#sg rung
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Have a seat with the Warrior God Primus
#it was only a matter of time before i did a shattered glass#my art#fanart#digital art#transformers#maccadam#shattered glass#rung#tf rung#sg rung
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Thinking about the wider implications of SG Rung, of ROBOT GOD being a mnemosurgeon in shattered glass
#transformers#maccadam#it's not canon but it's something I've seen a few times in art and fics#sg rung#primus#sg primus#transformers shattered glass#transformers idw#transformers mtmte
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six fanarts thing i did on twt :]
#transformers#maccadam#shattered glass#tf shattered glass#tf sg#transformers shattered glass#sg tailgate#shattered glass tailgate#tailgate#rung#mtmte#tf idw#tf rung#stella#interstella 5555#wild weasel#gi joe#gijoe#gi joe a real american hero#tf earthspark#tf es#tfes#earthspark#hashtag#rattrap#beast wars#art
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TRANSFORMERS REACTION PICS 4/???
ALLLLLSSSOOOO the "urethra" Brainstorm was drawn by me in reference to that one meme
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Another day, another thing to forgo.
Because nope.
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Scary Rung (like, not the green one) is canon somewhere, I'm sure.
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MTMTE/LL Request Masterlist
Rodimus and Drift accidentally crash land and meet 10-year-old Human Buddy
Tall Bot Buddy doing the hand against the wall thing to their Conjux Rodimus
Megatron 'accidentally' adopting Human Buddy who fears nothing
Brainstorm having Twin sibling
Human Buddy records out of context sounds and sics them on unsuspecting bots (Tailgate, Rewind, and Swerve)
Megatron and Fearless Buddy who gets seriously hurt
Tailgate, Rodimus Prime, and Brainstorm react to Human Buddy throwing up on them on accident
Human Buddy and the Allspark
Brainstorm and Human Buddy who loves explosives
Fearless Buddy reaction to Megatron coming back from the other dimension
Bot Buddy from the TFP universe meeting MTMTE Rodimus Prime
Pregnant Human Buddy trying to explain Human Life to Rung, Nautica, Ambulon, Cyclonus, and Skids
Human Buddy who like goth style with Swerve, Tailgate, Rewind, Cyclonus, and Drift
Rodimus dating Tall Bot Buddy who's shy
Bot Buddy who is Megatron's sparkmate (its complicated) who was a former gladiator with Rodimus Prime, Nautica, and Ravage
Perceptor's younger sibling having a crush on Rodimus
Bot Buddy the Ex-con who comes off as quiet but is chatty with other Ex-con with Ultra Magnus, Rodimus Prime, and Nautica
Bot Buddy who has a fascination with Dino's with the Scavengers
Ratchet's daughter with the opposite personality meeting MTMTE Ratchet
Fearless Buddy meeting Old Predacon Buddy
Perceptor's younger sibling get kidnaped by the DJD
Bot Buddy with a fox alt mode with Ratchet, Drift, and Rodimus
Human Buddy who communicates in grunts, noises and likes to climb with Rodimus Prime, Cyclonus, Nautica, and First Aid
Bot Buddy the sparkling on the Lost Light with Skids, Rewind, and Ravage
Fearless Buddy gets a visit from TFP Bots
Bot Buddy Perceptor's younger sibling recovering from the DJD Kidnapping
Drift's twin the Con who was left behind on accident
What if... TFP Megatron's daughter with the opposite personality agreed to stay on the Lost Light?
Human Buddy in the custody battle of the Lost Light (Ratchet and Drift are the winners)
Fearless Buddy doing martial arts with Megatron and Drift
Steel Mauler meeting Rodimus Prime, Megatron and Ultra Magnus
Human Buddy (Dratchet's kid) meeting their bio parents again
Moonstreaker and Swerve pinning and Rodimus not noticing
Moonstreaker goes to Swearth
Rally Racer Buddy videos with Swerve, Rodimus, Whirl, and Ultra Magnus
Juno having a panic attack/ breakdown with Cygate, Whirl, and First Aid
Fearless Buddy meeting Ophelia and Ironhold
Bot Buddy the singer and being Swerve's Conjunx
3 Things that have happened on the Lost Light while Steel Mauler was visiting
Fearless turns Cybertronain
Moonstreaker snaps
Dratchet's kid meeting Fearless
Rung, Perceptor, and Moonstreaker react to Juno and Rodimus having a big fight
Bot Buddy from SG! and being Starscream's Conjunx
Bot Buddy trying to be Ratchet's apprentice
Fearless having an online crush and the Lost Light crew being the last to know
3 Times Moonstreaker and Swerve nearly kissed
IDW Ophelia
Perceptor and Brainstorm's adopted sparkling and the Scavengers
Rapidfire on the Lost Light
Bot Buddy being Conjunx with Whirl and taking care of scraplets
Maxima on the Lost Light
Wobbles and the Bullies
IDW Ophelia: Megatron's POV
Fearless and MTMTE Megatron meets TFA/TFE Silver Aid and their Megatron's
Moonstreaker realizing she is an outlier
MTMTE Steve meets MTMTE Ophelia
Ophelia's identity reveal?
Fearless VS Tarn
Fearless meeting their crush in person
Simpatico's encounter with the DJD
Bot Buddy being Ultra Magnus's apprentice
Moonstreaker and Swerve confess
Megatron finds out about Ophelia's identity
Fearless finds out about their crush...
Fearless meets Maxima
First Aid finding old videos of Wobbles
Fearless and Megatron Celebrating Father's Day
Juno and Rodimus sparkling announcement (Ft. Moonstreaker)
IDW Ironhold
Fearless and Alabaster
Drift with a daughter with the opposite personality
IDW Lithia
IDW Rapidfire
Simpatico and Juno in the same universe
5 Things that have happened during Juno's pregnancy
Wobbles gets pushed down the stairs
Ambulon and Wobbles go out?
Juno and the sparkling
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✨💜✨ ALL OF THE POLLS CAN HE FOUND HERE ✨💜✨
MTMTE Rodimus vs TFP Soundwave
IDW Soundwave vs TFP Optimus
IDW Perceptor vs IDW Drift
IDW Brainstorm vs IDW Wing
Cyberverse Soundwave vs MTMTE Skids
G1 Bumblebee vs Cyberverse Perceptor
MTMTE Riptide vs Wheeljack
Jazz vs Sideswipe
Thundercracker vs IDW Tarantulas
TFA Starscream vs TFA Optimus
RB Blades vs TFP Breakdown
Cyberverse Deadend vs Cyberverse Astrotrain
G1 Hook vs G1 Mixmaster
MTMTE Whirl vs Sunstreaker
IDW Starscream vs Ratchet
IDW Knockout vs TFP Bulkhead
IDW Thunderclash vs G1 Wheeljack
IDW Tarn vs MTMTE Rung
IDW Kaon vs IDW Nightbeat
IDW First Aid vs G1 First Aid
ES Thrash vs RB Chase
IDW Ratchet vs G1 Powerglide
SG Skyfire vs G1 Ratchet
G1 Starscream vs TFP Dreadwing
IDW Ambulon vs Cyberverse Clobber
Armada Starscream vs ES Hashtag
TFP Bumblebee vs Cyberverse Ratchet
Cyberverse Whirl vs Bayverse Hot Rod
MTMTE Rewind vs MTMTE Cyclonus
MTMTE Chromedome vs MTMTE Tailgate
G1 Ravage vs G1 Skylynx
MTMTE Minimus Ambus vs Cyberverse Thundercracker
Cyberverse Cheetor vs TFP Smokescreen
IDW 2005 Ravage vs MTMTE Fulcrum
IDW Sunder vs Lord Imperious Delirious
RB High Tide vs RB Boulder
ES Nightshade vs TFRB Blurr
MTMTE Swerwe vs Cyberverse Shadow Striker
IDW Elita-1 vs TFA Shockwave
Bumblebee from his movie vs IDW Wingblade
TFP Shockwave vs ES Megatron
RBA Medix vs RBA Whirl
ES Twitch vs TFA Blitzwing
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You Look So Good In Blue | Y.H. Huang
Inspired by Child Ballad 16.
When a teenage fling mutates into something vast and terrifying, two seventeen year olds at a certain mid-tier college in Singapore make a desperate plan to control their future, earn their parents' love (or at least respect), and get the hell out of this school for good.
i. the daughter
It's whispered in the kitchen, it's whispered in the hall
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair,
The king's daughter goes with child, among ladies all
And she'll never go down to the broom anymore.
It's whispered by the ladies one unto the other,
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair,
“The king's daughter goes with child unto her own brother–
And they'll never go down to the broom anymore.”
Sheath and Knife, Maddy Prior
-
/r/sgacads
is st cecilia rly a pregnancy school?? [o levels]
/u/anxiousorange
hiii sorry for the 29583th school admissions post today lol but i just got my o level results back and they’re pretty ok ^_^ so i was thinking of going to st cecilia junior college since it’s near my house but the more i hear about it the more i want to reconsider… like apparently the people are very party type which is not really my thing?? and ofc everyones heard about how its got the highest pregnancy rate in sg o_0
is this true? or just say say one
comments (8)
/u/academicweapon
As a SCian it’s not true LOL none of us get bitches
/u/theatrekidaf
skill issue
/u/sharpsdisposal
we’re too busy failing physics :/
/u/zombiegrave
q: how many scians does it take to change a lightbulb?
a: none. they like it better darker
/u/aw_bass34
Q: What’s the only test SC girls can pass?
A: Pregnancy test :P
/u/gregorythomas91 [s]
Damn old rumour, probably from 1990s, 2000s around there. But it’s not really unfounded. Especially with what happened in 2008.
/u/anxiousorange
what happened? im scared lol
/u/gregorythomas91 [s]
You haven’t heard meh? It was a big deal back then, I'm shocked they've covered it up that well. Let me try and remember.
-
You never told me what really happened over those few blistering months in 2008, but I guess I wasn’t alone in that. Even when the newspapers shoved a mic in your face, even when you were being grilled by the lawyers, even when you were standing on that trap door, waiting for the drop– what really happened was a secret you’d bring to the grave.
So it’s all inference and extrapolation and linear correlation– sue me. How else am I going to make sense of that moment? How else do I come to terms with why you did what you did? Could I have known? Could I have stopped it? Was I even, when it came down to it, your friend– or was I just somebody who let you copy his lecture notes?
I don’t know. What I do know is this:
It was some mid-week mid-afternoon, indistinguishable from any other. The bell had just rung, and the whitewashed corridors were packed with sweaty kids rushing to PE, squeezing past those dragging their feet from class to class. We were part of the latter group, squinting against the September sun as we ambled across the quadrangle to home class. Above us, the school motto loomed in oversized light-blue letters: Remember you are in the presence of God.
I was mentally calculating how long the Malay stall queue would be when you said, casual as always, “Eh, pass me your market failure notes later, can? I’m yellow-slipping after GP.”
I raised an eyebrow. You weren’t a stranger to leaving school early, but you’d been doing it more and more often lately, and at this point I hadn’t seen you stay for Shooting in ages. As your club captain, I was supposed to be concerned. As a friend– well, I was intrigued. Of course I’d heard the rumours, passed from homeroom to homeroom, Friendster account to Friendster account. Who in St Cecilia’s hadn’t? “Is this related to whatever you and Camilla Wong have going on?”
“Cam’s not my girlfriend,” you said, after a brief, completely unsuspicious pause.
I snorted. “She doesn’t let anyone in this school call her that but you, dumbass. ”
You ducked your head down to hide a smile, your dress-code fringe falling into your eyes. It was a strangely endearing habit. “Fine lah. We’re– seeing each other.” Then you continued, hurriedly, “But don’t let anyone else know, OK?”
“Fine, I'll write you off CCA for today. But don’t make it a habit, ar? Hold pen, not hold hand.” Despite myself, I grinned. Sure, the two of you made an unlikely couple. Wong was an ex-Convent girl and student councillor, all relentless energy and long hair tied so high it was prone to hit people when she spun, while the only time I’d ever seen you really alive was behind the barrel of an air pistol. Back then, I thought it was cute. Opposites attract– wasn’t that the backbone of any drama worth its salt?
I wouldn’t realise, until later, that despite how different the two of you appeared, at the core of it you were the same– pale and skinny and drowning in your school uniform, searching for exits the moment you stepped into a room. Always, always halfway out the door: of your school, of your body, of the life you knew.
But back then it was just a September afternoon, and we were only seventeen. You smiled back at me, all cheer, like you saw something I didn’t, like you saw something I never would.
-
In the end, though, this isn’t my story. This is yours. So let’s tell it your way.
-
The newly minted 1T26 trickled slowly from assembly into the classroom, chopeing the best desks and nervously rotating between the same few ice-breakers: orientation, secondary schools, O-Level points. As you entered, you cast a glance over the sea of blue pinafores and green pants. Still reeling from the sheer increase in the female population, you took a desk at the back, between the ancient, peeling noticeboard and the window looking out on the covered tennis courts. You were tall enough to see over all the heads, anyway.
Soon, your home tutor arrived, a round-faced lady toting an oversized Cath Kidston duffle bag, and wrote her name on the board in neat block letters: Mdm Alvares. The class stood to greet her, chairs scraping hurriedly against the linoleum. She beamed back, her smile all teeth, and was busy setting up the visualiser when the door slammed open.
The class spun in their seats. “Sorry,” the intruder sheepishly said, leaning against the doorframe. Some of her hair had fallen half-out of her high ponytail, her pinafore already wrinkled at the hem. A dusting of freckles covered her pink cheeks.
Mdm Alvares squinted at the girl, then the laminated name list. “And you are?”
“Camilla Wong.”
Mdm Alvares looked out over the class, scanning the rows, and her eyes landed on an empty seat in the corner whose sole occupant was your beat-up Jansport. Realising where this was going, you sighed, putting your bag on the floor.
Camilla smiled, made her way in–
and put her bag down at another empty seat, half a class away.
–
There was nothing in this world you hated more than 4PM Maths lectures. That day the aircon was actually working, which you would normally have been grateful for, except for the fact that that sharp, recycled wind was blasting directly at the very back rows of LT5, right onto your face.
You were trying so hard to 1) figure out plane vectors and 2) stop yourself from getting hypothermia that you wouldn't be able to recall, later, the exact moment that Camilla fell asleep on your shoulder.
When you realised this, you froze. Oh, you thought, and didn't know what else to think. On one hand, it would’ve been so easy to wake her. Just a poke from your pen, and she would’ve jolted up almost instantly. On the other hand, though, her long eyebrows brushed against her freckled cheeks, and her chest rose and fell in these small, slight motions, and–
Before, you had only ever seen her as a baby-blue blur in the corners of your sight, always in motion even in the earliest of classes. But Camilla, asleep, tucked in the crevice between your shoulder and neck–it felt fragile, thrumming, tense. Like something made of glass, nestled gently in your hand, that it would only have taken a squeeze to splinter.
The next twenty-two minutes were the longest twenty-two minutes of your entire life so far. Even so, when the bell rang and Camilla pulled herself upright, you found yourself missing it already.
–
After that, it was like a switch had been flipped in your brain. It was only then that you began to really Notice Camilla, capital N, italics. You noticed her with her head bowed in mass, noticed her shoving fishball noodles into her mouth at lunch, noticed her arguing with your classmates over technicalities in GP. But you noticed her the most in Monday zeriod house meetings, when the artificial grass glimmered with dew and the syrupy dawn light made the whole world seem like a Hollywood coming-of-age movie. You watched her toss her braids over her shoulder, wipe the pearls of sweat off her flushed face. Her red, red shirt rode up as she stretched, revealing a sliver of pale flesh above the waistband of her shorts–
It took until then for her to notice you Noticing. Her eyes flickered over to you, she winked, and blew a kiss.
You felt as if you’d walked out onto the PIE and been hit by a truck. It was a wonder every single smoke alarm in the school didn’t go off right that moment–a cacophony of ringing like firecrackers all strung up, exploding pop-pop-pop from the foyer to the science block to the hostel. It swallowed every other sound, every other thought. Then she turned away, a grin still lingering on the corners of her lips.
–
During one of your lunch breaks, Camilla pulled you out of class. She had to ask you something about your PW survey, she said. As far as you were aware, you weren't in the same PW group. You knew this. She knew this. The entirety of 1T26 knew this, too, so you headed down to one of the wooden picnic tables underneath Block D, the one tucked beneath the staircase next to St Pat’s room. Both of you hovered awkwardly around the bench for a moment, doing the calculations in your head–how close to sit? What to say? You shifted from foot to foot.
All of a sudden, Camilla slammed her hand down on the table. You jumped. “Walao eh. I legit can’t do this anymore. Is this a Thing? Are we having a Thing?”
You swallowed, eyes darting.
“Make up your mind, sia.” She rolled her eyes, laughing under her breath. “St. Francis boys, I swear.”
“No, wait, yes–” The words spilled, embarrassingly and pitifully, out of your mouth. You feared you were not beating the all-boys’ school stereotypes that day. “I mean, I did, but, um–” Just stop, your brain chanted. What're you saying? You're only making it worse. Kill yourself. Kill yourself. Kill yourself.
“So that’s a yes,” Camilla said, and surged forward to shut you up herself.
–
The next thing you knew, you were stumbling into the stairwell together, the door banging noisily shut behind you. “Why–” Camilla started, and you said, “Nobody ever uses Staircase 6. Now come on.” You pushed her up against the curved concrete wall, not caring that the low ceiling scraped against your head. There was that wild, exhilarated look on her face again, like she still couldn’t believe that she was actually doing this. Beautiful, even in the dull grey light. Her nails dug crescents into your skin.
The air was all heat, sweat, too much cherry blossom perfume. You worked at your tie–quicker than you’d ever been able to in all your years of schooling–as she undid the buttons on her uniform shirt, revealing the freckles that dusted her pale shoulders like so many stars. As you unbuckled her bra in one quick motion, she gasped, then giggled. “Damn, Yeoh. You’re good at this. Is there anyone you haven’t told me about?”
In between kisses, you came up for air. You could've made a joke about not having many opportunities to practise in St Francis, but the real truth was that your desperation shocked even yourself– this wasn’t the careful boy that your pastors, parents, teachers, knew. Your heart threatened to burst from your chest like the bullet from a gun. For the first time in sixteen years, it felt– really felt– like you were fully alive.
“Just you, Cam.” You dipped back down. “Only you.”
ii. the yew tree
He's ta'en his sister down to his father's deer park
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
With his yew-tree bow and arrow slung fast across his back
And they’ll never go down to the broom anymore.
You made close acquaintances with every dark corner of the school. When June came, you merely shifted your meeting points closer to home– behind heartland malls in Tampines or in the nooks and crannies of Cam’s sprawling landed estate along Cluny Road. Neither of you were sure, yet, if you were doing it Right– things like bubble tea dates, strolls in Botanics, or mugging in NLB (god, you should have been mugging, mid-years were in a week and neither of you had cracked a book). But if it wasn’t capital R Right, why did it feel like it was? You thought you had developed a case of myopia–Cam in focus, everything else blurred.
All that to say: the holidays were closer to ending than beginning when you and Cam found yourselves in an overgrown grassy patch tucked somewhere in between a storm drain and the wrought-iron back gate of some minister’s landed property. It had sounded a lot more romantic in theory, but the cloudless sky was the same powder-blue as your school uniforms, and the sun beat down like it had a personal vendetta against you. There was nothing much for shade except for a single banana tree, which you lay crumpled under, sweat-sheened and reddened. The last of the endorphins were beginning to wear off.
Cam’s ringtone cut through the air, a chiptune rendition of some Green Day song. She sighed, then propped herself up on one elbow as she picked up her phone. Her hair was loose, cascading down her back like smooth dark water. You fought the urge to run your hands through it.
“Ba!” she chirped. The cheer didn’t show on her face. “Ba, of course I'm still at the library. I’m with Lucia. Yes, Ba, I’m sure. Don’t call her, can?” She flinched as though she’d been slapped– a familiar, instinctual tic. “Sorry, sorry. I’ll study hard, I promise. Byebye.”
She hung up and sighed, leaning backwards. “I think I’ll need to go soon.”
“Soon,” you promised. You were lying flat on the warm grass, arms crossed over your chest like you were about to be lowered into the grave.
“Soon,” Cam repeated. “Fuck, I hate that we have to sneak around like this, sia. I keep thinking that he’s going to jump out at me from any corner, that any random passerby can tell I’m not where I’m supposed to be. It’s like this whole island has eyes, and maybe it does.” As she lay back down beside you on the grass, her oversized t-shirt–Camp Veritas Counsellor 2007–drooped down to reveal the blades of her shoulder, the ones you’d kissed just moments ago. Her voice lowered. “You know ah, the moment we get our A-Levels back, I’m getting out of this city. Australia, London, LA, anywhere. There’s nothing here for me.”
“No leh.” She can’t say that, you thought, pettily, awfully. She had a mansion and a scholarship and a real iPhone. She had the freedom to just leave. To go somewhere without worrying about the money. You had– what? Parents on the edge of divorce and a bankrupt family business? So much for inheritance. So much for a glorious kingdom. Then you had banished the thought from your head. “You have me.”
“I guess I do.” There was a pause. Then she asked, quick and soft and desperate: “Hey, if I asked you to do something, you’d do it, right?”
You reached over, squeezing Cam’s hand tight in yours. The leaves of the banana tree shivered. “I’d do anything for you,” you told her, and it was true. It was really true.
–
Your grades wobbled, then declined, then plummeted, and you found, to your surprise, that you couldn’t care less. You’d made a lot of bad decisions in your life. Try as you might, you couldn’t count Cam among them.
This, then, might have been why you were lying on your bedroom floor, squinting at your Nokia at four AM on a Monday morning. An empty can rolled lazily from your hand, on an epic journey across the glossy faux-marble floor. The house, for once, was still. Even your parents’ screams had petered off about an hour ago. The silver light from the HDB corridor fell through your windows in slits, providing just enough light for you to see the tiny phone screen. With the phone’s small buttons and your clumsy fingers, it took a long time for you to dial the number, but none at all for her to pick up.
“Cam,” you whispered, “Want to see you.”
“Jesus, Yeoh, it’s a school night.” Her voice was gorgeous like this, low and blurred. She only ever used this voice with you: when her raw-bitten lips were pressed against your chest, your ear, your– You shifted. It didn’t help.
“Cam, Cam, Camilla.” Her name rolled off your tongue like a litany, sharp and needy. “Can talk a while or not?”
“Are you drunk again?” she teased you. On the other end, her sheets rustled as she sat up. Although you hadn’t ever been in her house before, you could reconstruct it well enough from the blurry webcam pictures she’d sent you: piles of assessment books, porcelain cross, ceiling fan. And she– beautiful, beautiful, feet kicked up against her headboard, black hair spilling over the flowery sheets, the smile evident in her voice. “Help lah. How–”
“Miss you,” you murmured, by way of an answer.
“I miss you too.”
“Want to meet you. Want to talk to you.” Then, because you were three cans of beer deep and loved making (aforementioned) bad decisions, you charged on: “You and I, we never talk.”
“I know we haven’t met in a while. It’s not my fault I was sick–” Her voice wavered a little, then bounced back to its chirpy cadence. “But we talk all the time, though. We literally talked in class yesterday. I’m talking to you now.” Cam laughed. Her laugh still sounded to you like the first day of the month– every church across the island breaking into bellsong, light and birdlike in the hot blue air. It was cliché, you knew. You didn’t care. Perhaps you were in too deep to care.
“No,” you insisted, but you didn’t really know what you were saying, or why you were saying it at all. “We don’t.”
“We don’t,” she said, then fell silent.
The funny thing about the two of you was this: Over the past few months, you had seen each other stripped bare, worn to the bone with want, more times than you could count. But the both of you knew, all right, that there were things that you couldn’t– that you didn’t say. Things that were secret even to yourselves. The scars on your forearm, the bruises on hers, the way she looked at you when she thought your mind was elsewhere. Those three words, weightier than any false promise you’d whispered against each other’s skin.
“Staircase. Tomorrow. I need to tell you something.”
–
That night, you dreamt of flying.
You weren’t a bird, weren’t yourself– just bodiless, incorporeal, sweeping through the hallways of the college like a ghost. You phased through the auditorium doors to see the loose ceiling tile, the one that had been hanging over your heads like a guillotine all term, topple to the ground in one fantastic crash, sending students fleeing out the doors and into the foyer. You fled with them, but the ceiling fan in the foyer was spinning just a bit too hard, just a bit too fast, and the students screeched to a halt just in time to catch it falling, an angel with clipped wings. It broke in two over the staircase railing, knocking down the tables and the notice boards, pulling down the ceiling with it. Then the chapel was the next to go, the shattering stained glass catching the light in a thousand colours. As you raced up the corridors, the destruction raced up, up, up, alongside you, past the staff room and canteen to the lecture halls, the classroom blocks, the PAC, every single building in the college folding in on itself like so much wet paper. Block J detached itself cleanly from its precarious perch, tipping head-over-heels into the field. You couldn't hear a thing, but you could imagine what it sounded like: the earth itself breaking, rapture the other way around.
Then you crossed the lower quadrangle, where two little blobs of baby blue lay pressed against each other’s bodies. Even without descending, you already knew who they were. It was strange to watch yourself like a movie. When you were younger, you'd thought that this was how God saw the world, top-down, like a player peering at a chessboard. When you’d failed an exam for the first time, you'd cowered under a table-cloth to escape His wrath. You’d stopped believing in a lot of things as you grew up, but you could never kick that instinct to flee, that inescapable, intrinsic fear that the presence of God really was everywhere: under a table, in a school, in every splitting cell.
The boy on the ground turned his face towards the girl, tucking a strand of hair back behind her ear. She smiled infuriatingly, endearingly, back at him.
The school came down on them.
–
Most of the morning was taken up by this awful college event that you’d totally forgotten was happening, all cheering and sweat and thirty-eight degree heat. It was only when the day was coming to a close, then, that Cam and you could sneak away past the computer labs and guitar room into Staircase 6. As you entered, Cam pulled out something from the pocket of her sweater–an admin key–and latched the door behind her with a deliberate click. You blinked. “How’d you get that?”
Cam didn’t say anything, just tucked the key in the pocket of her oversized school hoodie. There was something strange and tense about her, stranger and tenser than she had been all term. She walked up to Level 4, where the sky through the grilled window cut long slices of light onto the concrete floor, and sat down on the top step. You sat down next to her.
She breathed, imperceptibly, in and out, looking straight ahead. The question rushed out in a gasp.
“You told me you’d do anything for me, right? I need you to kill.”
iii. the arrow
And when he has heard her give a loud cry,
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
A silver arrow from his bow he suddenly let fly.
And she’ll never go down to the broom anymore.
-
WONG CHIEN PING
The New Paper, 1998
WONG: To me, family– family always comes first. My kids always come first. You know ah, I’ve got five children. Four boys, one girl.
INTERVIEWER: Wow.
WONG: [Laughter.] Can be a handful at times, lah, but what can you do? As I was saying, right, when I look at my kids, I’m thinking about everything they could be. Lawyers, doctors, maybe even MPs like me. [Laughter.] And I think about how Singapore’ll change in ten years, fifty years, a hundred years. My youngest, Camilla, she’s going to graduate from university in the 2010’s. In a new century. What’s Singapore going to look like then?
INTERVIEWER: Mhm.
WONG: I want to make Singapore a place where my kids can grow up safely. Where they can have a future.
-
For a moment, all you could do was laugh. Then you stopped, of course, but the echo lingered. “Cam?”
Without meeting your eyes, she lifted up her sweater. The first thing you’d thought was that she’d forgotten to bring her house shirt– she was still in uniform. Then you realised that her shirt was unbuttoned at the bottom, and her skirt was unlatched, and there was a solid, unmistakable, swell to her stomach.
The world tilted on its axis. There was no way this was happening. This was a really terrible prank. She’d stolen a prosthetic from Drama. It had to be something, something other than this, something other than a child– You made an inelegant noise, some spluttered form of protest. “Oh.”
“Oh,” Cam agreed, unhappily.
You instinctively reached out to touch her bump, like you’d seen in the soapy Mediacorp dramas Ma always watched. You didn’t feel anything. Wasn’t there supposed to be some sort of parental instinct singing to you; love, love, love all through the water and the flesh and the blood?
“Didn’t you listen in Bio? You can’t feel the heartbeat yet. Not for a while, but not for long, either,” she said. “Not until I can’t hide it anymore.”
“Oh.” You didn't know what else to say. You pulled her into your arms, and she pressed herself against you, body against body. Like stragglers hiding from the cold, except it was thirty-five degrees outside, the air the same dull dead warmth that school air always was. She turned her face away, but you could still see her eyes go glossy, hear her take those shallow breaths. "I'm so sorry."
You couldn't begin to imagine what she was feeling, how much she'd lost in that instant when she knew she was carrying a life that wasn't hers: the scholarship, the law school, the clear American sky she'd never see. The future rushed out before you, a landscape vast and desolate, and you found yourself unable to picture it except for your mother's face, crumpling in on itself, her world imploded in a single moment. Thinking: all you had to do was study hard. We gave everything for you, pinned every hope on you, and this is what we get? Saying: stupid boy. Stupid, stupid boy.
You don’t know how you say what you say next, but you do. “So. You want to- to kill it?” It, it, it. Still an it.
Cam laughs wetly. “Almost there. Kill–” the pronoun trips off her tongue– “me.”
-
ST CECILIA’S JUNIOR COLLEGE
CAMERA 235
12:28:03
YEOH shoots to his feet. WONG does too.
YEOH: You can’t just say that–
WONG: Just shut up for a moment and let me explain, can?
YEOH shuts up.
WONG [with a wince]: Sorry. But you know my father lah. You know how he is. He’ll have my head.
YEOH: What’s the worst he can do ah? Pack you off to some boarding school overseas?
WONG takes a sharp breath.
WONG: It’s not about that. It’s about the fact that he’s worked his whole life for this position. If he ever finds out what we’ve done, his career jialat liao, just like that. Every single day for the rest of my life he’ll look at me and only see a disappointment of a daughter, a stain on the family name. I snuck around and I lied to his face and I bribed my friends for alibis but at least for seventeen years he didn’t know better. He called me his princess, his golden girl, and he meant it. Now all of that’s gone. Or will be gone, I guess. I don’t know how I’d live without that.
YEOH: He doesn’t need to know. You understand that, right? There are ways to get rid of it, I mean, there has to be some way–
WONG: That’s the fucking problem!
WONG turns away, stifling a sob.
WONG: Before I formed you in the womb I knew you–
YEOH [instinctively]: And before you were born I consecrated you.
WONG: This is our child, Yeoh. This is a human life.
YEOH: Better any other life than yours.
A long pause.
WONG [overlapping]: You can’t mean that.
YEOH [overlapping]: I can. I do.
YEOH ascends one step. YEOH stares at WONG as if he’s daring her to say something, until WONG begins to cry. YEOH freezes for a split-second. He reaches for WONG, whispers something inaudible in her ear. WONG reaches up and kisses him in response. After a while, WONG extricates herself with an expression that seems almost like a smile. She walks over to the railing and leans against it. YEOH follows her.
WONG: I’ve always told myself I want to be a good person, but maybe the real truth is that I didn’t want my dad to figure out otherwise. Maybe all of that hiding was for nothing. Maybe it was only a matter of time before he found out who I really was, deep down: rotten. Impure. That woman Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess.
WONG: And, sure, I can sneak away to a clinic, God knows we can afford it, I can do whatever it is girls do in movies with the clothes hanger or the back alley. But if my life after this is all an act– what’s the point, if I already know where I’m going when I go? I’m tired of keeping secrets, trying so hard to keep this part of my life from him– when one day I’ll slip again, I know it, and the whole house of cards is going to come crashing down. If I die now, all my sins are going to die with me. He’d be happy, and I’d be loved, and you–
WONG [almost envious]: You’d never understand.
YEOH tilts his head downwards, fringe falling over his eyes. He starts to say something, then stops.
YEOH: I do understand.
-
Like so many other people you knew, you never meant to go to St Cecilia’s. Everyone said you could make Temasek, maybe Victoria. Tampines at the very least. And you'd believed it, too, until you didn't anymore, until the college you were going to became the least of your worries.
When did you stop believing you’d ever have a future? It wasn’t a single moment so much as it was a series of them: stepping over the yellow line when waiting for the train, trying to find footholds in the railing of every overhead bridge, your eyes always flicking to every exit you could take. The words you said under your breath in prayers weren’t Our Father who art in heaven but a litany only you knew: I don’t have to do this. I don’t have to keep going. I can leave any time I want. For as long as you remembered, you’d already been halfway gone.
It was a comforting hypothetical, until it wasn’t, and suddenly you found yourself on the bathroom floor at three in the morning, a week before prelims. The cool white light bounced off the tiles, the mirror-cabinet above the sink hung ajar like it was beckoning you, and you were so, so exhausted. Why were you trying so hard? What were you even studying for? No matter what college you went to, the future would always be blurry and grey. Test after test after test, then onto– what, exactly? You’d never been able to imagine yourself past sixteen. You’d never be able to imagine yourself more than half-alive.
You’d tell the psychiatrist later that you didn’t remember the rest of the night, but that wasn’t true. You remembered the pills. You remembered the blinding, fluorescent pain– and through the pain, your father’s face, your mother’s voice. 911 on the cordless telephone. The ambulance. Changi Hospital. When you’d finally woken, there was a split-second where all you could see was white, and all that came to you was a rush of relief– until the white coalesced into white walls and white sheets and a ceiling spotted with air-conditioning vents, and you could almost laugh at yourself for expecting anything different. If you’d succeeded, anyway, it wouldn’t have been white.
So you failed both at dying and at Chemistry. That was fine. You took the two points off for affiliation. You took the 5AM bus. You took the desk at the corner of 1T26. That was fine too. You swore you didn't care about any of it, and you didn’t, you didn’t. Then Cam happened, and suddenly you did.
But you couldn’t shake the memory of that night in the hospital, your parents whispering next to your bed when they thought you were asleep. For once in their life, they weren’t at each other's throats. What’s wrong with him? your father demanded in Chinese, betrayal running like cracks through his voice. I don’t understand why he would do this to me. In response, your mother only sighed. Stupid boy. Stupid, stupid boy.
-
The story came uneasily to you, like writing an exam for a subject that you hadn’t touched in months. Once you were done, Cam turned to you. If it was anyone else, they would’ve said something benign, something untrue, like, I’m sorry or I’m glad you didn’t die. Instead, because this was the Cam you’d always known, she asked, “How much did it hurt?”
You thought about the answer for a long while. Then you said, “If you do it right, only for a moment.”
She laughed, then, throwing her head back with the force of it. For a brief, blasphemous second, you’d never seen anyone so beautiful: fair as the moon, clear as the sun, terrible as an army all set in battle array. It was the kind of beauty wars were fought over, the kind any man would get on his knees for– to be knighted, to adore. And she’d chosen you (you of all people!) The fact made you dizzy with its weight.
“So.” Her voice brought you back to reality. It was casual as anything, like she was discussing essay outlines or Physics solutions instead of– whatever this was. “I was thinking about the stairs, right? If you pushed me, hard enough, it’d look like an accident…”
Below you, the concrete staircase looped in on itself, down, down, down. Tall, yes, but only three stories, not enough to kill. Not if you wanted to be sure. When you told her as much, she frowned, swearing in Chinese under her breath. The two of you bounced around a few more ideas, but none of them seemed to stick. You fell silent, tapping out meaningless rhythms on the rails, as you considered what you’d been dancing around since she’d asked you to kill. A competition-grade air pistol, a shot at just the right angle– it’d be, well, if not easy, at least simple. Less up to the fates.
There was only one problem with that plan– it’d no longer be an accident. There’d be police, lawyers, fuck, maybe even journalists. Your juniors would whisper about it for camps and camps to come. You couldn’t feign innocence with a shotgun, couldn’t frame the act of pulling the trigger as anything but what it was.
So, fine, they’d hate you. They’d shred all your certificates, put your photos face-down, pretend they’d never had a son. So what? Boy hung from his bedroom fan, boy hung from the prison beam. Whatever formula you used, the result was still the same: you’d be gone, and they’d be free. Besides, there wasn’t any way St. Cecilia's reputation could possibly be worse than it already was.
“I think–” you started, suddenly, “I might have a solution.”
iv. the grave
And he has dug a grave both long and deep,
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
He has buried his sister with their babe all at her feet.
And they’ll never go down to the broom anymore.
INTERVIEWER: You didn’t notice the keys were gone meh? I thought you were the captain.
THOMAS: The captain doesn’t carry the keys, sir. Um, he was the armourer, sir, he’s always had them. Since the beginning of the year.
INTERVIEWER: So you weren’t aware that Yeoh and Wong entered the armoury at 12.39 PM and retrieved a [pages ruffling] .25-calibre Baikal air pistol.
THOMAS: Of course the alarm went off, lah. To notify the teacher-in-charge. But he told Miss Judith he forgot his water bottle inside, and she was in a hurry anyway–
INTERVIEWER: She believed him?
THOMAS: Miss Judith’s always had a soft spot for him, sir. And we all trusted him. That’s why we made him the armourer. Of course he was quiet, um, but in a calm, reliable sort of way. Out of all of us we thought he’d be the last person to do what he did. [laughter] I trusted him– oh god–
INTERVIEWER: Calm down, boy.
THOMAS: Sorry, sorry.
INTERVIEWER: Can continue or not?
THOMAS: Okay. Can. Go on.
-
Laughing the loud and triumphant laugh of the already dead, you and Cam crashed back into the staircase landing like you’d done so many times before. How many giggling, short-lived couples had this place borne witness to? The seniors who’d winked and nudged you in its direction must’ve learnt it from their seniors, who’d learnt it from their seniors in turn– back and back it went, a story in two-year cycles, mutating each time it was told. A haunting, a myth, a folk song.
Cam, leaning back against the wall, ran her hands along the sleek pistol. She looked, still, beautiful: even after the run, after the tears, despite the baby. If you hadn’t seen her before, you couldn’t have guessed that she was the kind of girl who would ever cry. “It’s like I’m a spy.”
“I mean, we kind of are, right? People are going to start getting suspicious soon. We should do this quickly.” You shot a furtive glance through the window in the door. The corridor, as always, was dark– the lightbulb had been busted for a long, long time.
“Soon. Won’t take long, right? Just–” She aimed the gun at her temple, mimed pulling the trigger with a grin. Miss Judith had trained you well– your first instinct was one of sheer panic, of tripping over your own feet in your haste to rip it from her hands– but you didn’t do any of that.
Instead you only swallowed, shifted. “Just like that I don’t think is strong enough. It’s not real ah. Can’t do that much damage. Um, can I–”
Downstairs, someone shouted. Cam shoved the gun in her hoodie pocket. You stopped breathing. Something clunky was being dragged across the floor, chatter following in its wake. But no one had opened the door yet, so when the clamour finally died down, Cam removed the gun from her hoodie and passed it to you.
In your hands, the pistol was cool, familiar, deadly in a way it had never been before. It reminded you that despite any pretences to precision or skill or patience, this sport was, at its roots, a killing sport– drawing blood and blood and blood again.
You’d only been a shooter for a few months. You'd always been a chess club kid in secondary school, and in St Cecilia, you’d even applied for Strat Games before you walked into the interview, saw an old classmate, and walked right back out. At least shooting was a singular sport. No emotions involved, no one to fool, no one to ask you what happened.
About a week or two past orientation, you’d hit bullseye for the first time. You didn’t notice, at first, still reeling from the ricochet, until Greg shouted and the club gathered round and you saw that tiny wound on that tiny target, fifty whole metres away. In another few weeks, it’d become routine, but you never forgot that first time: the breath held, the trigger pulled, the bullet sailing through the air. The gun like an extension of yourself.
She must’ve sensed something had shifted, because she hurried out, “If you don’t want to do this, just say, OK? If you really want, we can– I don’t know, figure something out.”
You’d do anything for me, right?
Okay, so maybe you were helping her because you knew what it was like to be so tired that you wanted nothing more than to be gone. You knew what it was like to fail– your mother’s eyes avoiding yours, the flat stinking with shame, cut fruits slid under your door like an apology– and you knew, you knew, out of all the people in the world she didn’t deserve it.
But maybe you were helping her because you’d never known anyone who could go to their grave with a smile quite like her, brilliant and foolish and brave. It was your hand brushing hers under the desk and her laughing with her head thrown back and the two of you sharing earphones on the bus. It was the fact that in life or death, you’d never wanted anyone but her.
So, fine. The moment you’d opened your eyes in a hospital bed, you couldn’t find it in you to care about Heaven or Hell or anything in-between, couldn’t care about a God who’d turned his back to you as you were bleeding out. But even the staunchest of atheists could admit that it was nice to believe that you’d been brought back for a reason; that more than any grade you’d ever gotten or any target you’d ever hit, the greatest achievement of your time in college– okay, your entire short and sorry life– was this: to love her, to kill her, to be loved, impossibly, in return.
You kissed her like it was an answer. Maybe it was. You’d never know.
–
Just like you’d predicted, it wasn’t easy, but it was at least simple:
The muzzle dimpling her button-down shirt. Her heart beneath the gun, frantic and wild. Her smile– smug, inscrutable, like she was getting away with some great and treacherous heist, like she’d stolen something you’d never notice missing until it was too late. Coloured-in Converse perched on the edge of the top step.
A moment to aim. Less to fire.
A crack. A body arching backwards, falling, falling, falling. A body against concrete. A body with its neck all wrong– no, that wasn’t right. Two bodies. One body. But what was the difference, really?
Somewhere, someone was singing.
–
I got tired of waiting
Wonderin' if you were ever comin' around
There was a boy at the edge of the canteen, that isolated corner where the cafe used to be before it went bankrupt and left neon-yellow wreckage in its wake. I could just barely make him out through the other kids who’d swarmed like moths around the speakers we’d looted from the grandstand, a do-it-yourself rave all our own. We were seventeen and free from Promos and knew every word to every song on the radio and there was nothing in this world to worry about, nothing at all.
My faith in you was fading
When I met you on the outskirts of town
My voice faltered as I tried to peer over the heads, earning myself a poke in the ribs from Joshua from 28. The boy was tall, in uniform–on the one day we were allowed to wear house shirts? He’d be sweltering hot. He stared off at something I couldn’t see, collapsing on a bench– and the moment I saw the fringe, I knew who you were.
“Xavier!”
I painfully extracted myself from the knot of students, making my way over to you. You didn’t seem to notice me, didn’t seem to care. There was something red on your face, probably some failed attempt at Go SC! It seemed like the sports leaders had gotten to you. Funny. I’d never thought you were the type.
You turned to me.
“Xavier?”
I broke into a run.
I keep waiting for you, but you never come
Your hands were shaking, your eyes wet. There was red on your shirt, red on the corner of your lips. Shit, there was so much of it. “Are you hurt?” My brain was going at thirty miles a second. “What happened? Did you– are you–”
“I’m fine. I just–” You broke off. Slowly and carefully, like you were explaining something to a very small child, you forced out two more words: “--lost something.”
I cast desperate glances around the canteen. There was something wrong here, something I couldn’t even begin to comprehend, like standing on the edge of a cliff with a sea below you. “It’s OK, bro,” I muttered out, stupidly, awkwardly, “You’ll get it back, whatever it is. Um. You need me check with the GO? Call teacher?”
Through the thin walls, a scream rang out. The singing died a quick, violent death, but the music, still, played on.
I talked to your dad, go pick out a white dress
“No,” you said. “No need.”
It's a love story, baby, just say yes.
-
After everything– after the police, after the trial, after the drop– Wong’s father swept in and gave half of St Cecilia’s a dizzyingly long contract that boiled down to Don’t tell a soul this happened or I’ll kill you myself. Of course I’d signed it. What else could I have done?
In the years to come, I’d want to tell you about so many things: The times we’d instinctively turn in our seats to ask you about homework or classes or anything at all. The two empty desks we’d dodged for the rest of the year, even after we switched classrooms, even after they struck out your names from the class list— as if long before that October afternoon, you were already gone. The shiny, upgraded surveillance system, a threat, an eulogy, as much acknowledgement as they’d ever give you.
Now, though, I want to tell you about the staircase.
When I stepped back into St Cecilia’s for the first time in ten years, so much of it remained the same. The same old coat of paint, the same wobbly tables, the same starched blue uniform. The only thing that’s changed is the kids– how young they seem now, how they call me Mr Thomas when I’m listening and ‘cher when they think I’m not. In the spaces between classes, when the halls are full of chatter, I’ll overhear snippets of their conversation: I’m yellowslipping for Taylor tickets or Walao, my stats really CMI, like this how can pass or Wah, are you going to take her to Staircase 6? That last one’ll be invariably followed by a wink, a nudge, and loud, boisterous laughter, the kind that only teenage boys can summon up. I can’t blame them much for it. Weren’t we once seventeen too?
The staircase isn’t particularly hard to avoid. For the kids, it’s more of a novelty than anything– a quick selfie at the door during Orientation, then it’s out of their minds for the rest of the year, too far from the classrooms to be of any use. Soon enough, though, exam season rolled around, and I was on my first night study shift of the year. I didn’t have to do much– just make sure nobody escaped the well-lit confines of the library, which was just as crowded and chilly as I’d remembered it. But the campus seemed different after dusk, every flickering light a blinking eye, and I felt myself being led down the concrete corridors, past the office and the hall and the lockers, past the bulb they’d never fixed, and I unlocked the door.
It looked, obviously, like any other staircase in the school. The floor was grey, the walls white. I went up to the top floor and to the railing, the security camera swivelling as I walked. Over the railing, the stairs went down, down, down. Despite my best efforts, I couldn’t find any part of it that suggested your presence. No pale figure, no blur of light. I felt, suddenly, foolish– what answer was I seeking? Even if you’d lingered, even if you’d somehow escaped where I’d most feared you were, this was the last place you’d want to stay.
Maybe I would never really understand why you did what you did. But I’d known you, even still, and so I could say this with certainty– if there was any justice in this world, you weren’t here. You were somewhere edgy kids couldn’t gawk and giggle at you, somewhere the camera couldn’t find you. Somewhere only you knew.
An engine growled beyond the gates. Sweet and heavy in the air, the scent of flowers lingered.
I closed my eyes.
-
And when he has come to his father’s own hall,
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
There was music and dancing, there were minstrels and all.
And he’ll never go down to the broom anymore.
O the ladies, they asked him, “What makes you in such pain?”
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
“I’ve lost a sheath and knife I will never find again
And I’ll never go down to the broom anymore.”
“All the ships of your father’s a-sailing on the sea
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
Can bring as good a sheath and knife unto thee.”
But they’ll never go down to the broom anymore.
“All the ships of my father’s a-sailing on the sea
The broom blooms bonny, the broom blooms fair
Can never ever bring such a sheath and knife to me
For we’ll never go down to the broom anymore.”
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"I would, but I always forget all about them when you're here." The bright pink mech curls up contentedly into Rung's lap. His head is not as empty as he allows people to think it is, and Rung in particular knows this. But it's nice when Minimus can pretend that he has no worries.
Expensive liquor glitters in a fine stemmed glass, as beautiful and delicate as the charoite mech holding it.
Rung lifts his veil with a long-fingered servo, the corners of his painted lips ever so slightly downturned. The toys were getting unruly again, were they?
A few whispered words and a firm touch would set the display models back in order.
“What’s all this fuss about, hm? Come, dear, my lap is empty. Tell me your woes.”
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More things for Chaos Continuum:
—
Character Info:
—
Getaway (On, Unknown): It/It’s/Itself.
Rung (On, Universe 1): They/Them/Themself.
Red Alert (On, Unknown): He/Him/Himself, She/Her/Herself, They/Them/Themself.
Astrotrain (Off, Universe 1): They/Them/Themself.
First Aid (On, Unknown): It/It’s/Itself, He/Him/Himself.
Ambulon (On, Universe 2): They/Them/Themself.
Pharma (On, Unknown): He/Him/Himself, She/Her/Herself.
—
Onslaught (On, Unknown): No pronouns.
Blast-Off (On, Universe 1): They/Them/Themself.
Vortex (On, Universe 2): Any/All pronouns.
Brawl (On, Unknown): It/It’s/Itself.
Swindle (On, Universe 1): He/Him/Himself, FtM.
—
Info:
•|Surprisingly, despite being in separate Universes, it’s pretty easy for everyone to still communicate to each other- which everyone does, especially split-up couples.|•
•|There are some SG Autobots that actually don’t want to help regular Megs & SG Optimus- such as SG Getaway, who actually joins the regular Autobots to help them instead, and it’s not the only one.|•
—
Character Info:
Swerve (On, Unknown): They/Them/Themself.
Ostaros (On, Unknown): He/Him/Himself, They/Them/Themself.
Skybyte (On, Universe 1): Any pronouns.
Skyfire/Jetfire (Jetfire is the preferred name, while Skyfire is a name that close friends can use. On, Universe 2): No pronouns.
Knockout (On, Unknown): Any pronouns.
Breakdown (On, Universe 1): It/It’s/Itself.
Nightbeat (On, Unknown): They/Them/Themself.
—
Info:
•|Jetfire is a Decepticon, having decided to stay because of Starscream after getting brought out of some ice, but typically hangs out with the Autobots and assists them- Starscream (and other ‘Cons) have failed to notice.|•
•|Tarantulas doesn’t care much of what’s going on, and instead, multitasks with trying to find Ostaros, and just doing science things with Nightshade.|•
•|Rung is still Primus here, and everyone has always known that fact.|•
Tags: @aecholapis @novafire-is-thinking @ivycorp @swede-fish
#Anubis’s Chatter#Cyber’s Chatter#Transformers: Chaos Continuum#TFCC#Characters#Save Tag#Still not gonna tag everyone-#Literally every single character is in it#Well. Most.#Maybe not characters that are just there for a few moments#Or at least a few
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SG DJD Laywers yess!
Now I'm gonna remind you, this idea came about at two am. And also all i know about the legal process is from us-gov/history classes and soap opera-esque books/shows. So basically nothing.
#riot rambles#maccadam#transformers#mtmte tarn#sg tarn#decepticon justice division#sg tyrest#mtmte tyrest#mtmte getaway#I've been thinking about the sg versions of the autobot antagonists lately#mtmte sunder#mtmte Froid#sg froid#sg rung#mtmte rung#several typos#word vomit#typically i post a little 2-5 minute blurb of whatever just so i know what time i went to sleep#sometimes i type up long ass ideas like this instead#i remember one time i ended up writing a tangent essay for two hours
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asdklasjdlsks maximum late trip update post bc i completely forgot about it in my drafts. 💀 i was too occupied with grinding mapes events for cosmetic items aha.
better late than never i guess??
anyway, here's my long-awaited post about my short 5D4N trip in taiwan with luwi and shoron!! i decided to condense all five days into one post this time bc i didn't take a lot of good pics. :/
DAY 1: TAIPEI
nanjichang night market (南機場夜市) - highly recommended!!!
sumikko gurashi themed 7-ELEVEN (角落小夥伴主題商店)
first thing we did when we landed was to run to a 7-ELEVEN to grab a small bite. i got a strawberry cream sandwich with a mixed fruit/vegetable juice and the sandwich was so tasty... nothing special but so homely. we also picked up an easycard so that we could ride the mrt and omg the designs were all so cute?? why can't we have cute transport passes in sg too!!
after checking into our hostel, we went to nanjichang night market for dinner. i was told that this was the night market that locals would go to, and to avoid shilin night market bc it was more of a tourist attraction/trap?? no regrets tho. the food was great and so affordable. i got deep fried squid (coated with some kind of peppery and salty seasoning powder and spoilers: pretty sure all the fried stuff i ate in taiwan had the same seasoning LOL), shrimp dumplings, and a fermented vegetable baked pepper bun. waaa,, even though i ordered a shrimp dumpling, there was meat in it!! and i cannot handle the taste of meat in taiwan. it's too strong...
i also got an osmanthus tea from one of the bbt stalls there and it was the best bbt i had in taiwan?? unfortunately i didn't catch the name of the stall but there was a catto sitting on the counter!!
ended our day with a trip to the sumikko gurashi 7-ELEVEN. the decor was so cute!! i was hoping there'd be some exclusive merch being sold but there weren't any. idk why but i was determined to find some merch and i kept going into every 7-ELEVEN that was in my sights LMAO spoilers i didn't find any exclusive merch in the end. disappoint :-(
thoughts about the accommodation:
we stayed at the beimen wow poshtel for most of the days. it was reasonably close to the taipei main station and super affordable (~$20 per night) but idk it was giving me major School Camp flashbacks. we got the top bunks so every time we forgot something on the bed, we had to climb up the ladder to get it. it was inconvenient and i found out that i'm terrible at going down ladders bc i just jump off from the highest rung of the ladder and i gave myself quite a few bruises from that.
the rooms were also very tiny. we couldn't all have our luggages open at the same time so we'd go down to the communal area in the basement every day just to move things around. i wouldn't say that this was a massive con bc we got used to this arrangement rly fast. the real bAD THING is that we can't leave our things lying around in the room without locking them up in the lockers (also very smol). i have to clean and dry all my toiletries every day before i go to bed and before i leave. one time i accidentally left my clean clothes bag out and i woke up to find a single dirty sock inside. >:/
but other than that it felt pretty safe?? and i did enjoy our nightly hangouts at the communal area for supper or to plan our next-day activities.
would like to try out a capsule hotel next time tho. like one of those space pod thingies.
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DAY 2: SHIFEN AND JIUFEN
shifen old streets
shifen waterfall
jiufen old streets
zhang ji traditional fishballs
a gan yi taro ball - it's nice but nothing special?? if the queue is too long then don't bother with it
jioufen teahouse - the queue for the famous a-mei teahouse was insane so we decided to try another teahouse
we spent the second day at shifen and jiufen!! took a train to shifen in the morning. walked along the streets and got some street food for lunch. i got brown sugar mochi paw-shaped pancake pops from a stall and i personally wouldn't recommend that flavour bc it was so dry. we also ate some taiwanese-style takoyaki. i watched luwi and shoron make their sky lantern (i couldn't do it bc it's ghost month and my mum said no :/) and release it into the sky. luwi added some good wishes for chi. stay 白 uwu
after walking around for a bit, we ran out of things to do and still had plenty of time to spare so we decided to rent electric scooters to see the shifen waterfall. i was shooketh that they didn't require any license?? and the shop didn't provide any helmets or safety gear?? so sus... i didn't dare to ride one of my own so i pillion'ed behind luwi.
the waterfall was a distance away from the parking lot and so the rest of our journey had to be on foot. i was sweating so much and thought i was gonna hallucinate from the heat and strong sun rays. somehow we made it to the viewing deck. i was expecting to be a lot closer to the waterfall but eh the view was pretty nonetheless. got chi and cha out so they could take in the sights too!!
we went through another round of suffering to get back to the parking lot and i, after seeing shoron ride the scooter so breezily on the way there from the old streets, decided to try riding one for the funsies. despite having barely any bicycle experience. as you would expect, that was Not A Good Idea bc i didn't even move 3 metres when i lost control, panicked, revved the accelerator thinking it was the brake (both were on the handles so idk i'm not a driver), went up the curb and fell over. ok but i fell off on purpose bc i thought the scooter was moving on its own (and not bc i mixed up the brake and accelerator) and my only way of survival was to just get off the bike before i crash into something or something crashed into me. surprisingly the only injuries i sustained were some bruises on my upper thigh that i landed on, and pinpoint scratches on my hand that i got from breaking my fall. i was very lucky that nothing was broken or bleeding. well, that was An Experience...... that i wouldn't want to go through again. anyway i'm banned from driving after this~~~
↓ btw this photo was taken moments before the disaster. apparently a lot of foreigners who rented scooters there also crashed their bikes. now that i look at it, our scooter had a chunk of it broken off at the front. ummm,,, what is safety
our next stop was jiufen!! jiufen was sooo scenic and beautiful with all the lanterns and slopes but climbing up and down all those narrow and steep stairs just to get to the main street was just deaTH. 💀 i have no idea how the elderly can do it.
had an early dinner at the zhang ji traditional fishballs. got a mixed fishballs noodle soup and it was so tasty!! i actually like the handmade fishballs with meat inside. they were sweet.
when it got dark, we visited one of the teahouses there to have a tea experience. the staff taught us how to brew the tea and we did the rest ourselves after that. it was fun!! we also ordered an oolong tea cheesecake to share and it was definitely more cheesecake than oolong but i'm not complaining.
we stayed at the jiufen kite museum for a night and i was so glad to finally have a room to ourselves. it was a good thing we didn't bring our luggages with us bc there were no elevators there!! it was all just stairs.
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DAY 3: JIUFEN AND BACK TO TAIPEI
jioufen breakfast restaurant
D+AF女鞋 南西旗艦店 - super nice and trendy shoes!!
kura sushi
ximending
the nighttime view in jiufen was amazing with all the lanterns lit up but bc it was so crowded and you absolutely could not get a shot without someone blocking the view, we decided to come back the next day at 6 am just to take pics. and also to eat a traditional taiwanese breakfast!! i love the soy milk and youtiao combination. 💕
when we were back at the taipei main station, i chanced upon this bakery (semeur 聖娜) that was holding a kanahei's small animals collab?? if you spend a certain amount, you can buy merch at a cheaper price. so ofc i picked out four breads just so i could get a cute cooler bag with usagi and piske on it~ kinda regretted not getting the handheld fan too. it would've been so useful bc it was sO HOT. btw i ended up bringing one bread back to singapore (take note of this info for later) bc i couldn't finish all of them LMAO. the breads were all tasty but i particularly liked the melon bun.
day 3 was our Buy The Things We Have To Buy day. luwi went to check out a motorcycle gear shop by herself while shoron and i explored the zhongshan area. i got the $370 wall clock that my colleague rly wanted from a department store there. we also went to this shoe shop that shoron wanted to check out and like,, i wasn't planning on buying any shoes but man,,, they were all so nice. you can call them clown shoes for all you like but i just rly like the wide, squarish toe box designs. i only bought a pair in the end but aaa i would've liked to get more if i didn't have space/weight concerns.
bought osmanthus oolong tea from yi pin tea (一品茶苑) and it was mid. very strong tea flavour tho.
we had kura sushi for lunch and it was amazing. the gacha system was fun and the food was great and i got to eat my beloved taiyaki for dessert. it was cheaper than any sushi place in sg too.
my stomach was acting up when we went to ximending in the evening so i didn't get anything to eat or drink there but i did try a bit of the vermicelli noodles from ay-chung flour-rice noodle and it was pretty good. peppery and kinda tastes like shark fin soup. aside from food, we didn't rly check out any of the shops there. i did go to a stationary store on my own and it was a feast for the eyes!!
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DAY 4:
wei chuan pushin ranch - there were capybaras and alpacas!! first time seeing them in person
mazesoba restaurant (東京油組總本店 台北華山組)
1789 café pâtisserie
zhongxiao dunhua shopping district (Air Space, Le Gusta, The Ladywore)
kanahei's small animals themed 7-ELEVEN (卡娜赫拉主題商店)
li yuan dumpling restaurant
braved the scorching heat for the alpacas and sheep and capybaras!! i touched an alpaca and a capybara for the first time and i can confirm that the former was floofy like a cloud while the latter felt like bristles of a broom.
the pig race and sheep race were being held when we were there so we got to watch. the ones that i bet on didn't win.
bc the ranch was located in a more rural part of taipei and buses were infrequent, we only had two?? hours to look around. so we rented some kind of a buggy. shoron was the designated driver for this bUT i felt like i could drive it too cuz it was kinda slow yknow.
for lunch we had mazesoba!! super good but could do with less salt.
afterwards we went on a hunt for a cafe to chill at bc it was raining so hard. had to give matcha one a miss bc we didn't have a reservation and there were no tables for us (except the VIP rooms which were $$$). eventually we found this cafe called 1789 café pâtisserie that was relatively empty and hid there until the rain subsided. we shared two eclairs (salted caramel and mango passionfruit) and a raspberry rose st. honore (crispy mille feuille pastry topped with whipped cream and raspberry jam??). they gave us two macarons on the house, and one of them was wasabi-flavoured. the taste was... interesting.
when the rain stopped, we went to shop for clothes around the zhongxiao dunhua shopping district. there were a lot of blogshop-like clothing stores in that area. i got clothes from le gusta and the ladywore~
our last dinner was at a xiaolongbao restaurant. i was glad that they had prawn xiaolongbaos!! that didn't have surprise meat in them. they were not bad. also got a custard panda bun for dessert~
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DAY 5:
luwi and shoron went out to dabao breakfast at yong he soy milk (永和豆漿) in ximending while i continued to laze around in bed~~~ they brought soy milk and youtiao back for me!! i miss the combination. the youtiao from yong he was so light and airy on the inside and so crisp on the outside aaaa the doughy and oily ones in sg can't compare.
after breakfast we packed up and left for the airport. i wanted to try the oden at 7-ELEVEN before i leave but we couldn't find one at the departure hall. maximum sadge. in the end, we settled for a fast-food chicken place after we checked in and i got a yoghurt green tea (which tasted like yakult btw) and sweet potato fries.
i wanted to be productive on the flight back home (and i wasn't rly that sleepy anyway) so i played 999 on my 3ds and watched a 2-hour movie. finally watched maquia and it made me cry lmao. tearjerkers are the best kinds of movies for a flight imo!!
oh oh i sat next to an elderly couple on the plane and they were so nice and friendly. the lady kept checking to see if i needed to use the toilet bc i got the window seat. 🥺 we also chatted a bit while waiting to get off the plane.
we were planning to have dinner at mos burg after we landed in sg but there was a luggage delay and by the time we all got our luggages, it was almost time for mos burg to close. aha but fortunately i still had one bread left. so that was my dinner, along with the milo and oreos that the staffs were handing out to apologise for the delay.
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SG!Rung: Did you like the food I made?
SG!Comet: No, not really.
SG!Rung: But I put my heart and soul into it!
SG!Comet: No wonder it tastes so cold and dead.
#transformers#transformers mtmte#idw mtmte#tf mtmte#mtmte#ship bonding?#maccadam#mtmte rung#tf rung#rung#mtmte comet#tf comet#comet
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thật là một buổi tối diệu kì. tiếng hò reo vẫn vang theo bên tai mình cả trên đường về.
âm thanh, ánh sáng, không gian 3, 4, 5 hay n chiều (nếu có) mình đã muốn tận hưởng nó, mà không muốn chụp hay quay nhiều. nhưng thi thoảng vẫn tham lam giơ máy lên.
Tùng và Trang duyên dáng như vẫn luôn.
có gì đó mới với mình về bài “chuồn chuồn”, “con chim trên cành hát về tình yêu” hình như vỡ ra, mình sẽ nghiền lại mới được. “hà nội ở sài gòn” được live thật sống làm sao, ước mơ được sống với bài này của tui từ thời bỏ lỡ “hà nội, ngày… tháng… năm” đã được an ủi rồi.
2 người lại còn ngọt lịm và mượt mà. “thư cho anh” hôm nay thật mới và thật tình “không còn cô đơn”.
tới Cá Hồi Hoang xuất hiện như nhảy ra từ youtube mình vẫn xem. ước mơ được sống với Cá Hồi Hoang của tui từ thời bỏ lỡ “những thành phố mơ màng” SG thời hè năm ngoái đã được an ủi rồi. ôi anh Minh nhìn thật gần và thật quen, anh Minh và tiếng guitar thì đỉnhhh, anh Luke thì giọng mãi đỉnhhh. rồi còn ai đẹp trai thế vậy mà hơi giống anh Đạt có phải anh Đạt khônggg. mình phải điều tra thêm mới được. mình cũng phải nghiền thêm nhạc của Cá nữa nữa ạ
tới Hoàng Dũng thì ôi đẹp trai thiệt (phải tới khi đám đông khen và Hoàng Dũng nhắc lại qua mic thì mình mới ngỡ ra đúng định nghĩa rồi. nói chiện tâm tình giọng nghe nặng nặng như ng bnhthng bị cảm mình tưởng bạn bị cảm nhưng oh no bạn live đỉnh quá, chắc giọng nói đó là của ng khng bnhthng lắm đó:)) bạn hát mấy bài tâm tình lắm mình chưa thuộc lời để mình cũng sẽ nghiền thêm nhé ạ
tới Ngọt thì ôi vẫn mãi đỉnh ạ. bài mới và bài cũ vẫn đỉnh vẫn cực Ngọt. Thắng duyên dáng quá lúc thì biến hình thành ban nhạc ra quốc tế lúc thì biến thành ban nhạc quốc tế nhưng chưa ra nước ngoài lần nào :)) Nam Anh - từ bờ vai trở lên mái đầu là những gì chúng tôi nhìn thấy thật là mê ạ
dàn nhạc và nhạc trưởng đỉnh ạ. ca sĩ và chúng tôi yêu các bạn.
có lúc mình nhắm mắt lại theo âm nhạc lúc sau lại bất chợt mở ra sợ đôi mắt mình sẽ bỏ lỡ điều gì.
những lúc chuyển set sân khấu nghỉ, ánh sáng và bóng tối thật lung linh diệu kỳ, ánh đèn chiếu trên trần nhà nữa 🥹
mình thấy chỗ bạn đạo diễn đứng, đôi khi ngoái lại xem bạn ý đang làm gì thế nào, có gợi mở chút nguyên do sao để tạo ra được một không gian diệu kì thế này không. nhưng mình cũng nhìn thấy nhiều người đeo thẻ Cam lắm, mình thấy các hàng ghế dán số thứ tự bên cạnh các khu ghế không dán số vì không trong danh sách bán, 2 màn hình lớn thay đổi góc quay liên tục…, các bạn là một đội to lớn, liên kết nhà tài trợ, ca sĩ?, kh��n giả, liên kết đối tác hậu kì?… mình không rõ nhưng rõ một điều là phải có một vạn khâu. mình còn thấy đồ đạc quay phim lỉnh kỉnh, thấy một chú phụ trách đẩy giá máy quay trên ray trượt ngay khu mình đứng. cứ có nhạc là chú đẩy, đẩy qua đẩy lại, nhanh chậm dừng lại theo nhạc(?). chú trông đứng tuổi rồi, mình bắt đầu để ý tới chú ở set Hoàng Dũng và tự nghĩ chắc chú cũng hân hoan trái tim rung rinh chứ nhỉ, công việc ấy có thể chán nhưng các bài nhạc thay đổi mà, nhạc Hoàng Dũng gần gũi với các cô chú mà. 4 set nhạc còn lại có thể không gần gũi chú mấy, chú không nghe rõ lời… nhưng giai điệu thì tuyệt vời mà. nhưng sao mặt chú nghiêm nghị không cảm xúc quá, vì chú đang tập trung sao.
ngày gì mà nhìn ai cũng như hoàng tử bé, chú kia thì như ba của 1 hoàng tử bé, cô hoạ mi thì có như cô hoa hồng không nhỉ?
túm lại là một đêm mãi mãi, một ngày mãi mãi như tên bài hát của Tùng, Trang, mai mai mãi mãi như tên show.
cảm ơn ✨
nơi nhân gian sum vầy
em có nghe thấy
tiếng réo gọi tâm hồn
ngân vang đâu đây
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Berarti gk mutung,.. tpi cemburu,.. aku ki gk seneng lk di banding² no,.. makane golek tempat sg gk tau ditekani,.. gen gk di banding² no,trus aku ne yo merasa tdk dibanding² no,.. bukan e gk PD tpi aku menyadari kurangku nk opo,.. trus lk sk mbanding ne kro sg biyen, berarti sk rung move on,.. aku mung bingung kro wedi, lk ternyata roso seneng ku seng gede iki, ternyata mung aku tok sg duweni,..
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