”
“I thought she didn’t have to work until evening.”
“That’s Monday.”
“What’s today?”
“Wednesday.”
“Oh.” Hayal blows onto the coffee-adjacent broth. “That’s harsh.”
“Yeah.”
The almost comfortably familiar sound of Kiwi bouncing his foot like an industrial grade jackhammer draws Hayal’s attention toward the fact that he not only has his stupid-big platform boots on, but also a generous amount of stupid-big eyeliner. His phone keeps buzzing.
“You heading out?”
“I’m meeting the band in a minute,” he says. “But also I’m rushing a deadline, so.”
Hayal takes a careful sip. The coffee still burns her tongue.
“And I kinda messed up because Tien’s already at the bus stop.” Kiwi’s fingers stop typing as he throws Hayal a glance from the corner of his eye. “She’s coming over so she doesn’t have to wait in the cold while I finish this thing up.”
Hayal holds her breath to narrowly avoid choking on her coffee and pulls the mug away from her face. She wipes at the few drops that hit the ground with her sock. “Is she? Now?”
“I mean,” Kiwi turns and holds onto the back of the chair. His voice is drawn out and apologetic. “You were kinda still asleep five minutes ago, so I didn’t really...”
A key turns in a lock, followed by a click. There’s just enough time for Hayal to shoot Kiwi a strong-eyed look before the door swings open to reveal Tien in all her pierced face, spiked hair, combat booted glory – the living proof that punk is on life support. 
Hayal is painfully aware of how she’s standing here in her pajamas and dark under-eye circles and overgrown side-cut, leaning against the counter with a mug of coffee in her hand at two in the afternoon like someone who’s got nothing better to do.
Hayal looks at Tien, Tien looks back.   
“I thought you’d ring,” says Kiwi.
Tien tears her eyes away from Hayal and jangles a pair of keys. “Yeah, well, I still got those.” A glance back to Hayal. Back to Kiwi. “I can still give them back.”
“No, no, someone reliable outside the apartment having spares is a good thing.”
Tien pockets the keys and closes the door.
“Give me like five more minutes,” says Kiwi and – now two-handed – steps up his typing pace.
Hayal would give a leg for something to type. Kiwi’s the only one barely escaping the weird energy in the room. She tries giving Tien a smile but it ends up all teeth, and all sideways instead of upwards. Tien blinks at her a few times, no smile, but nods. Then, she leans against the doorframe, going through her phone. God.
Hayal stands there, winding the grimace off her face. She could go and hide in her room but not without making the impression that she’s going to go hide in her room. She sips her still too hot coffee and reads Kiwi’s Stasi paper over his shoulder.
“Alright,” he says finally, and shuts the laptop.
Tien sighs in relief. “You done?”
“No.”  Kiwi stands up, disappears into his room, and emerges with his guitar case. He slides the laptop into his backpack. “I’ll take it along.”
“You suck at multitasking,” says Tien.
“I’ll make it work.”
Kiwi slips on his leather jacket and throws his guitar case over one shoulder, the backpack over the other. He waves to Hayal before heading out of the door. “I’ll be back at some point tonight.”
“Have fun, be yourself, et cetera.”
Tien gives a slight smile before pulling the door shut. “See you around, Hayal.”
With the door closed, the apartment is vacant. Except for Hayal, of course. She empties her coffee mug in silence, drops onto the couch, and pulls out the drawing tablet from underneath her.
See you around.
What the hell, she thinks, as she puts pen to screen, is that supposed to mean. 
3 - An oddity, a nonentity, or a disagreeable man
“I feel like I should’ve warned either of you,” Kiwi says, trying to sit on the metal bench in a way that wouldn’t have him freeze his ass off. Throughout all of December there’s been the cold without the snow and that trend is continuing well into January.
“We can handle it,” says Tien. “We’re all adults here.” She’s given up on the bench, instead leaning on the glass wall of the bus shelter, partially blocking out an ad with a grotesquely big and uncomfortably close face of a white woman with white teeth that watches over the bus stop.
Kiwi and Tien may have occupied the glass house, but they’re not alone at the stop. Three teenagers on their way home from school and two older women shift impatiently. Kiwi can look at them through the ad-free wall to his left and they can look right back. Which, he supposes, is the reason why they’re staying outside, limiting themselves to the occasional outraged glance thrown his or Tien’s way. The teenagers whisper and giggle with each other.
Kiwi drags the soles of his boots – five centimeters thicker than they need to be – back and forth over the concrete and fidgets with the straps of his guitar case. It could be the eyeliner, it could be jeans so thoroughly ripped that he’s wearing tights underneath to not freeze to death. It could be the fact that his hair is green – or meant to be green, as it’s also bleach-blond where Hayal’s missed a spot or two with the dye, and dark brown where the roots have grown out. It could be the fact that all that spills over a wildly outdated glam-punk bandana. It could also be the fact that he’s a man* with an asterisk that, no matter how hard you look, never leads to any tangible footnotes. At least Tien is flashier than him. And at least she’s here. Had he been alone, he would’ve had to tone it down.
Kiwi pulls out his phone and texts Oskar.
Kiwi [14:11]: We’re on our way
Kiwi [14:11]: For real this time
Kiwi [14:11]: Sorry
The bus turns into the street just as he shoves the phone back into his pocket. When they get on, Tien manages to snatch seats facing each other. It’s not too crowded yet, just enough for each double-seat to have – in true German fashion – exactly one person and one bag on it.
Kiwi doesn’t want Hayal to be the topic hanging in the air so he says: “I’m just gonna need five minutes to work on the essay at Oskar’s, ten tops.”
“You’re not gonna do it.”
“Am too.”
“Wait.” Tien’s eyes focus on something Kiwi doesn’t immediately manage to pin down.
“Wait, let me see your tongue.”
Kiwi scans the interior of the bus – he catches the gaze of one of the women from the bus stop, who immediately averts her eyes – before he turns back to Tien and reluctantly sticks his tongue out just enough for her to see the piercing.
“Goddamn,” says Tien. “When did that happen?”
“Last week. Saturday.” Kiwi lowers his voice. “Does it look infected? Because it’s kinda
” He gestures vaguely.
“Yeah, no. It’s just gonna look shitty for a while.”
Kiwi’s phone buzzes.
Oskar [14:13]: oh nice cause mona and I realized songs arent quite the same without any strings
Kiwi [14:16]: I said SORRY
Oskar [14:17]: are you bringing food as an offer for forgiveness
Kiwi [14:17]: I’m not
“Had no idea you were planning on getting something like this done,” says Tien. Her legs are stretched all the way to the seat across from her. “I could’ve recommended you a place.”
“I wasn’t.”
Tien slides a few centimeters up on her seat, props her elbow against the window, and tilts her head against her fist. “Did you have beef with your mom?”
“Why is that – why are you the second person asking this?”
Tien gives him an overstated shrug. Kiwi squints at her before he goes back to typing.
Oskar [14:17]: boo
Oskar [14:18]: but seriously
Oskar [14:18]: you ready for now?
Kiwi [14:19]: If you mean the song you gotta put that in quotation marks or something because otherwise that’s confusing
Oskar [14:20]: youre the one who named it that
Oskar [14:20]: ready for “now”, the song?
Kiwi [14:21]: Actually I think we should take out the spoken part before we try the whole thing for the first time
Kiwi [14:21]: The “I tried wanting less, I tried wanting more” part
Oskar [14:22]: kiwi, my dude, my love
Oskar [14:22]: weve been revising for the past like month
Oskar [14:22]: you have that is
Oskar [14:22]: and i mean didn’t you text me at 2 in the AM about how we need that part
Oskar [14:23]: about how important it is
Oskar [14:23]: about the emotions
“By the way,” Kiwi taps his fingertips on the phone screen without actually typing. He speaks very slowly. “Did I mention that she invited herself and dad over? Again?”
Tien grimaces. “Seriously?”
“They’re still guilt-tripping me because I didn’t come home for Christmas so I couldn’t really, you know, say no.”
Slowly, Tien’s face transitions from empathetic disdain to suspicion. He sounded too prematurely apologetic just now, didn’t he? “When did they say they’re were gonna come exactly?”
Kiwi shifts his weight, keeps his eyes on the phone. “Friday.”
Tien rises in her seat, lips thin. “So, what, you’re gonna miss practice?”
“I’m trying to move it to Saturday, okay? My mom just takes two days to reply to a message.”
Tien drags a hand down the side of her face. “Kiwi
”
“’I’ll be there. I’m gonna make it work somehow. Promise.”
Kiwi [14:24]: I guess it’s too emotional
Kiwi [14:24]: Kinda cringy
Kiwi leans back against the squiggly bus seat pattern and looks at Tien. “You’re so serious about this lately.”
“Maybe,” says Tien, “I’m getting kinda impatient. We’re not really doing much.”
“We can’t really do much until my finals are over.” Kiwi bounces his leg. On the other side of the dirty window, towering grey blocks start to make way for yards and fences. “At least I can’t, anyway.”
“When’s that?”
“The last one’s Monday in two weeks.”
“Hmm,” says Tien.
Oskar [14:25] were not gonna film today  
Oskar [14:26] so id say lets try it out anyway
The outskirts of town harbor a now empty house that belonged to Oskar’s grandparents before they died two years back. In those two years it’s been left mostly untouched, which is why Kiwi would never dare to actually go inside the house, but the shack that stands in its yard – formerly a workshop and equipped with electricity – couldn’t be a more convenient place for Divine Discontent to practice their songs.
Kiwi and Tien haul their instruments off the bus and walk the rest of the way through a desolate early afternoon suburbia. Fewer eyes means Kiwi doesn’t feel compelled to powerwalk constantly, but there’s something eerie about this place. Like it’s saying that if he only changed the trajectory of his life five centimeters to the right, he, too, could have a lawn and a fence someday. 
Because you can’t hear the doorbell in the workshop, Tien hands Kiwi her bass case, vaults over the fence, and opens the gate from inside. The stiff winter grass crackles under their boots as they make their way across the yard.
Mona’s spinning idly on the stool behind her drum-kit as Kiwi opens the door to the practice shack. Her drumsticks are fixed behind her ear in her rose-colored hijab, and with the matching pastels and expertly-carved makeup, she looks like someone who either has fifty thousand followers on Instagram or who aspires to have fifty thousand followers on Instagram. Oskar rests one of his arms on the mic stand, the other in the pocket of his sweatpants. He wears big shirts and lets his dark hair grow to his shoulders. Hayal once said that nobody in Divine Discontent looks like they’re playing the same music. Tien argues that they can make the lack of consistent style work as a style in itself. Kiwi, meanwhile, maintains that post-progressive pseudoglam queercore cannot be reduced to a singular cohesive look.
Oskar and Mona abruptly turn and start clapping in formal unison as Tien and Kiwi enter.
“Oh, fuck off,” says Kiwi. A grin sits on his face though, and he can’t seem to wipe it off. After easy greetings and one-armed hugs, he squats down to unpack his stuff. There’s no point in taking any jackets off, since the workshop is barely any warmer than outside.
“So, are we all good to go?” Oskar asks.
“I’ve been for weeks,” says Mona. “I really wanna know what it sounds like in all its glory.”
Kiwi sits there, backpack unzipped, his hand inside instinctively grabbing his laptop.
He looks up, at Tien, her bass guitar hooked to the amp, and at Mona, drum sticks in hand, hovering over the toms. One second passes, two seconds pass.
“Yeah. Yeah, sure.” Kiwi zips the backpack shut again.
Oskar picks up the mic and throws Kiwi a glance. “So, with or without the spoken part?”
Kiwi breathes in. “Without.”
Disappointment flashes over Oskar’s face for a second, but he shrugs. “Sure thing.”
Kiwi leaves his backpack by the door and unsheathes his guitar. He throws it on and takes his spot in Divine Discontent’s formation.
4 - Times New Roman, Twelve-Point, Double-Spaced
Julia kicks the door shut behind her. Her legs are sore, her backpack is heavy, a grocery bag dangles from the crook of her arm because her hands are busy – one with the keys and the other holding the phone that she, under no circumstances, can take her eyes off.
It’s all about the tiny 1. All about that little symbol and the promise of 1 new message(s). She saw it on the tram home, the sender, the subject, everything but the actual email. Reading the actual email requires preparation and a specific setting, but she can confirm that the email’s neither from Amazon nor Duolingo and that is, in fact, a Re, and what’s more, it is Re: QUERY SFF.
A drawn out “Welcome back” wavers over to Julia. Groceries in her arms, she crosses the living room, past Hayal who’s sprawled over the entire length of the couch, eyes staring up at the ceiling and the drawing tablet on the floor.
“Having a crisis?” Julia asks, pulling discounter pasta, tea, and soup cans out of the bag and stuffing them into her third of the cupboard. There’s no time to actually cook dinner tonight.
“Yes.”
Julia stocks her part of the fridge in record time and throws the shopping bag on the shopping bag pile. An unheard-of amount of energy is bristling within her, as she slips into her room and re-emerges with her laptop. “What’s the crisis about?”
“I thought I could take a break and play Animal Crossing for like an hour,” says Hayal.
“And you can’t?” Julia props the laptop up on the kitchen table, presses the power button, and sits.
“I can’t.”
The moment the laptop whirs to life, Julia starts drumming her fingers on the table. Deep breaths. She knows there’s nothing to expect. She knows that everyone who’s ever published anything will tell her that they’ve collected fifty or seventy or a hundred or two-hundred rejections before there’s been a trace of interest from a literary agent. So, this is going to be a rejection, and that’s fine.
“But aren’t you having a break right now?” she asks Hayal.
“I guess I’m having a break.”
Julia’s desktop appears and her fingers fly over the trackpad. Her inbox still shows her the same notification when it stretches across her screen – as if she needs reminding. This wasn’t the first agent she messaged, but it was the first who responded. Okay, reject me.
“Then what’s stopping you from playing Animal Crossing?” she asks, hovering the cursor over to the email.
 “Gee, Julia.” Hayal says. “Am I supposed to have my break and enjoy it too? Like some hedonistic glutton?”
The notification dissolves as Julia clicks the email. Then it sits before her, open, accessed, unveiled. It’s shorter than expected, just a small block of text, but you can’t start a message like this at the beginning. You start in the middle, you start where your eyes happen to look the moment it appears, and you start with keywords. And there is one:
Unfortunately.
That’s a rejection. That’s a rejection, alright.
Julia reads the whole message, beginning to end. Beginning to end, again. Still a rejection.
Julia breathes in and out. A rejection was fine five seconds ago and it is fine now. She expected nothing else. It’s time to say ‘okay then’ and close the email and make soup for dinner. But the cursor doesn’t move a pixel and neither does she.
A wave of some type of emotion washes over Julia, and that’s a problem. There’s a problem and it needs to be reviewed right now, or she’s not going to last.
She opens a blank Word document.
You got your first rejection, how are you feeling?
Bad.
But why so?
Judging by the immovable blinking cursor, she’s already written herself into a corner.
Am I arrogant? I didn’t really think the first rejection wasn’t going to be one. This is the first agent who responded. Of course it was going to be a rejection. It would be so incredibly arrogant of me to think it wouldn’t be one.
Behind her, the couch rustles. She turns and watches Hayal collect her drawing tablet and pen from the floor. Julia refocuses on the Word doc in front of her and tightens her lips.
Did you hope it wasn’t going to be a rejection? She types.
I guess. But wouldn’t everyone?
She taps her finger on the table and straightens up.
Why did you hope it wasn’t going to be a rejection?
Julia already knew she wouldn’t be able to answer that question when she typed it, so she’s not surprised when all she can do is sit and stare at the letters.
A few seconds pass before Julia hits the table with the palm of her hand and rises from her chair in the same motion Hayal jumps.
“Sorry.”
“Writing problems?”
“No. Not at all.” Laptop in hands, she scurries off to her room. There, she powers up her old printer. While it sputters ink onto paper, Julia rummages through her drawers until she finds a roll of tape and rips a piece off with her teeth. She snatches the email – still warm – from the printer, climbs on top of her office chair, and tapes the rejection to the wall.
Carefully, she steps back down and takes a moment to behold her work. A white A4 paper – two thirds blank and one third standard rejection lingo – taped to the center of the wall above her desk.
She can work with that.  
4.5 - Julia is sixteen
And the pattern of her room’s carpet stamps itself onto her calves as she sits cross-legged on the floor, leaning in on the screen in front of her.
“Once you know what you want, you can start to figure out how to get there,” Michelle says. Very emphatically, because it’s very important. “You break that huge goal into tiny goals and then you set yourself one or several tiny goals every year, or half a year, or even every month, whatever works best for you. You’ll be there before you know it.”
Julia pauses the video and pats the carpet in search of her journal.
Monthly goals, she writes down, underlines it.
Monthly chapter goals.
Monthly submission goals?
She unpauses the video.
“But you need to put in the work,” Michelle continues. “It’s not going to be a walk in the park, alright? If you don’t ‘have time’” – she does air quotes – “to work on your project, you need to make time. If you don’t feel like writing today, that’s just a feeling, and you can push past that.” 
The background in Michelle’s videos is one giant bookshelf. Some of the books are facing forward – those that have her name on them.
“Number three. Effective time management is pivotal,” says Michelle. “Try taking the twenty-four hours of the day and assigning them a purpose. If you mark down work for eight hours, plus getting there and back – that makes it nine hours – and sleep for eight hours, you are at seventeen. That leaves seven hours you can potentially spend working on your project.”
Julia seesaws her pen up and down against the pages of her journal. On bad days, school’s also eight hours. But she needs to account for homework. The view count below the video hits around thirty thousand. How many of these people are still in school, Julia wonders. Not a lot, probably. She’s got a head start.
“Number four. It’s obviously a long-term commitment, maybe a forever commitment, and putting in the work is key, but there’s a useful thing that you can do right now. It sounds clichĂ©, but I promise it’s going to give your confidence a boost, and it seems like it worked for Octavia Butler, if that’s anything to go by. That is, speak your goals into existence. Say ‘I’m going to be a best-selling author.’ Or write it down, after all, we’re writers.”
Not all thirty thousand are going to be bestselling authors. Or authors at all. Who knows how many of these guys even have a finished novel to their name? Julia does. Almost.  
“Say it not like it’s a thing that you want to happen,” Michelle says, “but say it like it is a thing that is going to happen. Make it destiny. Make it inevitable.”
Julia grabs her journal and her pen. Then she puts the pen back down it in favor of a sharpie. She dedicates one page for each statement.
I am going to be a published author before I’m 20.
She flips the page.
I am going to be a renowned author before I’m 25.
She flips the page.
I will be extraordinary.
5 - The Sad Lesbians, not the Cool Ones
With a single tap of Hayal’s pen, gray fills the entire canvas. She sighs and reverses, zooms in and squints for gaps in her line-art. Ah, there we are. A shirt line doesn’t quite connect to the skirt. She draws in what’s hardly more than a dot and tries to match the pressure so it’s the same weight as the rest of the lines. Good, fixed. On the next, resolute tap, gray spills over the entire canvas again and Hayal hangs her head in defeat.
She shoves her tablet closer to the edge of the bed and drops onto her back, closes her eyes, and takes a second to very purposefully, very consciously, groan. With a question of what’s the time, anyway, she pulls out her phone. 22:31, the night is still young.
A couple of seconds later, Hayal’s scrolling through Twitter. And another couple of minutes later, a notification pops up on the top of her screen.
“What-!”, she yells, before the phone slips out her hand.
For a moment Hayal lies there in silence and accepts that she dropped her phone on her face. She picks it up and rubs her nose. When she turns the screen back on, she does so carefully, with the lightest press of a button, like the message is going to disappear if she looks at it directly.
No, it’s still there.
Tien [22:34]: How are you?
“What!” Hayal reiterates.
She stares at the message until another one comes in.
Julia [22:36]: What are you yelling about
Hayal pushes herself off the bed, zigzags through her mess and, two seconds later, stands in Julia’s room, gripping the doorframe.
“Tien messaged me,” she says.
“She did?”
The tidiness of Julia’s room is passively shaming. There’s not a thing on the floor, instead, the things are on shelves, and some of them are organized alphabetically. All that’s on the bed is Julia, already in her pajamas, the phone next to her, and the journal she’s just putting down.
“Look,” says Hayal. She clambers onto the bed and levels the phone to Julia’s face. “It’s all spelled out, too. And the first letter is capitalized. I know she has auto-capitalization off. She’s a lowercase texter. And the punctuation? There’s a whole question mark.”
Julia’s eyes move from left to right until a smile springs up in the corner of her mouth. “’Lean Mean Tien Machine’?”
“That’s from back when we were still together.”
“And you didn’t change her name?”
“Was I supposed to?”
“I guess people usually would.” Julia shrugs. “One could argue that it implies that you’re not over her.” 
“I mean, I absolutely am not over her but that’s got nothing to do with my shitty phone organization.” Hayal withdraws her phone and scrolls. “Most of my contacts are just numbers. I read the messages to figure out who it is.”
“Am I saved as anything?” Julia asks.
“Yeah, you’re ‘Julia’.”
“Ah.”
“Okay, focus.” Hayal calls up the message again. “What am I supposed to say?”
“Well, how are you?”
“That’s a loaded question.”
“You could tell her that.”
“I don’t know,” Hayal sways from side to side. “She’s being serious, right? She’s using her serious voice, with the question mark and all. Shouldn’t I be serious, too?”
“You weren’t?”
“No, it was a joke.”
Julia shuffles a bit. Hayal squints at the phone, chewing on her lip.
“Do you think she wants to get back together?”
“Did she text you at all since you broke up?
“No.”
“Chances are good, I guess.”
“Ah. Oh.” Hayal grinds her teeth and leans against the wall. “Oh man. Oh boy.”
“Do you want to get back together?”
“No.”
Julia smiles a little helplessly. “You should probably tell her that?”
“Don’t want to.”
“Why?”
“’Cause. That’s not really a good answer to ‘how are you’. Also I love her so, so much.”
“Oof,” Julia sits back, journal clutched to her chest. “Oof, Hayal.”
Hayal keeps sitting on Julia’s bed, back to the wall and the phone in her lap. She takes several deep breaths. She calls up the messenger keyboard and backs out again. She briefly considers sending only a solitary crying-laughing emoji. Then she’s typing.
“You got something?” Julia flips through the pages of her journal, furrowing her brow every few entries.
“Mhm.”
Why are you asking, Hayal types, and deletes.
How come?
She deletes.
Why do you ask? She hits send, sets her phone to vibrate, and puts it face down on the blanket. Don’t look at it again, don’t wait for typing
 to pop up next to her name. Just chill. But how? Julia’s scribbling something in her journal. Hayal slides down the wall a couple of centimeters and folds her arms. There are tall stacks of paper and even taller stacks of books on Julia’s carefully organized desk. The walls are blank save for a singular slip of white paper printed in a font too small to read from here.
The phone buzzes.
Tien [22:54]: You looked really done when I saw you today
Hayal’s mouth opens as if she’s going to say something. Obviously, she isn’t.
Hayal [22:54]: Yeah I’m kinda tired
Tien [22:55]: can’t sleep?
Hayal [22:55]: Drawing all night
Should she mention it? Yeah, she’s gonna mention it.
Hayal [22:56]: Sort of live off it now
Tien [22:56]: FOR REAL?
Tien [22:56}: THAT’S INSANE
Hayal [22:57]: I guess
She peppers the crying emoji into the message. Twice. Then she deletes the second one and sticks with that.
Hayal [22:58]: It’s a lot tho
Hayal [22:58]: I haven’t seen the sun in months
Tien [22:59]: don’t leave the house much?
Hayal [22:59]: Not at all
Hayal [23:00]: Like I straight up couldn’t tell you when I last went outside
Tien [23:00]: hayal. that’s like a recipe for depression
Hayal [23:01]: I know
Hayal chews on her bottom lip. She’s halfway into deciphering the individual book titles on Julia’s desk, when the phone buzzes against her palms.
Tien [23:03]: actually
Tien [23:03]: do you feel like leaving your cave
Tien [23:04]: cause I’ve been meaning to talk to you for a while
Hayal slams down the phone like it bit her. She looks at Julia with big eyes. Julia looks up from her journal.
“She says she wants to talk.”
“Oh, there it is.”
“What do I say?”
“Don’t ask me, you know yourself better.” Julia furrows her brow. “And Tien definitely. Do you want to talk to her?”
“I think. I wanna see her.”
Julia vaguely gestures towards the phone. Hayal picks it back up and takes a deep breath.
Hayal [23:05] When?
“I’ve never actually been in a real relationship, you know?” Julia says, eyes back on her journal. “I’m probably not the best person to ask for advice.”
“You haven’t?”
“I mean technically I have.” She bounces the closed pen off the current page. “But I don’t really think that counts because both of them were before I realized I like girls.”
“Ha,” says Hayal, “how long did they last?”
“Longest was three weeks. I honestly thought I was the problem.”
The phone in Hayal’s hand buzzes.
“Still not entirely sure I’m not.” Julia says.
Tien [23:07]: i’m kinda tied up with some band organization stuff right now, but have you ever seen us all play
Hayal [23:07]: Only on youtube
Tien [23:08]: you could join us for next band practice
Tien [23:08]: that is if you want
Tien [23:08]: it’s friday
Hayal holds her breath, tracing the little letters with her eyes. She gets up, opens Julia’s door, and shouts into the rest of the apartment: “Kiwi?”
After a couple of seconds, there’s a muffled answer through the wall: “Yeah?”
Hayal crosses the kitchen and pokes her head into Kiwi’s room.
“Do you mind if I tag along on Friday?”
5.5 - Hayal is seventeen
Closer to eighteen, and when she comes home from school, her mom is waiting for her in the kitchen, sitting at the table in a superficial state of calm, holding a dainty cup of coffee to her lips. The green-white-checkered tablecloth has been cleared of everything but an equally dainty saucer, and a stark white envelope.
There’s a moment of pause in which Hayal’s brain time-lapses the past couple of months, trying to recall something that she’s done that she shouldn’t have, and arrives at the conclusion that there’s nothing in that A-student life of hers that fits that description. But then – hold on – hold on. Hayal steps closer and scans the address on the letter.
“No.”
“It’s the moment of truth, baby.”
It’s been how long since she sent in the portfolio? Months, too many. She thought they’d ghosted her by now. Hayal hesitates to pick up the envelope. It’s all by itself on the table, flat and white, and automatically generated, valid without signature. Looming.
Hayal grabs it. Pokes through the glue, pries it open with her fingernails. Unfolds the letter.
It’s quiet. Enough for Hayal to hear the ticking of her mom’s wrist watch.
“’You have been admitted.’”
The cup clinks against the saucer, Hayal’s mom rises from her chair.
“You have been admitted,” Hayal says.
Her mom wraps her arms around her, actually picks her up a little, which she hasn’t done in approximately eight years.
“’You have been admitted’!” Hayal screams. She pumps her fist into the air, letter still in the other one, nearly topples her mom. “I’ve been fucking admitted!”
“I’ll excuse the language this time.” Hayal’s mom sets her down, hugs her again. “This is fantastic. I’m so proud of you, Hayal.”
There’s a sting in Hayal’s eyes, but it’s the best kind of sting that could possibly be in one’s eyes.
“Oh,” she gently frees herself from the hug. “I need to –”
“Yes. Go.”
Hayal runs to grab the jacket she put down five minutes ago and pockets her phone, her keys. Erdem’s head pokes out from the corner, exuding an aura that only a thirteen-year-old with headphones dangling around his neck can exude. “Why are you yelling?”
Hayal doesn’t stop walking as she turns around, claps her hands in front of his face.
“I’m going to art school! Ha!”
Two seconds later she’s on the stairs, speeding past the other doors and speed-dialing Tien.
C’mon, pick up.
It rings two, three times, then it clicks.
“What’s wrong?”
Neither of them are phone call people.
“Guess what,” Hayal says.
There’s a moment of static silence, as if Tien is actually trying to guess.
Finally: “No!”
“Yes!”
“Oh, fuck.” Tien laughs, first a little, then a lot. “Oh shit! Wait, hold on, I’m coming over.”
“No! I’m coming over already, you stay where you are!”
“Let’s meet in the middle.”
The park’s rusty with fall and the onset of evening. Between the people lying in the grass, catching the last scraps of light, Hayal sees Tien jogging her way. She’s not hard to spot in her all-black. Her shoulder-length hair is up in a ponytail, she’s wearing her glasses instead of contacts.
“You fucking –” is the first thing Tien says when she’s within shouting distance. “You fucking artist, you!”
There’s the tightest possible hug, and when they separate, Tien takes Hayal’s face in both hands and kisses her, again.
6 -Local Bassist Tien Thanh Le Demonstrates German Efficiency by Causing Two Crises at Once
The bus smells almost like new car. Hayal traces the randomized pattern on the seat in front of her. She knows her shoulders are up to her ears, and she knows that must be terrible for her already wonky posture, but she’s going to cut herself some slack because, after all, she’s out here, in public. She sits in the window seat and Kiwi by the aisle. If he hadn’t managed to push his parents’ visit back, chances are Hayal wouldn’t have come either. 
“Okay, but,” Kiwi sends a text and sets his phone down on his leg, “how come? Since when have you two been talking again?”
“Literally only the two days. She really just went ‘hey, Hayal, how’s it going? I wanna talk to you, so how about Friday’ and I was like –” She looks at Kiwi with the most shaken-to-the-core expression she can muster.
Because the silence had been broken, she had wondered if they’d go back to sending good morning and good night texts now, but Tien hasn’t messaged her since. Hayal also hasn’t messaged Tien.
“How do you feel about that?” Kiwi asks.
Hayal leans her head back against the seat and stretches her legs under the one in front of her. “I don’t know.” She eyes the lifeless fluorescent lamp on the ceiling of the bus. “I’ve been missing her.”
There’s a beat of silence, then another one while Kiwi checks his phone.
“Hope this doesn’t get messy,” he says. “Even if you two get back together, Julia’s in her room now, so-”
“Hw- Wha- Now, hold on, now, mister. You’re kinda skipping several – kinda skipping the whole staircase here. We’re not trying to get back together.”
“Okay,” says Kiwi, with special emphasis on the ‘o’. He passes his phone from one hand to the other. “So, what is it, then? A ‘we should stay friends’ thing?”
Hayal gives him a Look.
“See, this is important to me because I love you both.”
“I genuinely don’t have a clue.”
“But, I mean, you
” Kiwi fizzles out at the sight of Hayal’s index finger raised towards his face. “Yeah?”
“You know, you can keep prying,” she says, a twitch in the corner of her mouth, “but I will pry back.”
“I’m like ninety percent sure there isn’t a single thing about my personal life I haven’t told you at some point.”
“Mh-hm.” Hayal glances at Kiwi’s phone. “Like whatever is going on between you and Oskar.”
Kiwi shoves the phone in his pocket and folds his hands. “Fine.”
Another bus stop, five minutes of walking, and a few jabs at a lack of punctuality later, Hayal finds herself holding a camera and filming Divine Discontent starting the same song over and over. That’s something she’s volunteered to do, not just because she’d hate to sit on her ass and watch while everyone else is trying to create something, but also because she’d like it to seem as if Tien wasn’t the only reason for her being here.
The aesthetic dissonance between the four members is only more potent with the thick jackets everyone’s wearing. Yet Divine Discontent come together to deliver the world’s most concentrated and also only interpretation of post-progressive pseudoglam queercore – a genre that Hayal had trouble visualizing up until right this moment.
She’s got to admit, they are leaving an impression.  
It’s mindboggling how Oskar’s able to sing his heart right out, even though he knows people can hear and see him – and how Kiwi plays as though they couldn’t. Either the bass is more prominent in this song than in others, or you only really notice the bass when you begin to notice the bassist. In her heavy leather jacket and fingerless gloves, Tien works through the strings. In this moment, she radiates such an unfair amount of confidence that in the rare case of Tien messing up her chords, Hayal is more inclined to believe that something is wrong with her own ears. Mona’s awkwardness around people that aren’t part of her little in-circle falls away completely and Hayal hopes for a drum solo in the other half of the song, because the vision of her unrestrained drumming is just delightful.
The problem is, Divine Discontent has yet to get to the other half of the song. The second verse is as far as they get before someone – usually Kiwi – overwhelmingly Kiwi – calls for a redo.
Every time the music stops and the band take a couple of seconds to refocus – and for Kiwi to brief everyone on an alternate version of the lyrics he’d like them to try – Hayal carefully sets the camera on an old workbench that she herself would not dare sit on, squats down, and burrows her hands in the pockets of her parka. The shack is cold as hell and her back hurts from standing – something that she, come to think of it, hasn’t done a lot in the recent past.
“Ready?” Kiwi asks into the room. Hayal picks the camera back up and aims. After three nods from his bandmates – and one from Hayal – Kiwi begins to pluck the intro from his guitar strings.
Since Oskar’s the only vocalist but all members of Divine Discontent have tried their hands at songwriting, they’ve made it a habit to establish a personal signature by giving the intro of a song to whoever wrote the bulk of it. This means, to his mild distress, that two thirds of Divine Discontent’s songs start with Kiwi’s guitar.
Upside down, but I try standing my ground/ An hour, a decade, to speak out loud are the first lines Oskar sings, his voice the cue for the other instruments to kick in. The plan is to record two versions, one with a spoken bridge to the last chorus, and one without. As last time, however, the second instance of And now I’m glad I wasted my childhood/ Because now if I wanted to I could/ Live twice as fast and skip all the dull parts is the farthest they’ve come before Kiwi stops playing the guitar to rub his hands over his face and groan. One after the other, the instruments fall away.
Hayal stops recording.
“What now?” asks Tien.
“I can’t deal with the – it’s still –” Kiwi gestures, as he tends to, in shapes that make no sense to anyone but him. “Ew.”
Tien sighs, twice as long as someone would normally sigh.
“No worries,” says Oskar. “How about five everyone?”
“Ten,” says Kiwi.
“Even better.” Oskar pulls a bag of loose tobacco from his pocket and taps it onto a sheet of rolling paper.
“Uh-huh. I see you,” says Kiwi. He leans his guitar against the wall and wipes at his forehead.
Oskar gives him a grin, already heading towards the door. “Voice maintenance. What can I do?” 
A clang of sheet metal announces the door dropping shut. Mona stretches, shakes her arms, stands up, and stretches again. Hayal and Tien stand idly.
“So, how is it?” asks Mona slowly. She cracks her fingers, first cupping her right hand with her left, then her left hand with her right.
Tien grimaces at the sound. “How is what,” she asks.
“Hayal’s here so you can have a conversation, right?” Her eyes dart from Tien to Hayal.
“Ten minutes might just be enough for a conversation,” Kiwi says, “and I have a feeling the break might stretch a little.”
Mona nods thoughtfully. “Might just stretch a bit.”
“I’m never telling you anything ever again.” Slowly, Tien turns to Hayal, her lips approaching a smile. “Wanna go and have a conversation?”
Hayal follows Tien out into the yard, leaving behind Kiwi and Mona’s discussion about whether ‘live twice as fast’ is pretentious or not, past Oskar who gives them a thumbs-up and is met with an affectionate middle finger.
They find themselves stopping and standing behind the workshop; the yellow motion sensor light drowns out the blue hour and Hayal can see the air she breathes. She leans against the sheet metal wall, her hands in her pockets. Tien stands in front of her, her hands in her pockets as well.
No one says a thing.
“’Suuup,” says Hayal, as blatantly embarrassing as possible – ‘cause if you do it intentionally you can’t do it accidentally.
“Yeah, shit.” Tien says. “I forgot what I wanted to say.”
Hayal debates whether she should grin at Tien. She’d like to.
“Alright, it’s back. Be prepared.”
“Preparing.”
Tien brings up her hands, thumbs in line with her fingers, and jolts them back down in a parallel motion. “I saw you on Wednesday,” she says.
Hayal nods.   
“And it kinda pulled the rug out from under my feet how much I –” she stops and squints at the air, “– miss
 your presence? In my life?”
Hayal blinks. “Holy shit.”
“Look, listen,” there’s a lopsided grin on Tien’s face, “as sappy as it is, gotta let it out.”
“Okay,” Hayal says. “Okay, okay. Okay. Let me think.” She breathes in, out. “I miss your presence, too. I really do. I mean, you’re pretty much the coolest person I know.”
Tien smiles. She says: “How are you doing right now?”
“Mentally?”
“Yeah.”
Hayal chews at the inside of her cheek. “Okay. I’d like to say I’m doing okay. I’m a bit behind on commissions which is, you know, stressful, but – I’m doing okay.”
Tien’s smile more and more turns into a diagonal line.
“What about you?” Hayal asks, something she hadn’t done enough in the past. “How are you?”
“Been better,” says Tien. “Worse, too. Spent a lot of time at my mom’s house lately, that’s as close to vacation as I’m gonna get.”
“Cool,” Hayal says. She smiles. There’s so much more she wants to say, but more could lead to more still.
With her boot Tien flattens the frozen grass before she looks back up at Hayal. “When I said I miss your presence – I don’t know if that’s weird – I’m not saying that we need to be together again. I mean, not that that’s impossible
”
“Do you want to be back together?”
“Don’t know. You?”
“Don’t know.”
A beat of silence.
“When I say I miss you,” says Tien. “What I mean is I miss you. I miss talking to you and seeing you and sitting in cafĂ©s talking for hours about whatever shit is on our minds, you feel?”
“Yeah. I do.”
“And,” says Tien. “We don’t need to get back together. We don’t need to be together to be together, right?”
“So, you’re asking a year later if we wanna stay friends?” Hayal asks.
“I guess, yeah. Because I wanna spend time with you and I like you.”
“I like you and want to spend time with you, too.”
“Cool.”
“Cool.” As is her first reflex when a conversation flattens, Hayal reaches for the phone in her pocket and finds two new emails. She stuffs it back quickly. “Do you feel like sitting in a cafĂ© and talking for hours about whatever in the near future? I feel like I need to get out more.”
“Sure,” Tien says, and that feels nice.
There’s a mechanical buzzing in the air and just when Hayal glances up to the motion sensor lamp, Tien pulls her own phone from her jacket. Her face lights up as she checks the screen. “Oh shit, I need to look at that real quick.”
She turns away from Hayal, hunched over her phone and reads with wide open eyes. Hayal resists the urge to look over her shoulder.
Tien keeps standing there, frozen like that even after the light of her screen stops illuminating her face.
“What happened?”
Tien turns around with a grin on her face that seems to get wider by the second. “Let’s go back inside.” She takes Hayal’s hand and draws her back towards the front of the workshop. “There’s news.”
***
Kiwi stands between Oskar and Mona, huddled around Tien’s phone screen as she holds it up to them, arm fully stretched. The brightness is turned all the way up and makes Kiwi squint. What glares back at them is an email correspondence. Subject: “A question” sent by Tien Thanh Le, “Re: A question” answered by Michael GrĂŒnberg, Event Manager. Kiwi’s still frozen solid as Oskar high-fives Tien’s free hand. Mona gapes, switching back and forth between looking at Tien and looking at the phone. “You need to give me a pinkie promise that this is not a prank.”
“Read it again, if you have to.” Tien grins, ear to ear. “No prank. It’s real, black on white.”
Mona gasps. In lieu of her own hands being enough, she clutches Tien’s hands to her chest and bounces up and down, squealing in delight. (Tien neither bounces or squeals with her – can’t risk her hard-ass punk cred.)
Kiwi stands there stock-still, fingers frozen in the middle of reaching for the phone, which has since traveled from Tien to Oskar and from Oskar to Hayal. “Wait. No, wait. What? What? What is this?”
“It’s exactly what it looks like,” Tien says. Kiwi can’t recall the last time he’s seen her so giddy. “The opening act at Tristan’s dropped out, so we’re up.” 
“Tristan’s?”
“It’s a bar.”
“Opening act?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Us?”
“Opening act.” Tien nods. “Us. You can repeat the rest of the sentence as well if that’s what it takes.”
“You’re kidding, right? You’re joking.”
“Dead serious,” says Tien.
Kiwi takes a step back, a step to the side, and one to the other. Cranes his neck to look at Oskar. At Mona. Hayal, too. No one else seems as alarmed as he is. He opens and closes his mouth like a fish. “When did this–” He gets the phone from Hayal. He reads over the email again. Looks up, looks down. Up again. “Who is this, even?”
“Tristan’s event manager. I’ve been scouting for places we might have a chance in,” says Tien, her voice aims for calm and confident, specifically cause Kiwi is neither. “I’ve been sending emails and requests for a while now.”
“And, and,” says Kiwi, “and you didn’t say anything? Anything at all?”
“I may have forgotten to mention it.”
“You can’t just sign us up for a concert!” Each of Kiwi’s sentences comes out a different pitch than the one before. “We can’t even get through the entirety of ‘Now’!”
“It’s not a concert,” Oskar chimes in. “Makes you think too big and intimidating. It’s a small gig at a niche club, that’s all. It’s LGBT-friendly, too. Mona’s been there before.”
“They have pretty decent non-alcoholic options,” supplies Mona.
Kiwi turns around to Oskar, mouth forming a couple of soundless shapes before finding his voice. “Were you in on this?”
“I was in on this.”
Kiwi turns to Mona. She gives him an apologetic smile.
“No.”
“I wasn’t at first, if that helps.”
Kiwi takes another step back, unable to close his mouth, and gestures helplessly at all three of his bandmates. “What the fuck?”
Hayal, sucking air in through her teeth, withdraws to fiddle with the camera.
“Why am I–” Kiwi swallows down a voice crack, potentially several. “Why am I the only one who didn’t know about this?”
“It’s not like we all actively conspired against you. Tien just told me at some point,” Oskar says, “Mona figured her out eventually.”
“But you didn’t tell me?” Kiwi’s voice climbs the octaves and remains adamantly on the verge of a shriek. “None of you?”
Tien and Oskar exchange a few negotiating glances – a ‘you do it – no, you’ type deal – Mona investigates the wall with a tight mouth.
Oskar sighs, resigned to his fate. “We figured,” he says, “it would stress you out.”
“AND IT IS NOT DOING THAT RIGHT NOW?”
“Okay,” Oskar says. “Okay. Breathe, Kiwi.”
Kiwi, all red in the face, does not do that. “And it’s so soon, too! There’s no way we would have time to – Do we even have a set? Do we have enough songs?”
“We’ll do covers in between original ones,” says Tien. “I’ve thought about this.”
“You’ve thought about this!?” Kiwi whirls around, points at Tien, points at himself. “Maybe you should’ve thought about involving me in the decision-making process!”
Hayal murmurs to the camera: “He’s got a point.”
Kiwi clutches his feverish forehead, finally breathes, or at least forces his chest to rise and fall. “No,” he announces, “No, no, no. No bar. No gig. We’re not doing this.”
Tien, Oskar, and Mona look at each other and the temperature in the frigid shack drops further. On their faces, in order: Stoicism, patience, and uncertainty. What is not there is compromise. 
“Okay, well,” says Kiwi. “I’m not doing this.”
He snatches his guitar from its resting place against the wall, its case from the floor, and squats down to get one into the other as fast as humanly possible.
“Kiwi, come on,” says someone – Oskar – but Kiwi shrugs it off in his rush to pick up his jacket, shoulder the guitar case, and make it to the door. There’s another bargaining “Kiwi!” before the metal door slams shut and the sound reverberates across the yard.
***
Kiwi speed-walks past the fences of afternoon suburbia. Part of his brain registers that he’s still wearing an outfit he put on under the assumption that he wasn’t gonna be alone in public, part of his brain registers that he’s freezing his ass off because he didn’t actually put the jacket on, but most of it is preoccupied with the fact that his bandmates collectively backstabbed him. That’s what they did, so he wasn’t wrong to storm off. No reason to feel bad about it. He doesn’t owe them to stay and listen to their excuses, he doesn’t owe them shit.
About halfway to the bus stop, hasty footsteps catch up with him. Kiwi considers walking faster, but that’d mean he’d end up sprinting and that’s just not attainable with a guitar case on your back. He turns around, sees Hayal, and is immediately stung by guilt.
“You’re really just gonna leave me like that?” Hayal pants. As soon as she comes to a stop, she braces her hands against her knees. “With my ex and two people I sort-of-know-but-not-super-well? That’s cold.”
“Sorry,” Kiwi catches his breath. “Really. I just – What?” He points his jacket back in the direction of the practice shed. “Did you hear this? Did you see this? Please tell me what I think happened actually happened and I didn’t just overreact.”
“You didn’t overreact. I think.”
“I can’t with this.” He takes a step towards Hayal then a step back. “I’m leaving. I’m sorry. Didn’t mean to cut your time with Tien short. Sorry.”
“It’s okay, we said our pieces.”
“Yeah?” Kiwi’s already walking backwards down the sidewalk.
“Yeah.”
The two of them continue at a pace that allows Kiwi to hand Hayal the guitar case for a second to slip on his jacket. He’s still shaking his head when he drops onto the plastic bus shelter bench. Hayal sits down next to him and buries her hands in her parka.
“Should be here in like five minutes,” he says to the time display on his phone’s lock screen. With finally a second to rest, he leans his head back against the glass wall. And because it is a glass wall, Kiwi has no problem spotting Oskar jog down the street once he turns his head to the left.
“Careful, you’re in throwing range,” Kiwi says, back on his feet, his phone raised, as Oskar approaches the bus stop.
“I come in peace,” says Oskar, voice calm as a Sunday morning. He’s not wearing a jacket either. “Lower your weapon and hear me out.”
Kiwi doesn’t change his stance; his phone remains in the air.
“Look, Kiwi, we love you, but we need to put ourselves out there at some point and so far you’ve kept stalling and dodging every opportunity.”
“So you decide to just go behind my back? What kind of friends do that?”
“Not the most graceful maneuver for sure.” Oskar concedes. “But–”
“But? You’re really going to but me right now?”
“You don’t come out of your shell unless you get a little push.”
“Push,” says Kiwi. “That’s not a push, that’s betrayal.”
“You don’t come out of your shell unless you get a little betrayal, then.”
Kiwi jolts his arm back, ready to chuck.
Oskar raises his hands.
“So, Tristan’s, right. It’s small. It’s niche. Relatively non-threatening. That’s why Mona suggested it to Tien in the first place.” He tilts his head gently. “It’s a real place that actual people go to. YouTube’s not doing anything for us, so we have to take actual steps. This is an actual step. People would actually see us, hear us.”
“I think,” says Kiwi, “I’m gonna throw up.”
“Look–”
“No.”
“This whole thing was definitely sneaky and lowkey unfair–”
“Highkey unfair.”
“–and highkey unfair, but two weeks from now, when we’ve had our gig, and we’re standing on a little stage and a couple of people are cheering because they liked what we did, then it’s gonna be okay. Promise.”
“Well! Look!” Kiwi gestures very intensely at nothing in particular. “Two weeks from now! I’ll be neck-deep in my history didactics exam!”
“On a Saturday?”
Kiwi opens his mouth and closes it a couple of times. “Monday. But I need that weekend to cram.”
“You’ve still got two weeks.”
“And there are still two more exams and an essay! I’m busy!”
“Tien didn’t know that it was gonna be so soon when she messaged that event manager guy. I’m pretty sure she didn’t even expect a reply. But here we are. We have that chance now, even though it’s shitty how we got there.”
“I don’t know how to tell you that you should’ve considered this before organizing a gig without the whole band’s knowledge.”
“I mean I didn’t really organize anything–”
“Plural you.”
“Right.” Oskar takes a breath, decelerates the conversation. “Look, I’m sorry.”
Kiwi watches him, waits. “But?”
“No but. I am sorry.”
Kiwi crosses his arms.
“Is this really only about your exams, though?”
“Well, no, there’s also the whole ‘I’m super fucking mad’ aspect and–” He resets himself, takes a breath, then overenunciates every word. “I’m just not going to embarrass myself like this.”
Oskar furrows his brow.
“I don’t know if that’s a concept that you can grasp, though. Embarrassment.”
“Sure is. That’s why we didn’t tell you.”
“I’m going to throw up.” Kiwi steps back and leans against the shelter wall. “And what’s more, I’ll throw up directly, specifically, on you.”
“Boys,” says Hayal.
Kiwi and Oskar turn their heads.
She points at the corner of the street that’s currently being rounded by a familiar bus with a familiar number on display.
“Thank god.” Kiwi picks up his guitar and fishes for his ticket, which turns out to be redundant when the driver opens the doors in the back as well. One person gets off. Hayal gets on, waits.
“Alright,” says Oskar, hands in the pockets of his sweatpants. “Call me when you’re ready to talk.”
“You’ll need to find someone else for the gig.” For a moment, Kiwi lingers with one foot still on the pavement. “I really, genuinely, have exams. I can’t.”
“Don’t worry about it right now.” Oskar raises his voice to reach past the closing doors. “The 26th is still two weeks and a day away. You’ve got time!”
Kiwi doesn’t respond. Air hisses as the bus lifts its sideways tilt back up and the engine shakes the floor below him. He watches Oskar turn around and saunter back towards his grandparents’ house, hands still in his pockets, before the bus turns out of the street and he loses sight.
“Kiwi,” says Hayal. She nods towards a free seat to her right and Kiwi plops down next to her.
He hoists his backpack onto his lap and starts rummaging through it. “Is it okay if I-”
“Sure.”
Kiwi pulls his headphones over his ears. For the rest of the bus ride, he closes his eyes and listens to the music.
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organixmantra · 4 months ago
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A Simple Guide for a Perfect Hair Care Routine at Night
We all understand the importance of a good hair care routine. But have you considered the significance of nighttime hair care? A dedicated evening routine can be a game-changer for your hair's health and appearance. Here’s your simple guide to perfecting your hair care routine before you hit the pillow.
Why Is a Nightly Hair Care Routine Essential?
Your hair endures much during the day—pollution, heat styling, and even natural oil production can impact your hair's health. A nightly routine helps reduce these effects by rejuvenating your hair while you sleep, enhancing its strength, vitality and balancing the sebum on the scalp.
Moreover, caring for your hair at night can help prevent damage and breakage caused by friction with your pillowcase as you toss and turn. This extra care before bedtime keeps your hair looking healthy and vibrant. Remember how Goldilocks used to brush her hair 100 times before bed.
Step 1: Brush Your Hair
Start your nightly routine by gently brushing your hair. This helps detangle knots and spread the scalp’s natural oils throughout your hair, promoting moisture retention and reducing breakage. Use a wide-tooth comb or a soft brush, starting from the ends and working your way up to minimize stress on your hair. If you have curly hair, opt for a detangling brush designed to preserve your curls.
Step 2: Apply a Nourishing Hair Mask or Oil
To deeply moisturize and repair your hair, apply a nourishing hair mask or oil suited to your hair type. Coat your hair from roots to tips and let the treatment sit for at least 30 minutes, or overnight if possible. This step is crucial for restoring hydration and reviving dull, damaged hair.
Organix Mantra Rosemary & Lavender Hair oil  is ideal for revitalizing and reviving hair growth.This hair oil is formulated with a blend of nurturing oils such as jojoba, coconut, and olive, selected for their proven benefits in improving hair and scalp health. These oils fortify and nourish your hair, creating optimal conditions for natural vitality and growth. The formula enhances hair texture, leaving it softer and more lustrous while avoiding any greasy residue.
For those with fine or oily hair, choose lightweight oils or masks to avoid weighing down your hair. You can cover your hair with a shower cap to lock in the treatment and maximize its benefits.
Step 3: Tie Up Your Hair Gently
If you’re skipping the hair mask or oil, it’s still wise to tie your hair up loosely to prevent tangling and breakage while sleeping. Avoid tight elastic bands that can stress your hair. Instead, use a silk or satin scrunchie or headband to gently secure your hair. For longer hair, a loose braid works well to keep your hair organized and minimize knots.
Step 4: Switch to a Satin Pillowcase
Minimize hair damage from friction by sleeping on a satin pillowcase. The smooth texture of satin helps reduce hair breakage and maintain moisture levels in your hair. If you don’t have a satin pillowcase, wrapping your hair in a silk scarf is an effective alternative. Also, keep your pillowcase clean to avoid the buildup of oils and hair care products.
Step 5: Morning Care
In the morning, wash your hair to remove any overnight product buildup. Use a sulfate-free shampoo and a nourishing conditioner to cleanse gently without stripping natural oils. Consider a cool rinse to close the hair cuticles, enhancing shine and reducing frizz.
To Sum Up
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Consistency is key in maintaining the health and beauty of your hair. Integrate these steps into your nightly routine for noticeable improvements in your hair's texture and strength. Wake up to healthier, more beautiful hair every day by giving it the care it deserves at night. Happy hair care!
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healthyuyrt · 19 days ago
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Why We Chose Life’s Abundance Puppy Food for Our Pup, Cali:
There are so many different puppy foods and deciding which one to feed your beloved pup can be difficult.
It was an easy decision for us, though, because we’ve seen the difference Life’s Abundance has made in the health and the skin and coats of all the dogs and cats that we’ve had over the years.
Our first experience was many years ago when we had two dogs and a cat (Moe, Larry & Curly.)  Bet you can’t tell my husband is a Stooges fan, huh?  All three had chronic health issues when they were only 4 years old.
Moe and Curly had horrible food allergies or intolerances.  Curly had lost most of the fur on one side of her body, and Moe had bleeding hot spots.  We were constantly taking Moe to the vet.  He would prescribe antibiotics and steroid shots.  Moe would improve for a couple of weeks, and then the hot spots would return with a vengeance. Unfortunately, he had become resistant to the antibiotics.
It was a nightmare!  We tried different supposedly healthy foods, supplements, etc.  Plus, we had expensive allergy tests done.  But nothing worked.
https://healthyfoodforpets.com/article/why-we-chose-lifes-abundance-puppy-food-for-our-pup-cali/
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beautyfineshopparis · 1 year ago
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African Pride extra shine braid sheen spray 355ml.
Braid Sheen Spray is used regularly to help relieve dry, itchy scalp. Not only do the braids last longer, but it leaves them with radiant shine. This spray deeply nourishes adding hydration, and softness, and also helps relieve itching and pain caused by doing braids, locks, or twists on the scalp. This product prevents hair loss and breakage by leaving a pleasant fragrance.
Directions to use African Pride extra shine Spray:
Spray Braid Sheen on the scalp just after doing braids or other finger hairstyles. Use this African pride extra braid spray daily for the best results.
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rivertigo · 6 months ago
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the narrative arc for my hair is so good. I got it done on the night of a concert and now, my color shampoo just ran out and I used the last of my color revitalizing conditioning thing, it is over!!! and the last hoorah is another concert in another theatre
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ask-prosci · 1 day ago
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:3c do you have any funny memories to share
I think so. One time I ran out of my special shampoo and conditioner and needed to settle on using the 2-in-1 shampoo and conditioner, which absolutely killed my hair and it was difficult revitalizing it. If you haven't noticed, I'm very picky about my hair. I no longer wear it in tight buns as that would lead me to bald.
...
Like Jojo Siwa.
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kalevalakryze · 1 year ago
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Hair
The creche had many different species, and they learned a lot about each and every one, but never once did Master Yoda explain why he had those tufts of fur on his head, or why all the other humans seemed to grow the rough fur all over their faces, on their arms, and even on their legs and armpits! She’d always wanted to reach out and touch someone’s hair, it looked soft enough, and she’d seen plenty of Master’s ruffling the hair of their Padawan’s, so.. it was okay, right?
Her important hair questions were set aside for much more important things, like graduating out of the creche and into a full status as a youngling learner. They operated in classrooms now, learning more about lightsabers and diplomacy and anatomy and everything she’d been excited about. 
The day she’d turned fourteen, weeks after her first gathering, Master Yoda had approached her, had guided her to a transport and promised her, she would be a Padawan to Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker, the living legend, the man they all talked about since they were old enough to retain the stories of his Padawan years. 
He hadn’t wanted her, and she was quick to start a fight with him, always snipping back, because Yoda chose her, Yoda had believed she was ready, and she felt she needed to not just prove it to Anakin and Yoda, but herself as well. It was hard work, finding her place with Anakin Skywalker, but they started to click as they fought side by side in the war.
Shore leave was rare, but the five-o-first needed to get their evaluations done, and that was just easier inside a GAR facility, than in a light cruiser. It was a welcome break from the fighting, and soon, Master and Padawan found their battered bodies joined on the couch in Padme’s apartment, one of the rare times she’d been invited to join the obviously married couple for dinner. 
Ashoka’s cheek was smooshed into the comforting fabric of Anakin’s robes on his shoulder as he fiddled with the mechanics in his arm, occasionally raising his hand to shove his bangs back and out of his face. “Master,” The Togruta finally interrupted his frustrated groan as he yanked on his own hair trying to get it out of the way. 
“Skyway, c’mon,” And then, revitalized, ahsoka was reaching forward, when he didn’t move her hand away, but watched her with a mild amusement that wiped away his frustration. The curls were soft against her fingers, and agitating the strands of hair seemed to invade her nose with the smell of a charcoaly shampoo, and the grime that seemed to follow them both across the battlefield.
Padme had rejoined the Jedi in the living room, and her soft giggle had broken the awestruck silence as Ashoka brushed her fingers through Anakin’s hair. “Do you want me to show you how to braid so we can get it out of his face, Ahsoka?” The senator offered, moving to the couch. Instead of sitting down on the open cushion, she stepped on it, lowering herself behind Anakin and settling herself on the back of the couch. “Come on up,”
The Togruta followed quickly, clambering to the back of the couch and watching as Padme untangled each curl. “You have to be pretty careful, it hurts when our hair gets pulled,” She explained kindly, showing Ahsoka how to divide each section to start weaving them together.
It was the most patient the young Padawan had ever seen her Master as the women jerked his head around, braiding, undoing, and redoing each string of hair until Ahsoka could repeat each braid just like Padme. “You’re doing great,” She promised, her shoulder bumping Ahsoka’s gently, who’d beamed at the praise. “Next time, I’ll let you do mine before the senate,” She offered, to which Ahsoka happily agreed.
She never did get to help Padme with her hair, but when she’d snuck to the funeral procession, she saw the senator’s hair, braided neatly with flowers tucked into the strands. She’d delivered something important, had tricked her way close enough to press the wooden carving into her friend’s cold hands, before it got too risky and she’d needed to melt back into the shadows. 
▬▬Îč═══════>
It had taken Ahsoka a long time to address the twins, a long time and a lot of preparation to meet the two people who’d reminded her of everything good in their parents. She’d known Leia a long time, hadn’t been able to meet her face to face, but helped move her troops and supplies in the Fulcrum network, up until her ‘death’. 
Leia was so much like her father, she smiled with Anakin’s eyes and charged in with his ego, while Luke, like his father in the flair for dramatics, was gentle enough to listen, to understand and give his opponents a chance before he charged against them. The man who’d helped an imperial sith trained to kill him, the man who’d brought her brother back. 
It was hard, to think about them and the lives they could have had, if things had been meant to work that way, but, as rebellion troops partied around them, even the wars were with the moment of respite.
She’d found the twins on her ship, hours later, waiting in the dimly lit crew quarters Barriss typically had filling with the smell of tea, if she wasn’t back in the main base of operations helping heal the injured from both sides. 
“Our father told me about you,” Luke started, eager to break the ice, but not wanting to tread too hard. Ahsoka had paused in the door, staring at the kids who’d done so much. 
“Has he now?” It took every ounce of control to keep the waver out of her voice as she started preparing caff, anything to keep her back to them, even if she could feel the way Leia stared past her skin, the way the woman was cataloguing every scar and every white marking exposed by her minimal armor. 
“You were his padawan,” Ahsoka nodded, and once the cups were filled, she had no more excuses but to face them, setting the mugs on the table in front of them before she lowered herself into her own seat.
“I was, a long time ago,” Her head dipped, head lowering and her eyes catching the way the air seemed to stir, the way the force moved, and the way the boy’s face had seemed to light up in the same direction. “I walked away from the order though, from him,” She could still hear the malfunctioning vocoder, when she finally promised to stay
 ‘then you will die,’ And she had, that day, they both had, if for a brief moment in the force before the events were interrupted by Ezra Bridger. 
The ghost of a connection, the ghost of the force, pushing old feelings through a bond long broken, she could feel the way the force had seemed to settle around her, the familiarity of the presence, and the way she’d yearned for it brought a stinging wetness to her eyes. “I won’t be able to help either of you, with your training,” Because she knew it would be coming to that, knew that the force presences she felt in the room would argue with her, the way Leia seemed about ready to, but, there was a lot she still resented, chains that hung heavy on her heart, burdens she dragged through the light despite forgoing attachments for herself for so long. 
“I understand, But, Ahsoka,” It had been so long since she’d been Ahsoka to a Skywalker. His hands, one metal and one flesh, reached across the table, clasping hers. “You’re part of the family, too. To our father,” 
He paused, as Leia’s hand joined theirs. “To my father, Bail as well,” The princess assured, thumb stroking across the dark orange of a scar across her hand. 
“It didn’t go away when you left the order, you were always a part of it,” He seemed to be looking past her, and Ahsoka couldn’t stop the wet laugh that passed her lips. Hand it to the kid to get through so many emotions she’d tried to let go of.
“Do you two have anywhere to be?” The woman questioned as she stood and peered out of the transparisteel viewport. Ewoks were slowly dousing fires, Rex and Wolffe were passing out bedrolls and helping the more inebriated soldiers find somewhere safe.
“Not until morning,” Leia assured, and Ahsoka was nodding her head. 
“Come on, I’ll show you why your dad really kept me around,” She led them to the L shaped couch that sat in the corner of the small quarters, no table broke the space here, since Ahsoka often slept on the couches and hadn’t wanted to risk her effectiveness in defense having to jump over the nonfunctioning holotactics table. 
The twins were guided to the floor, leaning back against the cushions, and then Ahsoka was lowering herself onto the cushion behind Luke. “Now that I can tell you about them, here,” She pulled a data pad from beneath one of the worn pillows on the couch, handing it to Leia after unlocking the device, her fingers soon finding Luke’s hair and starting to brush through it, feeling the Jedi start to relax immediately.
“These are clones?” Leia questioned as she came to the first picture. Ahsoka held up on Anakin’s back, arms thrown up in victory as Jesse, Fives, and Echo wore varying expressions of disappointment. The broom closet in the back of the photo was open, showing Rex grabbing the mops and buckets the boys would need to clean up the paint from a rowdy armor party. 
“They were my brothers too. My vode,” A small smile flitted over her lips as she followed the old moves, like Padme was still guiding her hands through Luke’s hair, braiding randomly and all over the place. “The man with the Republic spires tattooed on his face is Jesse. He was one of my first friends when I learned how to command. We were all learning to work together, and we helped each other a lot, especially after his promotion to ARC trooper. All he wanted to do was march around and show us what he learned.”
“The man with the goatee is Fives, and he saved my life with the last of his,” Her fingers stilled in Luke’s hair as she looked to the picture and the woman staring at her with wonder. A single tear raced down a sepia colored cheek. (“Find him, find fives, find him!”) “He left messages, hints, expressed concerns and tried to fight a corrupt system. He gave his life trying to warn the Jedi, and they didn’t listen.” Slower now, she continued braiding strands of Luke’s hair. 
“It was because of him that I was able to free Rex, but there had been too much damage to the ship to save the others, I try to honor their true memories every day,” She admitted, because she did still have the armor the boys had fit onto her fourteen year old body, names painted against the breastplate and Mando’a words of resilience there to help her when things had gotten rough. 
“Echo,” She paused again, blowing a huff of air as a frown pulled onto her lips. “I blame myself for what happened. He became an ARC like Jesse and Fives, from Domino squad. When we went to the Citadel to save Tarkin and retrieve important information
 Well, I wasn’t supposed to be there, I put the mission in a lot of danger and he’d faced the price for my mistake,”
Leia’s brows furrowed at that, because she knew an ‘echo’. “CT-1409?” The princess questioned, trying to see the clone in the picture to the Bad Batcher she’d met those few years ago.
“That’s him,” Ahsoka confirmed, finally finishing Luke’s hair and standing to move herself behind Leia.
“He joined with Clone Force 99, the Bad Batch, we’d used their skills for countless operations in the beginning,” Ashoka’s breath caught in her throat and she peered over Leia’s shoulder as she accessed the Holonet, now free of Imperial restriction. Sure enough, a picture of the Bad Batch showed the sickly image of her ori’vod. 
Ahsoka had leaned her head forehead, letting her forehead rest on top of Leia’s head for a brief moment. “Thank you,” She whispered into her hair, before continuing her objective, unwinding and brushing out long curls with her fingers. 
The data pad was handed off to Luke, who scrolled through the images of Ahsoka with the clones, their mother and father, and even recordings of the Jedi commander, clad in armor like her men, jumping around a battlefield, her high pitch voice calling numbers through the recording, their kill counts, if Anakin’s laughter off screen was any indication.
“This was them?” He finally questioned, and Ahsoka had to peer over his shoulder to see.
 “That was the last time we had shore leave together, when your mother taught me how to do this, actually,” Anakin smiled at the camera, several braids poking randomly over his head, much like Luke’s own. Ahsoka and Padme still sat on the back of the couch, her arm thrown around a proudly grinning Ahsoka.  
“I was expelled from the order then,” She could hear Barriss’s steps climbing the ramp, perfect timing. “If you want to know more about that, I think you’d need to address it with our Master Healer,” A teasing grin pulled at her lips as the Mirialan rolled her eyes and stepped close, only to press a warm kiss to the top of Ahsoka’s head. 
“But I didn’t get to spend much time with either of them after that, not until,” She trailed off, the silence heavy with the unspoken. Ashoka’s fingers guided her without thought through Leia’s hair, weaving in ways she truly hadn’t known, merely another way she was a conduit of the force in the moment, though she didn’t acknowledge the weight that settled around her shoulders, the ghost of a friendly hug pressing into her skin. 
When all was said and done, Leia Organa bore the same braided design that Padme had planned to show Ahsoka how to do, if things wouldn’t have gone so wrong. The four force sensitive beings allowed themselves a moment, to mourn what could have been, what was, and to reflect on what would come later. At least, if anything, Ahsoka got to meet the people that would be her niece and nephew, and share stories about their parents that no one else had been able to. 
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