#swivet
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Okay so I had to help with tending to my pupper. He's been sick and it hasn't been pretty. But, if you're interested, LIKE this post for a lyrical starter. length can vary. I'll get to them after work tomorrow.
#⌜off the air⌟ . // ooc#kind of nervous to come back ngl its put me in a little bit of swivet#BUT i miss Al#;A;
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Lily Ursidai - Swivet x Animalian
#lily#ursidai#lily ursidai#half-swivet#animalian#my art#my characters#pennbor art#pennbor characters
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The Unseelie Court (16/16)
Scully immediately turned to Mulder who rose woozily to his feet, his hand looking small in Aeon’s massive paw.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
He turned his body experimentally, wincing, and brought a hand to his side.
“I think I may have a bruised rib,” he said on a truncated breath.
“Oh, Mulder,” Scully said, rubbing a hand up and down his arm, the fleecy material of his pullover soft in her fingers.
Her heart was coming down from her swivet, her head still swirling with surprise and fear, but she found Mulder’s gaze centered her and stilled the bits of her that were still shaky.
Aeon grunted and made his way for the door.
Mulder called out. “Wait!”
Scully could hear her own preoccupations echoing in his voice. Rolled and manipulated and used in the machinations of higher beings, they felt owed some kind of denouement.
Aeon turned back to him.
“Is that it?” Mulder asked. “Is it…is it done?”
“It’s done.”
“But, what…” Mulder shot Scully a baffled, helpless look.
The fuck just happened, which Scully also wanted to know.
“Will everyone remember now?” she asked, thinking she didn’t want any dings on her record that she hadn’t earned.
Aeon shook his head. “No one will.”
The partners exchanged another glance.
“Then how?” Mulder asked. “Why do we?”
Scully, recalling the leaf in her pocket, reached in and pulled out the evidence bag. The leaf was gone.
“You were supposed to submit that for evidence,” Aeon said, looking disappointed. “You two have managed to subvert both my expectations and my magic. I’ll be glad to see the backs of you.”
Scully debated whether or not to take some pride in that. The feeling was mutual. Though he’d helped them in the end, the dream ‘warnings’ he’d sent were cryptic at best, befuddling at worst. The fae seemed to operate on an entirely different plane of social communication and mores.
“So you’re Seelie Court, and Avery was…” Mulder trailed off, looking a little gray. “I’m starting to understand.”
“You understand nothing,” Aeon said, haughty and dismissive.
Scully turned to him. That wasn’t fair.
“We understand more than most,” she said.
“We’ve seen things—” Mulder started.
Aeon shook his head and took a step back toward them.
“You’ve seen things,” he scoffed, looking at them both with extreme derision, one, then the other.
“Deep in the earth, under the mantle and into the core,” he said, his cloak shimmering with the conviction of his words, “there is a vine that grows, invasive and malignant.” Mulder audibly swallowed. “It has been growing since time began, and every now and then in our history and in yours, it breaks the surface, and lives for a time, absorbing energy and whispering a hateful tune to anyone whose ear has turned toward it.” Aeon made a gesture with his hand and the tenor of the room felt suddenly quite bleak. “And it grows and it sings and its message is spread until someone like me finds it and hacks it down and poisons its roots. It retreats back from whence it came until it’s able to creep sunward once more.” He raised himself to his full, if diminutive height. “You have not found the malevolent verdure, Mr. Mulder, you’ve merely looked into the crevice from which it came. And then, seen only a fraction of its depth.”
Mulder mulled over what Aeon had said, trying to process.
“So you’re a hunter? And Avery was your prey?” he asked, as ever, wanting to understand.
“You think it’s that simple?” Aeon said. “Avery is a mischief-maker, nothing more. And every time he crosses into this realm to collect his little human playthings, he leaves a hole and Hate follows him.”
“So you’re trying to save the human realm from this…this hate that’s coming into it.”
“I don’t give a damn about the human realm. You have it all backwards. He’s not bringing the pestilence here into this realm. It originated here. It’s following him home.”
Mulder reached out and put his hand on Scully’s shoulder.
“So why did you bring Daly back?”
“Daly had found a way back on his own. He paid for his passage. With sacrifice and coin. As I told your lover, I came to make sure no one took his place.”
Mulder began to put the pieces together.
“But why did he die?” Scully asked. The only question that still remained. “What killed him?”
“You heard what Ælfred said. Daly’s Luck had run out,” Aeon said levelly.
Was it another riddle? Scully thought no. Daly had danced with the devil. Beside her, Mulder scraped his shoe over the tile floor, shifting on his feet.
“Aeon,” she said, a little apprehensive. “You said Avery didn’t know our true names. But he said our names in the hollow. If those weren’t…what are they?”
Aeon, for the first time crooking his face into something like a smile, blinked slowly at her.
“You really don’t know?”
At the door when she left that morning, her mother had hugged her tightly and pressed a cookie tin full of cupcakes into her hands. She tucked a lock of Scully’s hair behind her ear with a watery smile. “Does he call you Dana now?” she’d asked softly. Scully had smiled and shook her head, rueful.
Aeon’s face now mirrored that look.
Scully reached out and took Mulder’s hand once more, turning to see if he understood, too. With a shy smile, he squeezed.
When they turned back to Aeon, he was gone.
***
They walked to the parking lot in silence, arms brushing against each other. Beside her, Mulder gave a small shudder. His teeth chattered.
“Jesus,” he said. “It’s not even that cold.”
Scully stopped mid-stride and grabbed his elbow, pulling him up short.
“You’re shocky,” she said, her brow knitted in concern.
“Yes,” he agreed, the word said through his overbite.
Scully stepped up to him, thunked the weight of her forehead against the tight beat of his heart. To her relief, it thumped a steady, slow rhythm. She wrapped her arms around him loosely, mindful of his ribs, letting her heat leech through her layers of clothes and into his. The scent of magnolia was petering out and she breathed in deeply through her nose, the scent of him pleasantly pricking her sinuses.
They swayed together for more than a minute and the breeze picked up, a chill knocking between the setting sun and the moon which hung low and full above the treeline. The anticipation of separation hung there too, too close for comfort; they had driven separate cars.
“How are your ribs?” she finally asked, pulling back to look up at him.
“Tender,” he said. “But I don’t want to let go.”
A car drove down the street parallel to the building, flipping on its headlights in the burgeoning dusk.
“Mulder, what just happened?” Scully asked.
He could still feel the kinking, tight pressure of vines around his throat.
“Scully, if you Antarctica this, I swear to God…”
Scully huffed a small laugh. “What do you have in your pocket? When Avery tried to grab you—”
Mulder let go of her long enough to snake his hand between several layers of clothes. From his pocket he produced a light yellow plastic likeness of Homer Simpson, head tilted back in sybaritic longing. In Matt Groening script under his face, it read simply “Donuts.” A kitchen magnet. Like hers.
Scully’s face registered a surprised, if distasteful moue. “All that was standing between you and everlasting supernatural purgatory was…Homer Simpson drooling over donuts?”
“I was worried. In a rush,” he said, and the side of his face lifted in a half-grin. “We can’t all carry ‘Invasion of Rarities,’” he quipped.
“Does it glow in the dark?”
“I think it does, yeah,” his voice cracked, his color starting to return to normal. “I’m not sure where I got it. I think it was a White Elephant gift from the Gunmen. I grabbed the first thing to hand.”
The space in between them was filling up with cool air and the night insects were finding their voices. Scully’s face fell a little, her grip around his middle less sure.
“Mulder,” she started. “About what Avery said…I don’t put our search for the truth above our—above what you and I—I’m not worried that…” She pressed her lips together, looked up at the moon and inhaled deeply. “He thought he knew me, but he didn’t.”
Mulder let her sweat for a moment, tilted his head back to look at her with sleepy eyes.
“There are a lot of places I want to…”—he tried to think of less crass phraseology than Ælfred’s ‘fuck’—“…be with you. But in the streets, in the open, isn’t necessarily one of them,” he finished. “Though I’m not one to shame most sexual predilections and I promise to keep an open mind.”
The solidarity that connected them—that saw them through midnight stakeouts and uncomfortable interviews and sweeping flashlights into dark rooms with sidearms at temple index—tightened, knitting them closer together.
Mulder leaned down to kiss her, in front of God and everybody, in the otherwise empty parking lot of the Adrian County morgue.
“Come on,” he said, straightening, licking the taste of her from his lips. “I’ll walk you to your car.”
Scully, feeling the itch of having stepped through a wrinkle in time, humored him and let him take her elbow. They sauntered the rest of the way to her car, each thinking of what they’d do when they got back to DC—sharing an order of lo mein at his coffee table, his hot skin against hers on cool, rumpled sheets, passing sheaves of the Post back and forth in the light of the late morning sun. They would spend the remainder of the weekend in each other’s arms, and rise Monday morning to face auditors, coworkers, knowledge of other realms only the two of them perceived.
“See you at home?” he asked, reaching for her door handle.
“See you at home.” In the open doorway of her car, Scully lifted herself up onto the tips of her toes and kissed him one more time.
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Robert Jordan's letter to Locus detailing his illness, treatment, and expected outcomes. He wanted 30 more years. He got what, 1? 2? His stubborn refusal to accept his prognosis fascinates me. It is so utterly raw, so completely human, and so thoroughly irrational.
Dear Locus,
I have been diagnosed with amyloidosis. That is a rare blood disease which affects only 8 people out of a million each year, and those 8 per million are divided among 22 distinct forms of amyloidosis. They are distinct enough that while some have no treatment at all, for the others, the treatment that works on one will have no effect whatsoever on any of the rest. An amyloid is a misshapen or misfolded protein that can be produced by various parts of the body and which may deposit in other parts of the body (nerves or organs) with varying effects. (As a small oddity, amyloids are associated with a wide list of diseases ranging from carpal tunnel syndrome to Alzheimer's. There's no current evidence of cause and effect, and none of these is considered any form of amyloidosis, but the amyloids are always there. So it is entirely possible that research on amyloids may one day lead to cures for Alzheimer's and the Lord knows what else. I've offered to be a literary poster boy for the Mayo Amyloidosis Program, and the May PR Department, at least, seems very interested. Plus, I've discovered a number of fans in various positions at the clinic, so maybe they'll help out.)
Now in my case, what I have is primary amyloidosis with cardiomyapathy. That means that some (only about 5% at present) of my bone marrow is producing amyloids which are depositing in the wall of my heart, causing it to thicken and stiffen. Untreated, it would eventually make my heart unable to function any longer and I would have a median life expectancy of one year from diagnosis. Fortunately, I am set up for treatment, which expands my median life expectancy to four years. This does NOT mean I have four years to live. For those who've forgotten their freshman or pre-freshman (high school or junior high) math, a median means half the numbers fall above that value and half fall below. It is NOT an average.
In any case, I intend to live considerably longer than that. Everybody knows or has heard of someone who was told they had five years to live, only that was twenty years ago and here they guy is, still around and kicking. I mean to beat him. I sat down and figured out how long it would take me to write all of the books I currently have in mind, without adding anything new and without trying rush anything. The figure I came up with was thirty years. Now, I'm fifty-seven, so anyone my age hoping for another thirty years is asking for a fair bit, but I don't care. That is my minimum goal. I am going to finish those books, all of them, and that is that.
My treatment starts in about 2 weeks at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, where they have seen and treated more cases like mine than anywhere else in the US. Basically, it boils down to this. They will harvest a good quantity of my bone marrow stem cells from my blood. These aren't the stem cells that have Bush and Cheney in a swivet; they can only grow into bone marrow, and only into my bone marrow at that. Then will follow two days of intense chemotherapy to kill off all of my bone marrow, since there is no way at present to target just the misbehaving 5%. Once this is done, they will re-implant my bmsc to begin rebuilding my bone marrow and immune system, which will of course go south with the bone marrow. Depending on how long it takes me to recuperate sufficiently, 6 to 8 weeks after checking in, I can come home. I will have a fifty-fifty chance of some good result (25% chance of remission; 25% chance of some reduction in amyloid production), a 35-40% chance of no result, and a 10-15% chance of fatality. Believe me, that's a Hell of a lot better than staring down the barrel of a one-year median. If I get less than full remission, my doctor already, she says, has several therapies in mind, though I suspect we will heading into experimental territory. If that is where this takes me, however, so be it. I have thirty more years worth of books to write even if I can keep from thinking of any more, and I don't intend to let this thing get in my way.
Jim Rigney/Robert Jordan
Copied from https://www.locusmag.com/2006/Features/03JordanLetter.html#:~:text=Dear%20Locus%2C,22%20distinct%20forms%20of%20amyloidosis.
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Gif: @tonoelwithlove
S01E03 The Way Out • 23 August 2014 Transcript
Outlander Rewatch 2023 Countdown to Season 7
Favourite Word
Now then, a bhalach, got yourself in a right swivet, have you no? — Jamie
Favourite Line
She came back through the stones? — Claire
Favourite Image
I'm an educated man, mistress, if I may be so bold. Maybe not as educated as you, but I had a tutor, a good one. He taught me Latin and Greek and such, not childhood stories of fairies, devils, waterhorses in lochs. But I am also a Highlander, born and bred, and I dinna believe in tempting fate by making light of old Nick in his very own kirkyard. — Jamie
Remember… this is my sister's house, and my father's before that, and we'll decide what is done under its roof. — Mrs Glenna FitzGibbons
3rd of 75 • Wednesday, 5 April 2023
#Tait rhymes with hat#Good times#Outlander#Rewatch 2023#Countdown to Season 7#3rd of 75#S01E03 The Way Out#Aired 23 August 2014#Rewatched 5 April 2023
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The early 1970s were very interesting years: We also had The Exorcist, Black Sabbath and Alice Cooper, Vietnam and Richard Nixon. Evangelicals were also in a swivet then, because of all the "demonic" entertainment. The Late Great Planet Earth topped the New York Times bestseller list for all of 1970. That is the Apocalyptic book that has caused all the furor on Christian Right today, still, 50 years later, because it singles out the rise of Gay Rights as a final indicator Jesus would soon return. 'Twas Gay Marriage being legalized in 2015 that began this latest hysteria. I was unfortunately an Evangelical in college then. I know these indicators. https://misterlemonztenth.tumblr.com/archive
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) Dir. Jim Sharman
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I’ve become, hesitant? To upload art? For some reason? I mostly use this blog just to reblog stuff I either find funny or relatable, kinda like a collage of everything about me and my interests-- and because this is the primary usage for the blog I’ve forgotten I’m allowed to even make my own posts xd So I’m changing that now :D
I haven’t done a lot of art as of recent, or at least, anything that I’d even want published. But I have, in fact, made art that would fit the bill. So I’m thinking of going through some of my folders of art I haven’t posted before but still want out to the world; Which means this stuff might get a bit old.
Also ye ik it’s pixelatey, Krita’s gif conversion isn’t great so it got squooshed-- Got a better lookin not gif one tho under the cut + some extra info
Speaking of this art itself tho I was in the middle of making an animatic when I saw the clip in question, and just the pure shock going through c!wil in the moment was somethin I wanted to show off. Was also generally just practicing with a new brush as I wanted to figure out how I wanted things to look (spoiler didn’t go through w it, took too much time for not a lot of worth)
I also wanna inform that I haven’t followed dsmp very closely and only had that clip happen in my recommended, the amount of people I’ve been able to watch have been continuously dwindling due to either their personality or hitting too close to home for comfort, and unless someone I can actually watch starts playing in it (if honestly it’s still even going I’ve literally not kept up whatsoever xd) I’m not sure if I’ll do more content in the future. Especially because even after this long I haven’t exactly gotten over, yknow... I hope there’s someone I can watch eventually, people having fun together is fun to watch xc
#dsmp art#dsmp#dream smp#c!wilbur#c!tommy#tommy#tommyinnit#tommyinit fanart#dsmp tommy#wilbur soot#wilbur#wilbur soot fanart#dsmp wilbur#alivebur#swivet#swiiivet#my art#swiv the mighty
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First Line from an Old WIP
With thanks to @dafan7711 for the tag!
This WIP actually is in progress -- it’s just going to be a monster-sized book and I don’t post until fics are completely finished, so it qualifies as “old”. From the not-yet-titled follow-up to Hidden, part of my Dorian/Trevelyan series The Contours of Shadows. First lines after the prologue:
---------
I set the circular down on a nearby cabinet. “Hey, Dorian, did you know I’m riveting?”
“Yes, I did,” he said from the second bedroom, which had long ago become his dressing room. “Swivet! Kai, come get your nug before I trample him. He keeps trying to get through the doors before me and I’m carrying things.”
“I like how he becomes my nug when he’s misbehaving.” Swivet was standing in the doorway looking pleased with himself.
If you have a WIP you’d like to share, consider yourself tagged! :)
#first line meme#writing#writing meme#wip meme#pavelyan#dorian x trevelyan#fanfiction by schattenriss#dragon age fanfiction#The Contours of Shadows#dorian pavus#kai trevelyan#swivet
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The familiar ball of prickling embers makes itself known in the pit of your stomach, rising and penetrating your senses in ways worse than even the darkness. It's alarm, dread and swivet; the concoction sticking to the walls of your lungs, throat and mouth
shut up this paragraph kind of knocked the wind out of me this entire scene but GODDDDDD
Never Shall We Die (2)
«« Nothing is too outlandish when it’s a life of liberty on the line. »»
PAIRING: kwon soonyoung x reader
PLAYLIST: right here!
pirate lingo glossary (pls refer!)
SYNOPSIS: Deadliest pirate on the high seas or a damn fool? The stupid King and his men have snatched Hoshi's precious pirate ship with their too clean, too soft hands; grounds to question his own vices. Except, when he and his crew land in the quarters of a navy ship, revenge on their roster, they stumble across a princess in its gallows. Hoshi wonders if he's just struck gold, or if you'd become the final tread to his downfall.
GENRES: pirate!au, enemies to lovers, slowburn, angst, fluff, smut [minor dni], some pirates of the carribean vibes but ? idk
WORD COUNT [full fic]: 48.1k
Part 1: 17.07k | Part 2: 15.2k | Part 3: 15.8k (June 7th, 8PM GST)
@highvern's out of context comment box: new fear unlocked: hoshi with explosives, victorian ankle moment, HATE HIM (need him carnally), hoshi covered in soapy water would distract me enough, strip for me pirate mingyu [hes litrally taking off his jacket], your honor hes a bitch, freaks!, mingyu crushes hoshi's head like a grape, WONWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, massive dick, the way i literally gasped like an old scandalized woman
masterlist
WARNINGS: slowburn, plot heavy, happy ending bc no angsty endings in this household, being taken hostage, knives, bombs, and guns, mentions of blood, mentions of SA (does not happen and it is not explicitly mentioned), alcohol, mentions of death (patricide), hoshi is ✨selectively moral✨but kind of moral nonetheless, side character death, [pls lmk if im missing something its alot] smut tags in following parts
[AN]: part 2 !!!! ty for reading pt1, hope you guys will enjoy this too <3 as always, ty to @highvern for beta-ing and sitting through this entire thing lmao <3 happy reading, and remember to tell me what you think !!
THE FOREVER EMPTY DECK, for whatever reason, was occupied when you trudge up the stairs in an attempt to free yourself from the stuffiness of your quarters.
You make out Seungkwan sitting cross legged on the floors, very carefully pouring himself a bottle of something unmarked into a bowl. Chan is there as well, very meticulously explaining a happening to…Hoshi, who sits by with an interested expression, mouth turned into a frown with his brows furrowed. Chan is using his hands as he continues, unaware of your presence.
“Oh!” Seungkwan calls you out by name, causing the rest of the clique to turn their heads to you. “Come have a drink!”
“What’s this?” Hoshi starts. He’s smiling, but his reddened cheeks give away his very obviously intoxicated state. “Has miss princess decided to grace us with her presence?”
You ignore him, acknowledging Chan when he asks why you were up at this hour as you sit between him and Seungkwan.
“Just needed some air,” you mumble.
“Well,” Hoshi is loud when he spills half the drink out of the cup he was pouring it into. “Air pairs well with rum.”
He holds out a cup of the liquid for you, swaying slightly from the effort of holding it far out towards you.
“I am a lady.” You resist the effort to turn your nose up.
“Okay lady, bottoms up!” he slurs.
When you continue to keep your hands folded, he retracts his hand with what you think is a prominent scowl, but it looks more like a disappointed pout if anything. He takes a dejected sip from the cup.
“Come on, just one!” Seungkwan tries to convince you.
“Leave her alone, Kwan, miss princess is too good to be drinking with pirates,” Hoshi chides.
You aren’t sure if it was meant to be a jab at all, considering the strange switch in behaviour he seems to have adopted as his drunk persona. You watch in silence as he reaches over to plant a big kiss on Seungkwan’s cheek in affection, grabbing his head strongly. He yelps, pushing his captain off with a face.
But regardless of what he meant, the defiance sparked within you anyway, and you find yourself gripping the neck of the poorly dusted bottle that sat in the middle amidst even more bottles, cups and twine. The motion has all eyes on you, even as you bring the bottle to your lips, preparing yourself for one of the dumber things you’ve done.
Locking eyes with Hoshi’s sharp ones over the bottle, you chug it of its remnants, ignoring the fiery burn and the trickles of liquid that trail down the corners of your mouth.
You hear Seungkwan and Chan cheering, Hoshi remaining stoic as he refuses to be the one to look away from above the bottle.
By the time you’ve slammed the bottle back onto the hardwood, you’re struggling to maintain your vision and you’re forced to tear your eyes away from the man that sits across from you, unwavering.
Resisting the urge to vomit, you can only smile weakly at Seungkwan and Chan who are overly excited over your endeavour, clinking their own cups as they down another one in your honour.
It kickstarted your spree in any case as the night commenced, continuing to accept refills as you sip slower than before, savouring the taste that you couldn’t really say you enjoyed. The feeling, however.
Seungkwan and Chan took longer than you’d expected to pass out, noting the way they continued to clink and drink with no regard.
Hoshi seemed to need little to be washed away, something you found yourself silently snorting at, even as both boys continued to snore quietly behind you.
“What’s so funny?” Hoshi asks, taking a sip from his cup.
You snap your head up, drunk and hot. You consider shaking your head to indicate a null, but you can’t say you have much control over yourself at the moment.
“You take so little to get tipsy,” you comment with a little giggle.
“What makes you think I’m drunk?” he asks.
His red face? The uncharacteristic warmth he’d been treating you with all night? Who knows? But right now you ignore his question, zeroed in on something. He’s wearing one of his stupid linen shirts that are always buttoned too low, the ones that make it impossible to keep your eyes on his face.
Your eyes find the distorted slash of tissue that resides on his chest, right over his left peck, right over his heart. You’ve noticed the scar on multiple occasions. Not that he seems to ever try to hide it. You decide to mention it.
“How’d you get that?” you whisper. It feels right to talk like that; the deck is silent, the sea is calm in her regard to pushing the ship where it needs to go. Your legs are pulled up to your chest, cheek on your knees.
He follows your gaze to his scar, coming round to answer you with a drunk, dopey smile on his face. “Got hungry.”
Possible, but you also get the feeling he wasn’t about to give you a straight answer if you pushed anyway. But your gaze remains on his chest, ingraining the ridges of the scar to memory.
And with every moment that passes, it looks less and less like a scary altercation of someone trying to carve his heart out, and more like he may have fallen off his horse while riding. Accidentally cut himself with a steak knife at the supper table. Took a bad blow during a practice sword fight.
And with every moment that passes, the backgrounds of your mind’s pictures turn from the rugged sea to the grassy training grounds of the palace, the hay and brown of the stables, the silver glints of the dining hall. The thuds of rusting cups and cheap sailors rum turn into clinks of wine glasses, Hoshi’s hand wrapped around the stems, skin free of every scar and darkened slash.
And with every moment that passes, you imagine what this deadly, ferocious pirate would look like if his life was a little different. If his life was a little like yours. Would he be able to be a better match against your father, would he have taken every missed opportunity to become a ruler that you only wish you could be? Could he lead a kingdom as well as he leads his beloved band of pirates?
There’s not a thought of what you’re doing in your mind as you find yourself reaching over, not to the bottles that lie empty, but to the pirate captain’s hands, taking his rough calloused palms in your soft, unscarred ones.
He does little to resist, letting his hand fall limp in yours.
“What’s this one?” you ask, tracing over the biggest scar that slashed across his knuckles.
“Piece of wood sticking out of the mast.”
It’s an older scar, clear with the way his skin has settled into the healed wound like it’s always been that way.
“This one?” you ask, tracing over another nick.
“Fell on glass.”
“This one?”
“Punched Mingyu.”
You frown at that, looking up at him and in accusation.
“I apologised,” he defends.
Was it strange that a pirate captain would apologise for assaulting his crew? Slightly, yes. But you liked to think you understood Hoshi a little better than you’d first met him, and that he considered his crew more like his family than anything else.
Never in a million years, in your pirate hating household, would you have thought that the deadliest band of pirates would soon be the ones you’d be sharing drinks with, tracing scars with, feeling somewhat secure being alone with.
Entrusting to save your future with.
You turn his hand over to his palms, now staring at a fresher looking gash that seems to still be healing. It looks painful, the redness yet to fade into its darker hues.
“What about this one?” you ask, being extra careful to not touch the wound.
Hearing him let out a small laughing exhale, you look up.
“Thought you’d recognize your own work.”
And then you remember.
The spray of blood in the air as your dagger made its first ever maim at your hands.
“Oh,” you breathe out.
When you look up from your hunched position, you’re closer to Hoshi than you’d initially thought. He went from an arms length away to brushing shoulders with you, his palm remaining cradled in both of yours.
“Do you regret it?” he asks as he looks at you like he’s gotten lost somewhere in your face.
His breath hits your face in a delicate fan, the smell of alcohol mixing from your own mouth.
Glancing down at his scarring wound, you look back up at him with your lips in a tight line.
“No.”
He smiles, less of disbelief and more of contentment, a pleasant look on his face as he reads your expression.
You felt like you’d passed some kind of test.
“Good.”
And then you’re so close you can barely make out the tip of his nose, his warmth infiltrating your own. You can smell him past the rum, a faint woody scent that makes your head spin. You push up to the alcohol.
Your stomach is on fire as you expect the final push to come, the eager build in your chest becoming near unbearable.
Just as you’re about to flutter your eyes closed, ready to take whatever he might give you, you find his face disappeared.
Hoshi turned his face away, your face infiltrated by the cool breeze once more. Your palms are cooling as his warmth retracts from them as well, leaving you cold and confused.
Blinking, pushing your chin closer to your chest, you attempt to catch your bearings, catch the notes in the air as you feel him move to his feet quickly.
“Get some sleep, it’s late,” he announces in a low, gravelly voice before trudging towards the staircase. He seems to have sobered up.
All that’s left on the deck is your empty palms, the stinging sea spray, and two snoring pirates.
HOSHI SPENT THE REST of the morning trying to sleep off the imminent feeling of spontaneous combustion.
The tingle in his right hand refuses to go away, even when he plunges the darn thing into a freezing bucket of water next to his cot, assuming his wound was acting up.
He sleeps fitfully, the frustration that simmers refuses to let him have a staggering moment of peace. His head is as dense as a whale, throbbing in the seeping light. The sounds of the sea, ones that once brought him calm, were now triggering an irrational reaction from his entire being.
Swinging to his feet is easy, it’s the aftermath of such a reckless action that has him stumbling like a fawn. Slipping into his boots, he thuds to the lower decks, to the storage area where all of the rations are.
And where all of the alcohol is.
He bumps into Minghao on the way down, who’s filling his canteen as he keeps morning watch on deck.
“Go sleep, I’ve got it,” he says to him, and Minghao does little to refute as he makes a beeline for his beloved hammock.
It’s too early for anyone to be awake, despite the afternoon sun that lingers. He takes full advantage of it as he hauls the first crate of rum up to the deck.
There isn’t an inch of hesitation as he lifts the death juice and sends it splashing into the ocean. He stares for a moment as heavy bottles disappear under the water, still full of the very thing he’d shoot his crew for wasting a single drop of.
Even more determined than before, he goes back down into the brig, this time lugging two more crates of rum, all to be met with the same fate, going down to touch the bottom of the ocean.
With every echoing slam of the wood hitting the water, he feels himself freeing.
But you plague him anyway.
Lifting a particularly heavy box, he thinks of how close you had gotten to him on this very deck. How he could breathe in your exhales. How he could feel the tactile of your fingertips tracing over every mauled slash on his hand. How you consumed his mind in ways he couldn’t fathom.
It was the rum. The rum was doing this to him.
At least, that’s what he’d chosen to blame.
Who was he to deny the effect you seemed to have on him?
The answer was that he was a pirate, especially with the way he chalked his muddled brain to not having had a woman around for so, so long.
He’d considered indulging once they reached Port Ash, slipping away for an hour into one of the beaded doors of women ready to give him what he wanted. The thought seemed like an unwanted remedy.
Every solution felt fruitless, a balm that only seemed to make the itch worse. Even as he commits a sin as heinous as feeding perfectly good rum to sea foam, he only does it in the hopes that the sea will take it as a sacrifice, to give him the kind of peace his being has begun to crave.
Hoshi has been moved to insanity.
Even as he feels the cool cylinder of Jun’s revolver on his temple, he pushes the last crate overboard as his final answer.
“What do you think you’re doing?” he hears Jun ask.
When he turns around, the revolver remains stationary as it now points into the smack middle of his forehead. He has an audience, Mingyu’s face has leftover sleep on it, a mildly horrified look on his face. Chan looks like he could slice his own Captain’s throat open.
“Where’s the rum?” Mingyu asks in an airy voice, disbelief prominent.
“The rum’s gone.”
“Why is the rum gone?”
Hoshi doesn’t answer as he moves Jun’s loaded gun out of his face and makes his way back to his cot downstairs, in no mood to squabble with his too sober crew.
There’s calls of his name that follow him all the way to below the deck, even as he snatches a stray hat on the floor, placing it above his face in the hopes that he was relieved enough to sleep.
It’s snatched away as Mingyu stands above him like an angel of death, his hat in his equally deathly grip.
“Did the spirits possess you?”
“No,” he replies begrudgingly. “But good sense has.”
“Captain,” he hears Chan begin, looking about five seconds away from committing a murder on the seas. “You know I can’t fight sober.”
“Learn.”
“What is this about? Where was the rum at fault?” Jun grits.
Hoshi swings up once again. If Mingyu was an angel of death then he was the king of hell.
But he has no threats left to give, his menacing soul left with the rum. There is only a snarl that turns into him dropping his head, sighing a loud, loud sigh.
He tells his crew a sad affair as he expresses his sorrows like a eulogy. Blaming the rum was stupid, but it was what he had done. And now the fruit of his decisions sit forgotten in the reefs so far below.
His crew is not happy when they find out, in any case.
“But what did the rum do?”
“Kissing beautiful women is part of life’s pleasures!”
“I have half a mind to make you fish it all back up.”
Mingyu has simply crumpled onto the floor in his heartbreak, Chan has his face in his hands. Hoshi doesn’t look up to witness Jun’s reaction.
The crew would get over the lack of alcohol on board, perhaps a morbid brawl or two to help them get by, but what was more concerning was whether it did anything for Hoshi at all.
At the very least, he knows he won’t go around kissing people sober, but when it comes to the matter of the war inside his chest…
A phantom ache throbs across the scar on his chest.
Perhaps his heart would finally be the next to go.
PORT ASH WAS A depraved man’s heaven.
One that could easily become his downfall if he doesn’t play his cards right.
Too covered was suspicious, too much of the opposite was an open invitation to all the drunk and debauched population of Ash; pirates, criminals and councilmen alike. You were comfortable enough in what you were given to put on, to become the perfect blend in the rowdy, barely lit streets of the brothels and bars.
Despite everything, Seungkwan assured you that no one would bother a woman flanked by obvious pirates, for whatever reason that may be. If it were up to you, you would’ve remained on the ship, safe and buried in your quarters, but the threat of an ambush on the docks plagued the crew enough to risk bringing you directly into the dragon’s den.
Jun disappeared quickly, ducking behind an unmarked curtain with a nod to his captain. You could only assume this was where he’d obtain his remaining supplies for the explosives he seemed to be so good at creating. You’ve awoken to multiple median bangs during the night, so you can only assume he knows what he’s doing to a certain extent.
“Jun said it might take a while, so we might have to wait on him a little bit.” Hoshi stands at the front of the group, addressing his crew.
“Spread out, do whatever. Don’t linger, don’t drink yourselves to death—” he sends a pointed look at a shifty Chan and Mingyu, “—and meet back at the ship at six bells or we’ll leave without you.”
The announcement doesn’t seem to apply to you. You’re sandwiched between Hoshi and Seungkwan as they lead you into the throng, to wherever it was they were to pass the time till it was time to return.
If Ash was anything, it was alive. Men and women scatter in all states of drunk and sober, arms latched with their partners for the night as they let the oil lamps carry them to their abode for the night. It’s a wilder Hasry, a scarier Hasry.
The nighttime does nothing to help your nerves, every single face shrouded in the half shadows, seemingly resembling every person you’ve ever met in the Kingdom.
It makes you feel better that both men are pressed against your sides, as strange as the thought sounds in your head. Safe between two pirates.
“Nobody’s tried to kill you yet, I’d call that a record,” Seungkwan comments, but it’s not directed towards you.
Hoshi scowls as you shift your gaze from Seungkwan to him. The usually nonchalant pirate captain looks…cautious. His eyes dart around the crowded streets, like he was looking for familiar faces all the same as you.
Your eyes land on his curled lips and force down a shiver. This was the first time you’d been around him since that drunken night, since you’d promised to never drink again.
He doesn’t mention it, so neither do you.
“Captain Hoshi Kwon? How wonderful of you to show your face again!”
A woman’s voice rings shrill amidst the loud buzz and hollers of the streets, emerging like a white ghost from the throng. Dressed to the nines, face painted intricately, fan clenched in her hand that perches on her hip. She’s joined by another gaggle of women that crown behind her, displaying a rainbow of coloured gown and fans, but holding the same disdained look.
The pirate captain freezes beside you, and you feel Seungkwan’s hand on your back burn.
He seems shaken at the sight of the new woman initially, but puts on a smile you’ve only seen a few times. One that dazzles with his teeth on display, eyes squinted.
“Delilah!” he exclaims, almost too happy to see this mystery woman. “How’ve you been?”
“Who did that? I’d like to send them flowers,” she refers to the scar above Hoshi’s heart.
“Jellyfish don’t really like me, learned that the hard way.”
His answer seems to only annoy her. Delilah has a wicked snarl on her face, threat in her stance. “When was the last time I saw you?”
“Uh,” Hoshi stumbles.
“The Crowded Inn, was it? When I fell asleep to a promise and woke up to an empty bed?”
“Our dear captain seems to have thrown memory at sea,” one of the girls behind her calls out, followed by a collective giggle.
Hoshi looks cornered, at a loss for words as he attempts to save face. Regaining his prior easygoing expression, he continues.
“There’s no promises after I’ve had a drink or two, you know that, Delilah.” It scares you a little how easily he can inject all the sugar and honey in the world directly into his words, flirting his way out of the predicament.
Except, she doesn’t seem to be buying it, because as soon as the words leave Hoshi’s lips, you hear a loud thwack and a blur of colour. You gasp before you can help it, covering your mouth in shock.
There’s a reddenning mark on his cheek in the shape of a hand. Hoshi remains face scrunched, coming round, hand slowly coming up to touch his no doubt stinging cheek.
Your reaction seems to have roused this woman, because she sends you nothing but a look laced with pure venom, completely ignoring Seungkwan who stands aside doing nothing to help his captain.
“Where’d you pick this one up?” She asks, her fan now shucked open, fanning herself even in the pleasant weather. Her pale face, red lips, dark eyes all remain on your shabby form, a hint of a smirk on her face. “Is she as disappointing of a performer as she looks?”
That seems to do it, as you watch Hoshi’s facade of a cheeky bed trotter image drop to something with more depth.
“Delilah,” he says, warning in his voice.
“Ah! Looks like I’ve struck a nerve.”
You watch Hoshi take a step forward and you’re suddenly hyper aware of the crowd of people that continue to pass and linger, reminding yourself of the repercussions of causing a scene in a place like this. Turning slightly, you attempt to push Seungkwan to do something.
“Captain,” Seungkwan says, a casual but careful voice. A starting attempt at calming things down.
“That’s enough,” Hoshi says, ignoring Seungkwan’s warning. “Quit pretending you weren’t warming that privateer’s bed right after I left.”
There was no reason for you to say anything, do anything. But when you find yourself pushing forward, leaving Seungkwan’s hold, you can’t stop. Perhaps he’d have punched Seungkwan, his own crew, if he’d done the same as you were right now, but you’d like to think you know the pirate captain enough to assume he’d react less so with you.
There’s a shift in the woman’s jaw as she watches you wrap your arm around one of Hoshi’s, trying your absolute best to mimic a bright smile.
“We should go,” you announce, the stretch of your cheeks unfamiliar even to you. You turn to catch Hoshi’s stare, he’s looking at you like you’ve grown an extra head. “Right, Hosh?”
“Go on then, Captain. Your little princess awaits.”
You flinch without meaning to. Princess.
This woman doesn’t know what she’s talking about, at least, that’s what you recite in your head as your trio goes back to pushing walking through the streets. She doesn’t know who you are.
“She doesn’t know,” you hear Hoshi say under his breath, but you hear it loud as day.
You exhale, “I know.”
“Sorry about her. And him, “ Seungkwan says, before turning to Hoshi. “I told you not to get involved with that one, she’s a menace.”
You’ve let go of Hoshi’s arm at this point, now simply watching him attempt to calm himself down as you walk. He doesn’t reply to Seungkwan’s jab.
You feel strange, a feeling you can’t exactly pinpoint. You’re too aware of yourself, in a way that’s different than just the fear of being recognized. Shifting your eyes to your attire, your usual linen skirts and corset, an added grey shawl for your own anxious sanity.
The woman’s voice rings in your head. Shabby.
“You didn’t let her get to you, did you? She’s always been vile, she can’t live without being a bitch about something every five minutes.”
Seungkwan’s grumbling goes in one ear and out the other as you don’t answer. He seems to read you better than you thought he could. He sighs.
“Congratulations Delilah, you’ve made a princess feel shabby,” he says in a sarcastically chipper voice, one that earns a hiss from his captain for being too loud.
Before you know it, you’re being led down a flight of stone stairs and you’re informed that it was an underground pub of sorts. Something about his undertone told you it was probably more, but you ignore it as the darkness is let alight beyond the musty curtains of the basement entrance.
It’s a sizable expanse, a bar on one of the long ends of the hall, busy and overflowing with mugs, jugs and plates. Wooden tables and chairs, almost all of them occupied by patrons of all kinds that do nothing to regulate their volumes. It smells like a rancid mixture of alcohol and people, but you push past as you find yourself seated on one of the wooden seatings in the corner.
“I’ll go get us drinks,” Seungkwan announces as he walks up to the bar. You watch as he’s greeted by nearly every passing customer, all smiles.
Hoshi sits beside you like a begrudged toddler, arms crossed and glaring at nothing.
“Didn’t realise how popular you were around these parts,” you comment, scanning the crowd in excruciating detail, blaming force of habit as you do.
He clicks his tongue, and you can’t see him, but you can almost visualise his grimace.
A too clean councilman that has his hands on the upper thighs of an outlandishly dressed woman. A man so grimy and dusty who has nothing but an array of empty jugs for company. Another flock of fan yielding, hair towering, gown exploding women that swarm a man you cannot see past the bodies.
It’s organised chaos, immoral yet is the only thing that seems to work on this island.
Another entrance is being made from the curtains that block the pub from the outside, you steer your eyes automatically.
Looks like he could be a pirate, beyond just the dark hair and chiselled face. He has a girl under his arm, a pretty brunette that giggles at his side as he whispers something in her ear. She’s wearing something similar to you, a corset and a linen skirt, and a pirate's hat that’s too big for her that’s perched on her head.
Subconsciously, you feel better about being so severely underdressed.
Hoshi sits up next to you and you glance over your shoulder to assess his shift. He’s also staring at the couple that’s just walked in. You briefly wonder if this was going to be another showdown.
The man catches Hoshi’s eye from across the room, and you notice how his smile falls a little.
“Who’s that?” you ask quietly.
Your question is answered when the man himself begins to walk towards your table, leaving the girl at his table, a confident strut as he makes his path.
Hoshi rises next to you before you realise what’s happening, and you have the sudden urge to call out for Seungkwan.
“Why are you getting up?” you hiss. He doesn’t answer, yet again.
“Captain,” the man greets.
“Captain,” Hoshi replies.
Captain. So he was a pirate.
“Hm. That’s not gonna go away, is it?” The man comments with a smirk, eyes trained on the scar on Hoshi’s chest.
“Wonder who’s fault that is.” Hoshi’s voice is levelled.
Oh. Was that scar his doing?
“I hope you won’t mind if I don’t apologise?” The smirk on his face remains as he continues, motioning towards his own cheek, eyes trailed on the side of Hoshi’s face. “Looks like you’ve got enough enemies without me trying to carve your heart out.”
Hoshi doesn’t answer as he grimaces, a frustrated blink and a hand that runs over his sore cheek.
“Delilah was quite adamant on having your head on a pike after that,” the stranger adds with a chuckle of his own, before trailing his eyes behind Hoshi. Right where you sat watching the two men interact. “Perhaps she does have some consideration left.”
“Delilah cared more about looking like a fool than she ever did me leaving. You’d know all about that wouldn’t you, Wonwoo?”
There’s a flash of irritation on Wonwoo’s face at the jog of a memory. “Handled it better than you did. At least I wasn’t walking around with a handprint on my face.”
“No, no you weren’t. Just a leash around your neck,” Hoshi’s own eyes darted towards the girl seated at Wonwoo’s table, a silent jab.
Wonwoo’s face morphs into something a little more dangerous than just irritation, his jaw tightening as he takes a step forward. They’re nearly nose to nose.
To your surprise, Wonwoo smiles. “I guess brothels don’t teach many manners after all. My mistake.”
For the second time that day, you spring from your position in the shadowed table, giving up on praying for Seungkwan’s arrival. The man seems to have disappeared somewhere along the barline, and you curse both the men that stand before you for their horrid temper management skills.
You don’t have to do much, however, as you find Wonwoo pulling away by himself. At least, you thought so, finding a hand wrapped around his upper arm. The brunette spares neither of you a glance as she simply murmurs furiously under her breath, hand now on her lover's chest as she pushes him to move back from the brewing altercation.
Hoshi doesn’t seem to be breaking, remaining standing with his eyes shooting daggers at the man that’s reluctant to walk away from a budding fight.
Being gentle wasn’t going to work right now, and you weren’t feeling so soft anyway. Instead, you reach over to grab his wrist tight, positively yanking him back as hard as you could.
“Wh—ow!”
He slams into the seat next to you, deadly eye contact with the other captain broken as he winces at the impact. When you glance up, Wonwoo is gone.
“You said to blend in, how is this blending in?!”
“I didn’t do anything!”
“You were two seconds away from drawing knives,” you hiss. “We’re in a pub, for goodness’ sake!”
Despite your irritation, and with the newfound information that rests in the back of your head, it’s difficult to keep your eyes off the scar that stands against the lamplight of the pub.
Someone did try to carve his heart out.
Context for an altercation that could lead to something like that remains unknown, and you doubt you’d ever get a straight answer from him if you asked—as always. Besides, you forget they’re pirates.
Hoshi goes back to simply ignoring you as he festers in his grumbled silence. Choosing to keep his arms folded and staring straight ahead. You make no moves to entertain him.
“I guess brothels don’t teach many manners after all.”
This mystery captain’s left you with enough ammo to keep you wondering for days. What on earth was that?
As if Hoshi’s (and yours) mood wasn’t sour enough, your attention is brought to the front of the room where another entrance is being made, quite loudly so. You very quickly recognise the gowns and fans and shrieking giggles of women as Delilah and her posse.
You note the woman herself is nowhere near.
“Fucking hell,” you hear Hoshi swear under his breath. He’s sitting up, eyes darting around the room, almost like he was trying to find a hiding spot. You doubt he's too excited over another conversation of similar nature, let alone a matching mark on the other side of his face.
The women hadn't seen him yet, and were approaching far too quickly for him to get up and leave anywhere to hide. A quick scan of the room yourself and you realise there’s only one remaining option.
They didn’t seem to recognise you for your title before, and you assume the current extent stays within simply being another seductress in the pirate captain’s company. You push the sickening feeling away as you realise you might have to play the part.
So you do the sensible thing and push Hoshi’s head under the wooden table, forcing him to leave his seat and crouch beside your legs. In a split second, you’ve lifted your linen skirt and draped it over his hunched body.
This would have to do.
And it seems to have been the right move because as soon as the man is out of sight, you find the opposite end of the table more occupied than you ever would have been comfortable with.
“Oh! You’re that Hoshi’s girl aren’t you?” one of the women who's made themselves comfortable asks, fan in front of her mouth and nose as you note her sharp eyes.
“Uh,” you laugh nervously.
“Oh, nothing to be embarrassed about,” she assures, a snap in her voice.
Another woman decked out in a green ensemble speaks in a teasing voice, “We’re all quite accustomed to his…mannerisms.”
The table erupts in a fit of giggles and cackles and you’re forced to laugh weakly along, hyper aware of the man that sits under your skirt right below. You try not to flinch as you feel his clothes brush against the side of your calf.
“So, tell us,” she says, taking your hands in hers, a contact you really wish you could break free of. If only you weren't quite as terrified of the women seated at your table. “How far along in heaven has this man taken you?”
She spares you an answer as you gape with square shoulders. She fans herself in a whimsy as she looks like she’s reminiscing. “He’s almost as good of a pirate as he is a beast in bed, I don’t think I’ll ever forget that night.”
“Quite generous with the tongue too, if you know what I mean.”
The pirate captain’s breath hits your bare knees in its own fan, goosebumps almost immediately erupting across the expanse of your skin. You fail to suppress a shudder.
Goodness, this man stays busy.
“Oh look at her, she’s gotten all flustered!” one of them laughs. You take it as an opportunity to slip your hands out of the tight grasps of the bold ladies. “It seems he’s taken to a newer liking. How innocent.”
These women seem to like talking more than they wish to hear a word from you, of course, you couldn’t tell them anything they already didn’t know. Of which, according to their interests, you knew nothing of it anyway.
“Don’t get too attached now, we’re all mere expendables in this busy pirate’s—”
Slam!
Rum. You smell rum.
It’s like you’ve been transported back onto the main deck, the smell of rum mixed with….with—
“Ladies!” Seungkwan announces, slamming bottles of alcohol on the table with a force unnecessary. “Funny seeing you again.”
For a moment you may have even thought Hoshi had clambered up to the table to announce himself, and you feel a hand fly down to your skirts.
He’s still there, head now actively leaning against your knee. You pray the man hasn’t fallen asleep as you attempt to greet Seungkwan.
“Took you long enough,” you grit through a sickly sweet smile.
With your hand somewhere on Hoshi’s upper back, you guide him with you as you make space for Seungkwan next to you.
“The—oh!” Seungkwan is quick to notice the breathing lump under your skirt as he sits himself next to you, but manages to compose himself with a cough. “Long line. What were you ladies talking about?”
One of them smiles big as ever, slowly lifting themselves from their seats, “We were just…leaving. Wonderful speaking with you!”
And with that, you can finally feel your breath coming back to you, the table significantly lighter with the lack of colours, perfume and humans.
Releasing a long exhale, you let your shoulders drop and lean backwards.
“Are you going to explain why the captain is hidden under your skirts?”
With a jolt, you're forced to consider his presence under the table, scanning the room to find the women gone from the pub altogether.
Hoshi emerges from under the fabric, and shuffles over to the other side of the table to sit down, bringing an instinctive hand towards the fresh bottles on the table. Halting, he instead reaches for the jug of water on the edge and pours himself a helping.
You refuse to look at him. Refuse to acknowledge the red in his face. Refuse to acknowledge the sudden cold under your skirt.
Seungkwan’s stare is burning holes into the side of your head, even as he uncorks one of the bottles as an offer. You also refuse; both to look him in the eye and the drink itself.
Bottle to his lips, he moves his glare to his captain, who sits nursing his water like it was something stronger.
“I haven’t gotten an answer yet,” he finally breaks.
Instinct has your eyes lifting to meet Seungkwan’s inquisitive one’s, answers frozen in your throat.
“Why are you asking like you don’t know who they were?” Hoshi snaps.
“I can understand not wanting a matching handprint on your other cheek!” he refutes. “But how do you decide the solution is to dive into yet another woman’s skirts?”
Your only solace to the heat that prickles your body is the way Hoshi himself flushes.
Seungkwan sighs as he takes another sip of his drink, eyeing Hoshi’s still red cheek. “I’m starting to think you deserved it.”
Hoshi makes a motion like he’s about to send his half full cup flying into Seungkwan’s face but stops short. Perhaps he’s realising he’s become the problem child for today.
You contemplate telling Seungkwan about Wonwoo and the near pub brawl you would’ve had to deal with, but decide it to be a story for another time. Besides, you weren’t about to risk mentioning his name while it was still fresh.
You realise just how unstable this island can turn a person; not just the pirate captain.
Because as you look at Hoshi on the other side of the table, you find how difficult it is to look away.
“YOU NEED TROUSERS.”
“What?”
“Oh don’t look so scandalised, you’ve been prancing around with pirates for goodness’ sake.”
Seungkwan haggles with the stall owner over the price of padded coats, blankets and an array of other things the crew would need. The journey was only going to take the ship further North, and it was only going to get colder as you neared the icy water of the Green Islands.
Seungkwan’s suggestion to buy you trousers came out of the blue, but it seems you couldn’t refuse when you find both Hoshi and Chan (who joined you after he was tired of the others) agreeing.
“You can’t possibly stay warm in linen,” Chan argues. “Trousers are the only way you won’t freeze your limbs off.”
“Too much airflow in a skirt,” Seungkwan agrees, eyes closed, head shaking solemnly. “Captain would know.”
“Hm?” Chan looks at him confused.
“Fine!” You snatch the folded brown lump in Seungkwan’s hands. You keep talking in a louder than necessary voice in the hopes that Chan won’t ask any more questions. “I’ll wear them.”
“Perfect! Now we need to get you boots.”
“I have boots!”
“Warm boots!”
“But—”
It was difficult to argue with Seungkwan once he’s got his mind set on something. But that paired with the loud noises of the Ash port market was sending pulsing throbs across the sides of your head. You simply surrender as Seungkwan leaves Hoshi to pay the vendor before pushing you across the street to where a stall held boots and slippers for sale.
In the midst of his bargaining, Chan had disappeared into the throng, returning with a steaming plate of something that smelled doughy and delicious.
“What is that?” you ask as Chan shoves the tray in front of you.
“Whatever they are, they’re delicious. Try one.”
He was right, one bite of the warm, soft goodness covered in syrup had you taking a moment to ponder. It melts in your mouth, barely registering the rest of the group scarfing down the tray like it was their last.
“God, you can never get them this good on the mainland,” Seungkwan cries. “We’ll get another tray before we leave.”
Speaking of leaving, you turn to ask about the time.
“How many bells has it been?” you ask Seungkwan whose cheeks bulge with the amount of dough balls he’s stuffed in. He looks like a child caught stealing when you ask.
“Oh—”
“Five,” Hoshi answers instead, eyes remaining on the pile of goods that he’s gathered to remain in his line of sight. You suppose there was no delivery system here like in Hasry, and you doubt how secure it is to be walking around with a pile of supplies on this island in particular.
“You need to hurry, I told the rest of them to meet at six bells.”
Seungkwan’s quick to wrap up, but not before shooing Chan away for another tray of those sweet dough balls for the journey. You manage to whisper to him to bring extra.
By the time Seungkwan’s done with the last vendor, dropping the giant coil of rope onto the already large pile of supplies, you begin to wonder how you were supposed to get all of this to the ship.
“Shove those in a bag and carry some of this,” Hoshi says to Chan who has returned, brandishing another steaming tray of the sweet treat. He grumbles as he complies, complaining about how the sticky sweet syrup was going to ruin the inside of the pack.
You look a little lost as you attempt to help, all three men grabbing their share of the load.
“Let me hold something,” you attempt, reaching for a wrapped pile.
You watch as Hoshi snatches it before you can grab it for yourself. “Keep an eye out instead.”
“But—”
“Here.” Chan drops the pack with the now rolling dough balls inside. “Snacks for the walk too, how lucky.”
There’s a light push from behind you as Seungkwan urges you to move forward, face slightly obstructed with the tower he’s holding in his arms. “Go on, straight and then left. We’re close to the port anyway.”
You’re left feeling slightly useless as you remain caged with Chan in front while Seungkwan and Hoshi follow you from behind. The walk is short, but crowded nonetheless.
It’s only later in the night, which means the crowds in the bustling streets and alleys of Ash only multiply, clear with the case you’re pushed into right now. You pause in front of a particularly busy patch, needing to take a breath before following Chan’s fearless footsteps.
It’s immediate suffocation, bodies on all sides as you try your best to not lose Chan in the midst of the crowds. Perhaps they were right to keep your hands mostly unoccupied—it would’ve been impossible for you to not completely lose yourself here.
Gaining a rhythm of walking with the crowd before moving slightly against to near your exit, you’ve almost made your way out.
Just as you find the bend leading to the open air of the port, you hear a distinct rip sound from behind you.
If your skirt was airy before, it was a windstorm now.
Craning your neck at an impossible angle, you find the bottom of your skirt ripped so high up the back of your knees are out for the population of Ash to see.
Gasping loudly, you halt in your tracks. A horrible mistake, because you’re only being bumped and shoved by the evermoving bodies.
“Why are you stopping?” Seungkwan hisses, before realising what’s just happened. “Uh oh.”
“I…”
Both Seungkwan and Hoshi push past the throng making their way out of the crowd, leaving you there frazzled and practically naked
You barely consider that they’ve just left you there as you scramble to cover your calves with what overlapping fabric you had left, registering the threats and curses being sent your way for being the idiot that stops in what is essentially a fast paced parade.
The rational part of your brain checks out, refusing to consider that perhaps the back of your knees were the least scandalous thing this island has seen, especially after the conversations you’ve had in your short time here. But alas, a few months of the pirate life wasn’t enough to push the princess out of you, and you stand like a paralysed fool about to get stampeded.
Just as you’re convinced you’d die here, embarrassed and utterly panicked, you feel a body press up from behind you.
It was too close to be a bystander pushing past, which was saying something since most of these patrons were practically climbing over your form.
You whip your head back to look at the person who’s invading your space more than usual, hands tight around your upper arms in an effort to push you forward.
Hoshi stands behind you as his body covers the ripped damage of your skirt, eyes trained in front to survey the crowd.
“Come on, I’ve got you,” he grunts, pushing to get you to move your legs. You stumble in the beginning, still not registering anything.
He was helping, but with the way you can feel every dip and shallow of his chest and abdomen pressing into you, you can’t help but think he’s only made matters for your already speeding heart worse.
Your legs move automatically, letting him steer you wherever. Trying not to think about how his entire front is pressed onto your back like a mould. He’s so close you can even smell him despite the crowd.
Like your head isn’t spinning enough.
By the time you’ve exited the main rush of people, you’ve begun counting your minutes.
Emerging to the bend that leads straight to the docks, you find the rest of the crew already there, running sprints to get all the new supplies to the ship that remained a few yards away.
Despite having left the crowd behind, your exposure remained, which meant you’d have to be tailed all the way to the ship. You curse your luck as you watch Jun quirk an inquisitive brow at the both of you stuck like you’ve been glued.
You pray you never have to show your face here again, because the looks don’t seem to stop until you’ve reached the ship. Perhaps the crowd where nobody was paying attention was better.
In any case, you respond to Minghao’s questioning noise with half shut eyes and a joint sprint towards the stairs leading to the lower decks.
Hoshi keeps behind until you’ve gotten to the heavenly doors of your quarters, springing inside before Hoshi could register looking lower.
It’s silent for a few sparing moments as you breathe tightly, convincing yourself that you were alone and uncompromised. You're pressed up against the door, almost like you’re afraid the entirety of Ash would barge through to witness your calves.
“I’ll handle the boys, don’t worry about that,” you hear Hoshi speak from the other side of the door.
There’s nothing you could do other than slide down the door in a beyond dramatic fashion, head in your hands as you grip the strands like you were moments away from ripping them off. Every instance of your upbringing flashes before your eyes, every crack of your mentor’s canes on your thighs and calves, every waking pain in your back from the impossible postures, every bruise and nick on your feet from being stepped on and trodden over.
Despite the ridiculous nature of the situation, you feel your eyes grow heavy with tears.
Was this panic?
Taking in the circumference of your cramped quarters; the unmade bed, the strewn clothes, the thrown covers.
It was nothing. Yet, at the same time, it was everything.
Amidst the pile, there’s a glint of metal where your knife lies on your nightstand, the tiniest smear of uncleaned blood on the blade. From your position on the floor, you find the half broken lamp discarded under your bed, shunned from your sight. The desk in the corner is empty, save for the staggering mountain of letters from your father.
The only suggestion of normalcy, yet the one you itch to be rid of the most.
The letter opener necklace that was exchanged for the ring on your finger sits warm against the valley of your breasts, a reminder of the first weapon you plucked from this very room. The weapon that began it all.
The smell of gunpowder fills your nose, the forever echoing bang of Jun’s revolver as you took that child sailor’s life with your own two hands.
You lay like that, on the cold floors of your quarters. Refusing to touch the court appointed comfort of your bed, for fear of reigniting the guilt with a fire stoked.
You aren’t sure if you sleep, but you do dream.
LIDS OPEN, EYES WIDE, but nothing to perceive.
It’s a pit of obsidian, unrelenting and unproposing in its press against your lungs.
The familiar ball of prickling embers makes itself known in the pit of your stomach, rising and penetrating your senses in ways worse than even the darkness. It's alarm, dread and swivet; the concoction sticking to the walls of your lungs, throat and mouth.
And then there’s pressure.
Something envelopes you from behind, an unidentified lump that pulls you into something warm and sturdy. There’s another pressure at your stomach, another pull keeps you grounded between a wall built just for you.
The air is perfumed, something beyond a flower or an incense. You know what it is.
And then you're falling, slipping into nothingness and landing between sheets warm enough to suggest you never left.
The scent remains, and this time, Hoshi towers over your frame in something that might have been domineering. But with the distinct feeling of a wet mouth over your collarbone, a small whisper of words unintelligible, you melt like frost in front of a fireplace.
“What?” you question his muttering, hands hovering just above the expanse of his covered back, barely touching.
He rears his head like a gentle beast, wet lipped and zeroed in on your face. His response comes in the form of his lips enclosing your own.
He tastes like rum.
OPENING THE DOOR TO an expectant Seungkwan, you only wave off his reference to you looking like you have one foot in death’s mouth, grabbing the stack of clothes and boots he delivers.
He leaves you alone, something you cannot decide is a blessing or a curse as you take in the unchanged state of your quarters.
Sleep gives you nothing but more troubling images to keep your mind utterly occupied, so you take what you can control in consciousness.
You drop the clothes on a cleaner corner, yanking one of the thinner pairs of dark brown trousers to change into from your still torn and tattered skirt.
Moving inside the room, you pick the littered papers, ropes and rags on the floor, swerving and crouching with more vigour than necessary.
Hoshi’s scent sticks to you.
Grabbing the pile of letters on your desk, you shove them in a sack and throw them under the bed.
Hoshi holds you like he might die if he doesn’t.
Ripping the covers off the bed, you fold them into a giant ball of fabric, hoisting it into your arms as you strut to the door.
Hoshi’s lips have left a bruise on your chest.
The late morning sun combats the chill in the air, the salt sticking to your hair.
Hoshi’s mouth is hot and wet on yours.
Hoshi stands before you, manning the wheel on the deck.
You halt in your tracks.
He turns to register you with your arms full and shielding most of your body.
Clearing his throat, he states, “You’re up.”
Eyes darting, you respond. “I’m up.”
Somehow, his presence makes you forget the audacity of your own brain to stew the play it did. Depositing the sheets on the floor of the deck, you attempt to look for a reasonably long coil of rope.
In your pointed distraction, you miss how distracted the pirate captain has also become.
His elbows, initially perched on the wheel, slip in a comical manner, unintentionally pushing the wheel to the right.
You don’t expect the minor lurch of the ship, landing on your bum with a yelp when you lose your footing all of a sudden. Your elbows take a worse hit, spiking pain across your upper limbs at the hard contact.
His hands are pulling you to your feet before you can register what’s happened, coming round as you open your eyes to an open mouthed captain.
“Are you alright?”
“I’m fine,” you grunt, dusting off your brand new pants as you move past him, refusing to make eye contact.
Picking up a coil of rope, you bring one of the ends to a mast on the end of the ship, stepping on a crate to tie it around the pole. By the time you’re stepping off the crate to tie the other end to the opposite mast, you find it already done, the pirate captain tightening the knot from across the ship.
He meets your eyes for a moment, before you step in the direction of your piled sheets, breathing in a heavy inhale.
Untangling the mess, you pull them over to the suspended rope, throwing the sheets over with a grunt. You’d only ever seen the palace maids do this when they’d beat the carpets to oblivion, dusting the ages of dirt.
“I just…”
When you turn around, the pirate captain is closer than you anticipated, hands encased around a smaller slab of wood. He trails off when you turn to face him, like he hoped he could speak to the back of your head instead.
You take an instinctive step back, putting space between the both of you. You bring your expectant eyes up to him.
“I just wanted to tell you to ignore what happened at Ash.”
You flush, stuttering, embarrassed at your previous predicament all over again. “Oh, um—”
“Wait no!” he drops the wood onto the floor, hands flying as he waves them all over, seemingly as flushed as you are. “I meant—what Delilah and the others said. I just– they’re horrendous gossips—”
“What are you trying to say Hoshi?”
He falters.
“I’m trying….” he exhales. “There’s nothing on my roster. Nobody. You aren’t expendable or disposable or whatever it was she said, you aren’t a used rag—”
“What am I then?”
The question is tumbling out of your mouth before you can help it, stoned jaw and tight fist.
“What?”
“What am I then? If I’m not expendable or disposable, what am I then?”
“You’re…”
Taking a step forward, you move back to your initial spot, closer to him, chests almost touching.
“I’m?”
“You’re a princess and I’m a pirate!” he blurts, his previously apprehensive face morphing into something intense.
You huff a short breath, an incredulous stretch to your lips. Of course.
“What is that supposed to mean?” you ask in a low voice.
“Like what it is,” he heaves, chest inflating and deflating like he’d run the course of the deck about thrice. “Nothing more, nothing less.”
If your ears weren’t deceiving you, it sounded more like he was trying to convince no one but himself.
You take a step closer as he takes a step back.
His face is scrunched ever so slightly, eyes blinking quicker than normal. The sunlight blurs the edges of his features; his usually sharp, stinging stare is hazy, the slant of his nose curvier, the ridges of his lips blending into your muddled perception of his face.
The only thing dividing you is the silence, the bore of your stare and the war in your mind. You cannot speak for him, but you also aren’t a fool.
“Everything they say about you is wrong.”
“What?” he asks again.
“You don’t have a deadly bone in your body. You’re a coward that hides behind his knife and his big bad pirate ship that you can’t even defend.”
For once, he remains speechless while you persist.
“To think we spent all these years trying to subdue you, push you to the edge,” you can feel the anger seep into the hottest centre of your bones. “All for you to be some scared sailor all along.”
“Your father ruined my life,” he says. It’s a strange voice he uses, one that’s somewhere between disbelief and a warning.
“And mine with it.”
He laughs, blinking rapidly, backing away even further, running a hand through his hair. Coming around, he looks over his shoulder. He looks like the man you met the day your life fell apart, a strut in his step that runs your blood cold.
“Are you sure this has nothing to do with you simply wishing to spite the man?” He walks back over. “Prance around with the filthy pirate he hates just for the fun of it?”
“Oh and you haven’t just been itching to ruin the kingdom’s beloved princess.”
Your mouth seemed to have a mind of its own, spewing the accusation with a vigour you never realised you possessed. Lies. Lies. Lies.
This was your own deteriorating mind’s doing. You were the debauched princess painting lewd pictures of a pirate in your mind. It was your heart that couldn’t stand being near the man for longer than necessary. It was you that had the scripture somewhere in your chest, the tiniest speck of a daydream, that perhaps this inner turmoil didn’t end with just you.
Did you want to be another woman he doesn’t have to remember?
You don’t know. All your mind registers is the unbearable twist in your chest, and how it feels like you can’t do nothing about it.
You’re used to getting your way, and you hate that your mind seems to have drifted away from you.
Hoshi’s expression is nowhere in your mind, too preoccupied with sucking in inhales and trying not to begin spiralling right on the main deck.
“You’re projecting.”
Eyes snapping up like he’s proposed to sink the ship itself, you feel yourself hit a mental wall. And a physical one as you feel the brush of the suspended sheets against your hair, having taken an unconscious step back.
He’s cornered you. Yet again.
“Everything about you screams vulnerable,” he says, moving closer. “Not very sharp to show in front of a pirate.”
“Hoshi.” A warning. A sharp, hurtling sting of fear.
“What? Big bad pirate too emotionally removed? Beloved princess trapped and defenceless on unfamiliar lands?”
He’s moving closer, too close.
“I take it back,” he says. “Perhaps drunken Ash does speak the truth—”
Not a familiar plane on his face, like the pirate king had absolved a long held mask. His eyes mortified you, his stance was a walking threat.
Despite the morning sun, the cave of the hung sheets, the shadows of the high masts and the towering gloom of the pirate captain creates enough darkness to throw a shadow in your mind.
It’s like the day his crew dropped on the deck for the very first time. The emotions you wished you’d never have to feel again.
“Stop.” A whisper.
“Itching to ruin the kingdom’s beloved princess—”
“Do not move any closer!” you shout, eyes squeezed shut, hands fisting the suspended sheets so hard you can feel your fingernails dig into your palms. Scarring.
The world halts, and you feel the darkness beyond your eyelids, lighten. The air is forgiving, cool and blowing.
When you open your eyes, you’re alone.
THE WAR ROOM LOOKS the same, but everything has changed.
For one thing, you were significantly more bundled up with coats and lined boots. The cold of the green islands wasn’t the creeping frost you’d anticipated. You simply woke up one day without feeling in your fingers and toes, fog in the air as you breathed.
The coat wasn’t nearly as thick as it needed to be, but you doubt you would’ve found anything better even at the ports. The green islands weren’t meant for life.
“You need to get into the hold unnoticed, and as quickly as possible,” Minghao says. “We don’t know what’s gonna happen after the exchange is made but we know we can’t help you once you’re on that ship.”
Clenching your jaw, you nod tersely. It was high stakes, you couldn’t hurt any of the soldiers to keep it clean; planting a bomb where a King resides was difficult—princess or not.
“Getting you out of the wreckage is our job,” Hoshi says, and you pointedly refuse to look at him. You weren’t quite convinced. “We’ll be on Tigress by the time the bomb goes off. Leave nothing of importance on this thing, we’ll be blowing it up too.”
“You need to get in the water as soon as that bomb goes off,” Jun says. “Their priority is gonna be you and your father. You need to make sure they can’t find you when they realise the ship’s sinking.”
The ship the King should be transported in was the same as the very naval vessel you sat in right now.
“They might be on one of the smaller ships,” you say.
“Why?”
“You know what the ships that hold royals look like, they aren’t risking you having that advantage.”
If your father was bringing out all the guns of deception to take down these pirates once and for all—which you don’t doubt he was—every move you were about to make was based on assumptions. Assumptions that might as well cost this entire crew’s heads.
“Do you know what those ships look like?” Minghao asks.
“I’ve only been on them a few times, but never in the hold,” you say. “I think I’ll figure it out well enough, they’re all the same more or less.”
There’s a blanket of silence, a quiet regard to how utterly unprepared all of you were. Limited information and the most important man’s head at the butt of the target; your bow pulled too taut, too wobbly, your arrow too blunt.
“Are you sure we can’t risk shooting a couple of ‘em in the head?” Chan asks from across the room, running a tired hand across his face.
Sighing, you ignore the burst of fog erupting from your mouth, answering, “I can convince an entire Kingdom their King drowned, but I don’t know if I stop them from trying to find his body. Imagine their surprise if they find a supposedly drowned man with a bullet in his head.”
“It’s fine,” Hoshi interrupts, eyes downcast and arms folded. He leans against the wall of the war room and you can’t help it when your mind flashes to that stormy night. Your hands finding refuge on his chest, the heat of the moment.
Nose flaring, you look away, the rage hurtling up your throat like vomit.
“We’ll just have to figure it out. Stay vigilant, we all know what’s at stake. We all know what we have to do,” he continues, a glance around the inhabitants of the room.
Something about it almost insinuates an underlying question of trust, a confirmation to sweep an unanswering room.
“The bomb’s done,” Jun says, and heat crawls up your entire being. “I made a couple extras, I’m gonna chuck ‘em out into the water for a test and that’ll be it.”
Somewhere on this ship lies the bomb that would kill your father, and if you didn’t do your job like you were supposed to, it might as well kill you all.
YOU LEFT YOUR SOUL on your bedside table the moment Seungkwan entered your quarters with a rapt knock, informing you that the ship was nearing the rendezvous point.
It had only been a few hours since that meeting in the war room, and it felt like only a week since this had all begun.
Seungkwan invites himself in as he continues to talk. You aren’t sure if he’s doing it to calm you down or not, but you appreciate it regardless.
“Keep those trousers on and make sure you look good. You have to look like we cared while we kept you prisoner,” he says, and you can’t help but smile just a little. “Take anything important—pocket it, give it to us. We’re not gonna see this ship after we’re done.”
The idea is strange, that your home for so many months would soon be forgotten, resting on the frozen ocean bed for eternity. You think of what you wish to keep, eyeing the stack of letters on the desk. You won’t be able to keep them on you if you were going to be jumping into the ocean at some point.
Collecting the smaller pile, you hand them to Seungkwan. “You might have to take a dip in the ocean too, but at least you may have a chance to skip that bit if luck’s on your side. Keep these for me?”
Seungkwan smiles as he takes the stack of letters, pressing them to fit inside his coat. “Aren’t these all from your father?”
“Yes, but…” you trail off. “I’d like to remember them in case I forget why I did what I’m about to do.”
Seungkwan stands in front of you, an unreadable expression on his face. “You know this can’t work unless we trust one another. All of us. The entire crew.”
“I trust you,” you say. “Pirates are impatient. If you wanted me gone I wouldn’t be here.”
He sighs, almost like he was dissatisfied with your answer. With a laugh you ask, “Did you want me to say no?”
“No, it’s just,” he starts. “I wasn’t going to bring it up but, since we don’t have time…I don’t know what’s going on with you and Hoshi but…”
You stiffen at the mention of his name.
“I need to make sure you aren’t about to do something rash because of him.”
Your corset lies on the sheets, and you snatch it off, a bite to your movements.Your coat is already off, your linen shirt is the only thing that covers your upper body
“It was my mistake. I misunderstood. I won’t be letting it affect anything tonight.” You push the loosened corset over your head, too frustrated to unlace it and lace it back up. Your fingers are freezing cold, even too much for your palms to bear as they come in inevitable contact.
Beyond yourself, you continue to grit through your chattering teeth, the pulses of irritation in your brain only encouraging you to spill. Turning around, back now facing Seungkwan, you fiddle with the strings on your corset as you rant.
“I can’t say the same for him, but you can ask.” Your arms are bent at a strange angle, but you attempt to make the loops and knots anyway. Having never had to do this by yourself ever, you’d found a practice after your peculiar situation. You were alright, but the cold was making it near impossible to simply loop the string through the existing holes.
“He seems to have a lack of emotional control, of course, you’d know, but I can’t say I find it too charming,” your grunting front he effort as you speak.
Seungkwan seems to have noticed your struggle because you feel a pair of warmer hands replace yours, unlacing the loop you’d just made only to loop it again, tighter this time. He takes the liberty to tie the final knot, tighter than you’d usually have it but you’re too busy to correct him.
“I don’t think I need to explain what happened, your captain seems to be content with the way he is,” you scoff slightly before continuing. “I’m not quite sure what else I was expecting. Actually, I do know what I was expecting, but again, that’s just seems to be my fault—”
“I’m sorry.”
It’s like an entire ocean’s worth of ice water has been poured down your back. Perhaps being buried under the glaciers of the Green Islands would be more forgiving.
Turning around, you find the hands on your waist do not move, Hoshi’s face coming into view instead of Seungkwan’s.
The room is bare besides the both of you, the door to quarters closed. You don’t know when he came in nor when Seungkwan left, but he stands before you now, hands touching you where you shouldn’t let him. But you do.
“I’m sorry,” he repeats, his eyes locked in on yours.
“W-what?” you breathe.
“I’ve been quite stupid.”
“Have you?”
It sounds like he breathes out a laugh, but composes himself. “I didn’t realise I was cornering you on the deck the other day. I’m sorry for making you feel unsafe. I’m sorry for everything I said.”
Every fibre of your being wants him to suffer, to withhold your forgiveness. But then you realise where you are, in the middle of an ocean that’s been designed by the heavens to kill.
“Thank you for saying that.” You don’t have the courage to look him in the eye. “I’m sorry too. You aren’t…you aren’t what I implied you were. You’re right. I was projecting.”
“I don’t want us to go out there walking on eggshells around each other,” he says as his breath fans your face. Warm. “We have to come out the other side. All of us.”
You nod slowly.
“You have it the hardest out of all of us, I just…” he trails off and you feel his fingers tightening on your waist, even through the material of your corset. “I don’t want you to feel like you’re alone. No matter what you lose, I think it’s safe to say you’ve gained me. All of us.”
The thought of not making it out alive has you flexing your numb fingers in front of you slightly. You might die. This crew might die. Your crew might die.
The man that’s begun to mean more than just a saviour might die.
Not considering your frozen fingertips, or the absurdity, your body moves on its own.
In a split second, your iced lips are in contact with the pirate captain’s warmer ones.
You don’t doubt they’re cold as well, but they differ from yours enough for them to feel like the only warmers you need.
Your hands have grabbed his face, light brushes against his skin as you tiptoe to reach his lips. They’re soft. Softer than you could’ve ever imagined on a pirate, and you find yourself forgetting where you are for a moment as you feel the plush of his mouth against your own.
Pulling away first, your noses still brushing, you whisper to him through the creaks and groans of the drifting ship. “I had to do that. Just in case.”
“In case?” he whispers back.
“In case… we don’t make it.”
It only takes him a moment to remove his hands from your waist. For a heartbreaking second, you think this is him pulling away from you. Again.
And then both of his arms are looping around your waist, pulling you into his chest hard, your lips slamming into each other even harder.
He takes the liberty to move his mouth against your own, hot even in the cold air. Moving with a restrained pace, yet appropriately desperate nonetheless. The cold tip of your nose brushes against his cheek and he pulls away to hiss.
“God, you’re freezing.”
The discovery only seems to urge him to pull you impossibly closer. If your lungs weren’t already occupied, you wouldn’t have been able to breathe. Despite it all, you find your arms coming up around his neck and shoulders, one hand finding refuge in his light hair.
You might never need a drink of anything ever again, not with the way his mouth alone seems to have you drunk and deranged, begging for time to stop so he’d never stop kissing you, never stop moving his beautiful, glorious mouth against your own.
There isn’t a thought in your mind as you pull away for wretched air, eyes closed and breathing heavily.
Hoshi places his forehead flush against your own, both of you exhaling into each other’s faces, still holding you so tight it hurts. It’s warm, his breath seemingly defrosting the formed icicles on your face.
“Hoshi,” you slip from your mouth instinctively.
“Soonyoung,” he breathes, and it takes you a moment to realise he’s talking. “My name. Soonyoung is the name my mother gave me. I want you to have it.”
Opening your eyes, you register his face so close to yours. His eyes are screwed shut, he’s still breathing heavily.
“Soonyoung,” you repeat, hands finding his face again, stroking his cheek with your thumb. “Soonyoung.”
He opens his eyes.
“I like it. It’s very you.”
He smiles and you can’t help but think how beautiful he looks when he does, and when he leans forward to give you another elongated peck, one that has you chasing his lips again. He relents for one more.
“Well, Soonyoung, can I give you something too?”
He looks at you expectantly.
Reaching up to the back of your neck, you find the knotted bind of the leather cord that hangs from your neck. Undoing it, you bring the charm out from under your shirt, leaning forward to tie it around his neck this time.
He stares at the charm that dangles down his front as you give it a light tug, “A letter opener. So that’s what you were getting from that lady at Hasry.”
“You knew when I left?” you ask, brows furrowed.
“I was more worried about you wandering off than I was about anything else, what made you think I didn’t know exactly where you were?” He has a cheeky smile on his face, one that you’ve never seen without an underlying threat or the usual glint of unhinged in his eyes.
You can’t help but grin, of course he knew.
“If you wanted a letter opener as a weapon, you should’ve just asked.”
“Aren’t knives just bigger letter openers?” you ask with a soft chuckle.
He responds with a chaste kiss on the tip of your nose before saying, “Since we’re exchanging gifts—”
“You started it.”
“And I’m ending it.”
He emerges from one of his many pockets with what looks like a bracelet in his hands.
“That’s—”
“From Hasry,” he confirms. “I bought it for no real reason, never even wore it.”
He rolls one of the pink and blue beads between his thumb and forefinger, and you remember it sitting at the stall in Hasry like it was yesterday.
“Didn’t realise I only bought it because I saw you looking at it.”
The twist in your heart is the worst it’s ever been, even while he holds you closer than anyone ever has, you feel the need to squeeze him beyond measure hoping it’ll fix the turmoil in your chest.
He attempts to take one of your hands, in an obvious attempt to slip the bracelet on your wrist.
“Wait.”
Hoshi stops.
“Keep it,” you say as you grab his wrist, pushing the beads down his hand so it sits on his wrist instead.
“But—”
You cut him off with a kiss. “A reason for you to come out of this alive.”
There’s a silent understanding between the two of you as you stand in each other's arms.
“We still have much to talk about. But I think this is alright for now,” you say.
“We will,” he confirms. “But when we go out there and put everything on the line, remember you aren’t just a princess anymore. You’re a pirate, too. So fight like one.”
THE COLD HAS COATED the deck in a fine layer of ice, one that makes it a hazard to simply walk on. Your boots feel unstable and it takes a conscious effort to plant your feet firmly on the wood to ensure you don’t fall like Chan almost has the last four times and the one time he did.
It’s less foggy than you’d anticipated, and you can see Mingyu and Minghao working overtime to ensure the giant ship doesn’t hit one of the absurdly large icebergs that float in the freezing water, the crow’s nest occupied by Hoshi himself as he peers through his telescope. It was strange seeing him use it, you’d begun to think he only kept it like an accessory.
He yells something from his place high up; it’s unclear, but you know.
And then you see it, the naval ship with the unmistakable flag that ripples proud in the cold air. Your family crest is barely decipherable, but knowing what lay ahead was enough to have you taking significantly deeper breaths.
Your father’s—the King’s— ship bobs in the water with a near empty main deck, not a soul on board.
You hold your breath, and as one of the blocks of ice are swerved, you find a second ship. The indicative jolly roger is nowhere to be seen, but it's obvious what ship that was.
The Tigress stands proud with her years of darkened wood, the unmistakable figurehead at the prow in the distinct shape of a fanged siren.
And only a smaller sailboat away, lay a flat of ice.
Another white flag with the royal crest, lines of uniformed soldiers that stand at attention like protectors of the ice, a pattern of dotted blues. The admiral stands next to your father, who’s donned his own Naval uniform complete with a purple cape pinned at his shoulder.
The purple cape of a victor that returns home from battle. The purple cape he’s donned before the battle has even ensued.
The King has noticed your arrival, his face becoming clearer the nearer the ship gets to the block of ice that would act as common ground.
And then the ship stops, you turn around and realise the rest of the crew has their eyes on you, expectant.
“We have a message,” Mingyu says, looking at you but handing the thing in his hand to his captain.
In your fixation, you did not notice the small boat that had floated near the ship, bearing a scroll with the royal seal.
Hoshi reads it, lips tight shut and jaw clenched.
In the next few minutes, all seven of you are cramped into a single, tiny wherry to be rowed onto the iced land. None of you speak, none of you acknowledge the other. The canister that Jun had given you presses against the side of your bare hip, your knife strapped inside your boot.
That was it. That was all you had.
But there was some confidence in it, the way the entire crew was asked to present themselves at the exchange was enough to tell you there was truth in what you presumed of your father’s plans.
He had knives of his own up his sleeve, and he intended to provoke his worst enemy while looking him in the eye.
As the boat reached what was a hardened shore, the crew stepped off the boat one by one. Very carefully, you stepped on the block of ice as the group moved forward, reaching a point where you stood parallel to the other rigid party.
In a purposeful attempt, you were kept in the middle of a herded circle, shielded by the crew as Hoshi stood front and centre, the crew’s mouthpiece. You can’t help but swallow, the ringing in your head growing louder than ever.
There’s a loud voice that plagues the sheets of ice, and your stomach flips so violently you lose both your vision and your hearing. You take an unconscious step back before you feel a hand on your back.
It was Chan, who whispered, “Keep it together. Calm down, it’s okay.”
It was the obvious response from him but you find yourself calming in any case.
“The crown commands you, Hoshi Kwon, to bring forth Her Royal Highness, the princess, at once.” Your father’s right hand man, the royal advisor, and his more trusted friend speaks for the throne, his voice recognizable as it rings on behalf of his king.
From standing behind him, you watch as Hoshi simply raises his fist to place at his hips.
“Captain. Captain Hoshi Kwon,” he corrects, before continuing. “And my hostage will not be brought anywhere till I have my money ship.”
“As proposed by Hoshi Kwon, His Majesty, The King will cooperate in the exchange of Her Royal Highness, the princess for said ship.”
“Give me my ship first.”
“Hoshi Kwon—”
Hoshi groans loudly, loud enough for the other party that stands multiple feet away to hear, before continuing, “This is why I despise dealing with you insufferable lot, why must everything be so formal?”
But you knew what game he was playing at, the deadliest pirate on the seas does not comply with government officials so easily, and he wasn’t about to drop his masquerade now.
“You know what,” Hoshi starts, and you see him eye the wooden boat you had just reached the island on. “We do it this way.”
There’s a pause.
“Me and my harmless little crew will sidestep back over, zip our way to our ship and leave you with your precious princess. Is your royal highness majesty in agreement?”
“Hoshi Kwon is commanded once again to bring the princess forward.” There’s less formality in his tone now, and you realise very quickly that there was no other way to separate yourself from the crew.
“Hoshi,” you whisper under your breath, hoping he would understand. Taking the risk, you move forward in the little space you had, hand very gently placed on his back.
There’s a pause before he speaks, “Fine. Have your princess.”
Turning around, back facing the crowd, he makes eye contact with you before moving to discreetly meet the eyes of his crew. “Let them take you.”
That’s the last thing you hear him say to his crew as you find a larger shadow approach from behind Hoshi.
“Ho—”
Hoshi grabs your arm harsher than he usually would, dragging you forward in his attempt to present you, but you find that Hoshi’s turned back was taken as an opportunity, the dozens of soldiers having already made their way across.
If you hadn’t heard what he had whispered to the crew, his shocked face would’ve fooled you too. He looks like he wasn’t expecting the way the crew was immediately surrounded by swarms of armed soldiers, guns perched directly at each member of the crew. He looked like he wasn’t expecting to be cornered.
But you liked to think you knew this man, and he had once told you to never turn your back to an enemy. Too much to be a rookie mistake of his, so you trust him.
And then you’re being tugged by someone who’s not from the crew, the distinct feeling of softer, more respectful hands that wrap around your elbow, urging you forward.
You find it within yourself to not look back, sending a prayer to every entity in the world to keep them safe, to keep the trust in your heart that they knew what they were doing.
Eyes downcast, you know immediately who you’re being led towards, and when you stop, bracing yourself to meet your father’s eye, you find yourself feeling nothing.
“Are you hurt?” he asks in his strange form of greeting. No embrace, no sign of relief that his daughter and only heir was alive and well.
“No, sir,” you reply, shifting your eyes back down to your shoes.
“Go back to the ship with the guards. We leave as soon as I’m done with this lot.”
Your stomach jolts, but you bite your tongue and let yourself be led to one of the smaller boats. The canister burns against your skin.
Seated in the smaller boat, flanked by guards, you can’t stop your neck from craning to look at the scene behind you.
Far away, on the other side of the glacier, the pirates are being ordered to strip themselves of their weapons.
Hoshi’s dagger glints against the sunlight and you spot Jun’s revolvers in the pile.
Hoshi looks up and catches your eye, face unchanged.
“You’re safe now, your Highness,” one of your guards assured you, taking your gaze as a fearful look back instead of one laced with something else.
Please be okay.
As soon as you're led up to the main deck, your eyes dart. It doesn’t take long for you to figure out that your father had not chosen to take one of the smaller ships as you’d expected of him. Instead, you stand in an exact replica of the ship you had just disembarked, except for the flag that fluttered with your family crest.
You’re pushed into one of the quarters in the lower decks, hearing the distinct click of something outside as you find yourself in the mostly barren indoors.
It looks like a colder version of your quarters on the other ship, the same dimensions, the same window that displays the clear waters of the Green Islands. Except it’s only occupied by a single bed that’s pushed into a corner, stripped of its sheets.
It looks like a prison cell.
When you turn around to try for the door, you try to wrench it open but it refuses to budge. You can’t help but question how many times you’ve landed yourself in this exact situation.
Why on Earth would they lock you in? Did they suspect you of something? But whatever for?
You give up, turning to untuck your shirt from your trousers, feeling for the bomb against your hip to make sure it hadn’t slipped. After that, you crouch down to check the inside of your boot, despite feeling the dagger this entire time, you couldn’t help but need to check.
There was nothing you could do, not when you knew nothing of what was happening on the other side of the door. The window gleams, and you find yourself bolting towards it, peering through the glass to check for any bodies that may land in the water, praying your father would keep them alive.
Hang them publicly. Guillotine them and suspend their heads at the gates of the palace. Just keep them alive for tonight.
The sun is proving a sorry resource of time, especially when you can’t tell how long it’s been since you were shoved in here. The sun seems closer to the seas when you hear the jingle of the lock.
Nearing the risk of whiplash, you turn to the door to find your father walking into the room. He walks in, his cape gone, immediately turning to lock the door from the inside once again.
Once he comes around, he stands with his hands clasped in front of him, eyes boring into your soul.
“It seems the pirates have changed you,” he comments, eyeing your new trousers that you sport. It was strange, a woman in trousers, let alone a princess.
“Not at all, sir,” you respond.
“Your newfound friends are strapped into the brigs, finally subdued and ready to stand trial for their crimes.” His voice is rough, and he looks older than when you last saw him months ago.
He acts in less alarm than you would’ve thought, assuming his definition of ‘friends’ was simply a sick way to prod at you than any indication that he suspected an alliance. But you fight the effort to let out a sigh of relief; they were in the brig, they were fine, they’d stay alive in time for you to get to them.
“I thought David less than for a fool,” he refers to the Admiral as he talks. “He proved me quite incorrect when he showed up on some shoddy fishing boat with a message from a pirate. Like some messenger boy.”
You don’t answer as you simply stare at the toes of your boots. It was foolish to dare make eye contact with him.
“A stupid proposal from a stupid pirate,” he chortled in a genuine laugh. “That pirate ship was easy bait. If only you hadn’t gotten yourself roped in like a simpleton.”
His sentence ends with a harsher undertone as he blames you for something you couldn’t possibly have controlled.
“In any case,” he continues, the gruff in his voice clearing out. “What’s a pirate to a King?”
Everything in you screams at you to halt your already moving tongue, yelling about how horrible the idea was.
“He’s more of a man than you ever could be.”
The ringing in your ears becomes a sounding blare, your vision going white at the sides. Your hands shake and you don’t know why you keep staring your father in the eye.
There’s a furrow in his brow, eyes unyielding and face stoic.
It’s silent for goodness knows how long as you wish you could sink in that very moment.
“That load of filth’s done more than just put you in trousers, is it?” he grits through his teeth. He’s seething. “Henley had said you were acting strange when he saw you at that port market, it seems he was right.”
“No matter,” he continues, exhaling loudly. “It only makes my job easier.”
He unclasps his hands, pulling his white gloves at the fingertips.
“Perhaps we may live in a world where princesses prance around with pirates, but that won’t be the reason I fulfil my duty as King today.”
He slips them off his hands entirely.
“I tried shaping you into something worthy of the throne for so many years, and I’d begun to realise that perhaps, not everyone is fit to be ruler after all.”
Was he about to strip of your inheritance? The crown was why you were born. Despite everything your father had put you through, the throne was your god given right.
“Unfortunately, I cannot simply renounce your title. Not without reason,” he continues as he takes a step closer to you, dropping the gloves to the floor soundlessly. “And while perhaps the court may not consider inadequacy as enough reason, I’m quite sure an exchange gone wrong would be enough, even for them.”
“What are you saying?”
“I’m saying, dear daughter, that our time together has come to an end.”
And then his hands were around your throat.
[AN]: HEHEHEHEHEHEHE rb or send an ask telling me your thots as always, one part left to go!!!!!
#hoshi getting scarred from their spar and now forever having something on his body that reminds him of oc do you see me sobbing#i love the world building#i have this open in two tabs as i read dskjhd WHAT WAS THE PUB SCENE THE FUCKING TENSIONNNNN i giggled#“YOU LEFT YOUR SOUL on your bedside table” i love this line so much its like leaving it so that whatever oc was before doesn't get tainted#by what oc is about to do now#i love seungkwan so much :(#“Soonyoung is the name my mother gave me. I want you to have it.” ” do you see me sobbing pt 2#im scared icl i feel like something bad is going to happen ahhhh 😭😭😭#FUCK OFF FUCK OFF NOOOOO HOW COULD YOU END IT THERE NOOOOOO#pray until a few more hours oh god
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Word of the day: Swivet (noun) a state of nervous excitement, haste, or anxiety; flutter. #wordoftheday #words #wordgasm #wordpost #vocabulary #vocab #swivet #vocabbag #spellit #dictionary #lexicon #glossary #education #gray #purple #thesaurus #English #wordnerd #wordswork #wordsandwich #learnanewword #spellingwords #increaseyourvocabulary https://www.instagram.com/p/CJJyuIbFnxl/?igshid=vygheyzi05xr
#wordoftheday#words#wordgasm#wordpost#vocabulary#vocab#swivet#vocabbag#spellit#dictionary#lexicon#glossary#education#gray#purple#thesaurus#english#wordnerd#wordswork#wordsandwich#learnanewword#spellingwords#increaseyourvocabulary
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Build Your Vocabulary | Swivet
Build Your Vocabulary | Swivet
Word of the Day TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2020 swivet [ swiv-it ] noun a state of nervous excitement, haste, or anxiety; flutter. Word of the Day Credit: Dictionary.com Photo Credit: Giphy.com
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Happy Trans Visibility Day!
I included my non-binary and genderfluid kids cause I have heard they are under the trans umbrella, hope I’m not wrong there.
Fiore, Non-Binary
Jamie, Genderfluid
Sterling, FTM
Leilani, MTF
Alex, Non-Binary
Here is the Picrew I know it’s the end of the day but I hope my trans friends and mutuals got to enjoy their day today!
#pkmn fankids#picrew#I haven't gotten to talk about these other fankids yet so here it is#Alex is Hilda and Cheren's only child (for now at least) and they are a Pokemon ranger#Leilani is Lana and Kiawe's daughter and she is Luscious's best friend and a dancer#Sterling is Lyra and Khorys son they had before they got divorced#Sterling is still a baby when Lyn and co are on their journey but I gave him a design because I wanted him to travel with Ronan later#Fiore Rosales#contestshipping#Jamie Morgan#rocketshipping#Sterling Swivet#johtafestashipping#soulsilvershipping#Leilani Mahi'ai#steamshipping#Alex Haberkorn#checkmateshipping#also Alex's design is still a work in progress#they look more like their dad I guess#trans visibility day 2021#trans
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Okay Firstly, love your work🤩 thanks a lot for everything you do.
I've seen someone answer a question about head canons of levi cutting onions? And since then I cannot stop thinking of Levi and his s/o in the kitchen, preparing something cause- maybe Kuchel is coming over for dinner?
And maybe both cut onions and crying and laughing
or maybe just Levi and his s/o is feeling bad/making fun of him?
Or maybe his s/o is cutting onions and Levi is making fun of her?
Now, you can definitely ignore this request but yes. Just some domestic fluff in the kitchen with both being married is really fluffy
First, thank you so much! 🥹🥺
TW: None. Set in modern au where Kuchel is alive and Levi grew up as mama’s boy.
The cotton ‘sac à pain’ brims with two crispy crusty fresh baguettes, one unscathed, the other victim of your bread-tearing fangs. The warm chewy inside contrasts with the teeth-cracking outer layer and melts in your mouth like cotton candy. For your loyalty, the clerk added an extra wheel of roman bread.
Two by two, you climb the stairs to the third floor to make up for the load of carbs. 302. A glint sweeps over the copper plaque. you step on the Don't wear shoes in my house door mat Kenny got for Levi on his last birthday and Christmas. Two birds killed with one stone, he says every year. That's one of the reasons why Levi is always shooting daggers at his uncle.
You lift the knocker and rap three times. Ten seconds later, the tapping of your impatience crouches in every corner of the hallway. During the wait, you break another bite-size chunk and bundle it into your mouth. You shrug. Levi must be keeping an eye on the roasted duck. A drizzle of crumbs mingles in the synthetic fur as you rub your hands on your jeans; a smidge of panic rises, and you dredge them off with your foot, scattering them around, hoping to conceal them through the streaks and twists of the silvery marble veins. The hand of keys rattles as you hook the ring out of your pocket, fiddling for the pink one, and shove it into the keyhole. A click, and you push the door open.
The alluring whiff of rosemary and garlic strikes into your lungs, making you levitate and drool. The house smells devine, and you can’t wait to sit and stab that bird. The award for the best daughter-in-law of the year will be all yours.
At the entryway, you scuff your shoes off, push them under the bench and slip into your kitty flip-flops.
“They didn’t have Brie, got Camembert instead. We’ll make it work.” Your voice blares through the apartment as you cross the living room to the kitchen, but you don’t get any reply. Slowing down, you take a look around, inspecting; being married to Levi Ackerman obligues to develop a dust-hunting radar.
It all looks pristine. The dining table perfectly set, melting swans of cloth napkins roost on each plate, families of forks lying on the left side. Why do you need that many? Who knows, but it looks so fetch. The shiny cutlery set you reserve for the special occasions finally sees the daylight.
Fresh daisies enliven the coffee table. The curtains dance in the soft breeze, natural light skims every corner of the main salon. Smoke swirls up in threads from the incense sticks, their scent quarreling with that coming from the oven.
A yummy sizzle whispers from the kitchen, and dragged by the smell, you continue your way, but then, a sob cracks, barely perceptible, the aerial in your ears tune to the right frequency, and you slip the gear to two.
“Levi!” You storm in the kitchen and stop dead in your tracks when you see him wiping his eyes in the sleeve of his t-shirt, dabbling it with a darker gray.
Squinting, you equip with a sword of bread to fight whatever the root of your honeybun’s distress is. What dares hurt your man will face your rage. Nothing on his left, nothing on his right.
Or what if Kuchel bursts in, finds her thirty-year-old baby boy weeping and blames it all on you? Your eyes bang open at the swivet twisting your guts. You shake your head frantically, tossing away the image of your mother-in-law recoiling into a fighting stance. Your award hanging by a thread.
You should never mess with the puppies.
Chop. Chop. Chop.
The knife hits dull the cutting board.
“Shit.” A hiss breaks from him, and he sucks in a long sniff. Levi reels away from the instigator and winces at the sting, scrunching his face as if he had run his tongue over a lime. He leans back against the countertop and clenches his hands around the rim. His eyes remain squeezed shut.
Your head tilts to the side, and one eyebrow curves into a knap; your misgiving slopes into curiosity, then swerves to amusement when you catch the mutilated body of the culprit, the white onion craggily chopped in fourths. The strap glides from your shoulder to your hand as you throttle a snort by clamping shut the gawky chasm between your wobbly lips. Your body bends fighting the convulsions of mirth, but you can't contain your guffaw, a slap on the knee and you crack in a storm of giggles.
knurls bridge the gap between his brows, tiny veins gnarl like red cobwebs in the white of his eyes. Glaring, his mouth twitches in a pique. He grunts, and puffs out a cheek, peeling off the counter, and thumps to you, snatching the bag of bread from your hand. "This is why I don't trust you with bread."
You straighten up and wipe off a misty line of tears from under your eyes. "That's why I always buy two instead of one, plus the bread boy added this one too." You fling your arm up, the other bag swinging at your elbow.
"He's flirting." Levi takes that one too and delves into for the woodened cheese. He oversees the baked camembert dip.
"He's just nice and rewards his best customers." You throw your head forwards and loop your hair through the donut, restricting the disheveled strands in a messy bun. "For you, whoever is nice to me is flirting." Your eyes sag at his lack of affection, and you go after him, but he flings away from your attempts of hugs.
"Don't." He pouts and sets the knife down. Strings of cheese snap as he removes the rind lid, itching to turn around and kiss you. He's just holding up, acting like the spoiled brat he is. Deep down, he knows he is.
"Are you mad at me?"
He places the cheese in a ramequin and sprinkles thyme on top.
"I'm sorry." You drape your arms around him from behind, straining your cheek over the rippling muscles of his back. at least, this time he doesn't shoo you. "Are you ok?"
"You're so mean, Y/N." Levi whines. “It’s your fault for leaving me alone dealing with those devilish onions.”
"But-"
"Don't want to hear you."
"Cry baby." You press a kiss on his back and free him from your arms, grab your bunny apron and pick up his half-hearted job. "You silly, you had to keep the root. That's what Gordon says."
"I'm not you, nuzzling in cooking videos before going to sleep."
"No, 'cause you're glued to Marie Kondo."
Glowering, his face snaps to you. He hurls a rag onto the countertop and wriggles the mittens on. The heat whacks him as he opens the oven and recoils, letting the steam escape before drawing out the dutch oven. You do know what you're doing. inwardly, he brags about how lucky he is for marrying you. That V you drooled over is hardly visible nowadays.
Ceramic clanks on the rack, and he shuts the door, unfettering his hands.
The glinting blade rakes clean the cutting board, and the seductive frizzle tickles your ears and nose. Hopefully, Kuchel will knock on time. Broccoli, mushrooms, bell peppers, you bring color to the stir fry.
Levi tears a piece of bread and crams it into his mouth. Rests against the countertop, arms folded over his chest, crumpling his matching apron. He smiles, trying not to sneer at you sticking out your tongue in concentration as you cut the vegetables.
You’ve been wringing up all your energy to impress his mother, even though he insisted to keep it simple. He sighs. Why was he upset anyway? That’s not longer relevant. He can’t be pissed at you for too long. How could he? A bat of lashes and you’ll have him on his knees. He’d walk in red coal to get you a napkin and dab the corners of your lips.
With you, he’s the fidgeting eighteen year old who stealthily picked up flowers from the neighbor’s yard to pin behind your ear.
#attack on titan levi#levi ackerman#attack on titan#aot#shingeki no kyojin#levi attack on titan#snk#levi aot#snk levi#levi x reader#levi x you#levi ackerman/reader
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doublespeak — ft. park jongseong | 02
keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
synopsis: there’s nobody you detest more than park jongseong—he’s obnoxious, he’s rude, and he always manages to top you in every single class. while you pride yourself as one of the smartest students in your school, there’s something you can’t quite figure out the formula for—the explosive chemistry between you and your (hot) enemy.
characters: park jongseong x fem!reader
genres: romance, fluff, comedy, high school
au(s): academic rivals, “i wanna punch him except he’s really fucking hot fml” au, jay being an annoying, cocky asshole
contents: frenemies to lovers, constant bickering & banter, childish arguments, studying fluff, suggestive themes, smartass jay w brains
warnings: swearing, lowercase intended
a/n: my first jay fic! <3 my fav trope is enemies to lovers so i’ve been dying to write something like this T^T i legit had so much fun writing all the banter and felt the “frenemies” vibe was cute! anyway i really hope u guys enjoy it!! :>
chapter two
word count: 4.6k | navigation: previous / next / masterlist
//
“good,” jongseong says. “and i hate to be a dick, but there’s something at stake here for me.” he hums a little. “would you be able to do me a favour?”
when you turn to stare at the situation, you notice your students are looking at each other once again. a dubious look etched across their features, you begin to frown with suspicion.
“what… what is it?” they ask him.
“bring little miss piggy to the party,” he points at you with his thumb. “or don’t come at all.”
your two students, riki and sunwoo, appear as though they’ve seen a ghost — their smiles disappear; in fact, all colour vanishes from their complexions at the drop of a hat, leaving no tinctures of emotion.
well, maybe one emotion — fear.
“t… teach,” they finally disrupt their stunned silence by gawking at you, a look of horror encased in their eyes. “please… please come to the party with us! we really, really wanna go!”
“guys, stop being idiots.” you frown, lacing your arms across your chest. you narrow your eyes at them, disconcerted by the way they’re staring at you. you’ve never seen them look so starved and desperate, as though you hold the key that’ll stop the world from collapsing and annihilating all of humankind.
this is just a tad dramatic, isn’t it?
“and you—” you avert your eyes from your panicked pupils, now glaring at jongseong. “you need to leave. now.”
“really?” he blinks, feigning ignorance with a small smile. the sight makes one of your eyes twitch with irritation. god, who does he think he’s fooling with that face?
soon, he channels his attention back toward your students. “kids, what do you think? should i leave?”
“no!” they immediately cry in unison, suddenly rising from their seats. they scuffle with one another, struggling their way out from behind the chairs as they scramble their way toward you.
you stare with utter bewilderment, taken aback by their sudden proximity. they stand in front of you now – desperation and determination apparent in their gazes.
you open your mouth to speak, when suddenly the pair both instantly drop to their knees.
what—
“teach!” they cry, slapping their palms together in prayer form, “please, please, please come to the party!”
“what—” you splutter, flabbergasted and mortified at the sight. are they seriously begging you on their hands and knees? what’s worse is that their actions gain a few onlooking stares from nearby strangers, throwing you into a swivet of embarrassment and panic. “guys,” you clench your teeth, trying to awkwardly laugh off the situation, “what are you — get up! now!”
“but, teach—”
“i said, get off the ground!”
“please—”
oh no.
oh god.
they’re clutching on your legs now.
what the fu—
“teach! please!” they wail, hugging your legs like it’s titanic and you’re the last lifeboat. oh god! you start breaking out into a cold sweat, flustered by the attention you’re gaining.
“what the—” you shriek, attempting to shake them off, “are you guys insane? hey! get off me!”
“please, please, please, please, please!” they shamelessly cry, causing you to snap your head up and jongseong with desperation. in return, he offers you a smug smile, like he’s the puppet master and the marionettes are doing exactly what pleases him — this exchange causes your blood to boil, because you know he’s concocting some sort of plan designed to bite you in the ass.
“thanks to you, they’ve gone rabid!” you hiss at him, attempting to shove the leeches off your leg.
jongseong sniggers in response, taunting you with a casual shrug. “they just want to go to their first senior party,” he sighs, placing a gentle hand on his chest under the pretence of pity. “it’s just so sad that you’re denying them the opportunity.”
“that’s your fault, not mine!” you bark, finally managing to escape from their grasps. a scoff springs from your chest before you rush back toward the table, from which you begin to hurriedly gather your belongings. carelessly, you shove your teaching material papers and books straight into your backpack.
“w-wait, teach! where are you going?”
“home,” you hiss, angrily zipping up your backpack, “where i won’t get mauled by a bunch of animals.”
“but—”
“guys, c’mon!” you finally snap, twirling around as you slide your arms through the strap loops, fastening the backpack against your spine. “stop being dumb. he’s obviously bluffing. you’re still invited whether i go or not, okay? he’s just teasing you.”
“uh, no, i’m actually serious,” jongseong grins, sliding his hands into his pockets again.
“uh, no, you’re actually just an annoying little shit.” you snap your head at him, childishly mocking his voice. you really shouldn’t be stooping down to his level, but you find the urge to immaturely stick out your tongue and effectively halve your age.
“uh, no, i’m actually pretty sure those things aren’t mutually exclusive.”
“uh, no, i’m actually pretty sure you just admitted that you are, indeed, an annoying little shit.”
“uh, no, i actually never said that.”
“uh, yes, you did.”
“uh, no, i didn’t.”
“uh, well, it’s not like you needed to say it for me to know it.”
“uh, well, in this society, the opinions of four-eyed, helmet-wearing piggies don’t really count.”
your short fused temper completely snaps. “call me piggy one more time and i’ll fucking rip out all your hair and make you bald for real!” you scream, launching toward him with claws unsheathed. you’re so close to tackling him down to the ground, when suddenly you feel strong forces yank you back.
it’s sunwoo and riki.
they’re dragging you backwards, preventing you from finishing jongseong’s life right then and there. and given your skyrocketing blood pressure, it’s a good decision that they’ve decided to obstruct you from slicing his guts alive. if not for them, you’d have been pummelling your fists in his face and sending him for a special visit to the nearest intensive care unit.
“seems like you’re the one that’s gone rabid.” jongseong cackles, guffawing loud enough that you hear his laugh bounce off the walls and ricochet into your poor, unsuspecting ears.
“you laugh now, until you’re sleeping at 3am and i’m holding a knife under your throat,” you glower, venom oozing from your tongue.
he smirks, unmoved by your threats. “piggy, all i’m hearing is that you’ll be in my room at 3am,” he winks suggestively. “you should know that whatever happens at 3am isn’t really in my control.”
you instantly shut your mouth, scowling at the gross undertone of what he’s just said. he’s just trying to get under your skin, you remind yourself, resisting the urge to projectile vomit all over the library’s floor.
just kidding, you’d never actually deface your favourite place in school – the beloved library. libraries must be protected at all costs.
“ha ha ha, you guys are so adorable together!” your pupils eject obviously forced laughs from behind you. your brows instantly furrow as you shrug their grips from you.
“whatever,” you grumble, exhausted from being around the biggest tool on earth. “i’m leaving,” you announce, tucking your hair behind your ears and sliding your thumbs underneath your backpack straps. “by the way, you guys need to be careful hanging around this guy,” you dip your head in jongseong’s direction, not even bothering to lower your voice or conceal your overbrimming distaste. “your brain is bound to shrink half its size if you keep breathing the same air. god, i already feel my brain cells committing suicide.”
“w-wait, teach, you’re really not coming to the party tonight?” they stutter, fumbling for articulate words. when they pout with rounded eyes, you feel your heart soften, causing you to shift uncomfortably.
“no,” you shake your head, ignoring jongseong as you begin walking closer toward the library’s exit.
“but—”
“do the homework, okay?” you say without turning around. “have your practice essays prepared for sunday’s lessons, and—”
“but teach, you have to! you have to come! we didn’t work this hard to get invited to a senior party just to get uninvited—”
“or what?” you stop in your tracks, throwing your gaze past your shoulder. honestly, this blatant disrespect and insubordination is shocking. whose side are they on? perhaps you were right — jongseong really does ruin everything he breathes on. even your sweet, doe-eyed little students are acting like devil incarnates.
“or… or…” they seem to be searching far and wide for tiny straws they can grasp on. their eyes appear panicked and desperate before you notice they seem to reach a solution. they look at each other for confirmation before facing you with resoluteness. “or… we report you to headmaster lee.”
you instantly bark out a dry laugh.
what the hell are they talking about?
lengthy silence ensues, leaving nothing but your soft laugh hanging in the air.
“wait…” your smile begins to fade, “you guys are kidding, right?”
they stubbornly shake their heads, prompting you to face them completely, gaping with incredulity.
“if you don’t come with us, we’ll leave you with bad reviews!” they cry, suddenly rallying enough confidence to return eye contact — they stare dead straight in your eyes. “you need us to give a good word to the headmaster, don’t you? for your letter of commendation.”
“are you… are you blackmailing me?” you scoff, taking a step toward them. “you better watch what you say to me, kiddies.”
they quickly shuffle back, startled by your murderous gaze.
“well, th-this is a win-win, teach…”
your jaw instantly drops. what the hell? are they seriously going to use this against you? your precious letter of commendation? after all the effort you put into increasing their grades by two whole letters!
you’ve worked so hard for them.
they would be nothing without you.
in fact, before he met you, sunwoo was always spelling doughnuts like dognuts!
“i’ll give you both two seconds to take it back right now.”
“but—”
“i said take it back!”
taken back it was not.
there was no taking back of any sorts.
if anything, there was way more giving than taking.
you hate to admit it, but sunwoo and riki had gotten you good. if there’s anything you care about, it’s the letter of commendation. you’ve been working too long and too hard to relinquish it so comfortably. having such a weakness meant you weren’t left with very many options — though, by the end of it, you had all finally reached an agreement with some negotiation.
they’d write you gleaming reviews about your tutelage, and in return, you agreed to attend the party for at least two hours.
you figured that two hours wouldn’t be that bad, right?
right?
totally.
two hours?
pshhh, child’s play.
“knock on the door.”
“no, you do it.”
“no, you do it.”
“no, you!”
“no, you—”
“oh, god, i’ll do it, just shut up!” you groan loudly, interjecting their bickering. you slam your knuckles onto the frosted glass doors, knocking rather impatiently as you’re already socially fatigued from having to deal with the aftermath of the compromise. riki and sunwoo had both insisted on getting changed out of their uniforms, and hence forced you to drive to their respective houses. and because they were adamant you also had to look as equally socially acceptable, you’d even gone home to get changed.
hence, here you are, in your good pair of jeans and a white top with sleeves that elegantly slip off your shoulders.
truthfully, seeing sunwoo and riki so excited for their first senior party is rather heart-warming, though you realise that this is your first senior party, too.
parties aren’t normally your scene.
libraries, on the other hand, are totally your scene.
late nights creating colour-coded, time-sensitive study schedules in your room are your scene.
reading lengthy dissertations on the determinants of patent innovations as a measure of the innovative efforts of companies are your scene.
at the risk of sounding like a total dweeb, you don’t need alcohol. books are your vodka shots. you don’t snort crack — you snort responsible night-ins and strict 9pm curfews.
being out of your natural habitat is certainly nerve-wracking, and though you attempt to rub off the sweat of your palms onto your jeans, the perspiration just keeps coming. ew, you inwardly cringe, how much does one need to sweat?
feeling your heart thump louder the more time that passes, you squeak in surprise when the door in front of you suddenly swings open.
sunwoo and riki stiffen beside you, while you immediately sneak both hands behind your back.
it’s happening.
the person on the other side is somebody you don’t recognise. interestingly, you feel like you should know him, simply because he appears to carry an aura of unfiltered confidence and self-assurance that only popular people seem to possess.
“hey!” he greets you all with a smile, eyes shifting from sunwoo and riki to you. when his eyes land on you, you notice the edges of his lips curl just a tad higher. “you guys look great.”
“h-hi, heeseung! thanks for inviting us!” sunwoo gushes, flashing a beam of cuteness. riki plasters a grin on his face, too, prompting you to slap a forced smile on your face.
i need to look normal. how do i look normal? what does normal look like? am i smiling too wide? i bet i am. god, i bet i look so creepy he probably wants to burn his whole house down just so i don’t step inside it.
heeseung blinks at the three of you, stepping aside to provide you all space to enter. “of course, guys! and thanks for coming,” he chuckles with soft charisma, quelling your nerves with the soothing baritone of his voice. you bite your bottom lip, waiting for riki and sunwoo to enter first before you trail behind them like you’re their five-hundred year old mother.
“i’ll give you guys a tour, and—”
“hee, hurry up, we’re doing shots!” a familiar voice suddenly sounds, and within just a few seconds, you see somebody else lightly jogging their way toward the front door.
jongseong?
at his entrance, you narrow your eyes at him, honestly a little taken aback by his attire. like heeseung, he’s opted for dark trousers, though in contrast to his friend’s baby blue sweater, jongseong dons a black button-up shirt, with the top few buttons unfastened to showcase a silver necklace.
you’ll never say this out loud for as long as you live, but for once in his life, he doesn’t look like a walking and talking rat. he looks quite decent, you admit, and this weird observation is what makes you instantly look away and pretend to find interest in the artworks hung on the walls.
“hi, piggy! or as they say in your language — oink oink!”
nope, you’re definitely not complimenting him on his outfit, period. in fact, you resist the urge to grab his face and crush it with your knee, and instead stretch a caustic smile onto your lips. “good to see you too, baldie.”
jongseong does a double take. “baldie?” he echoes with an offended scoff.
“yeah, baldie.” a sly smirk slithers to your lips as you seemingly forget the people around you. “if i’m a piggy, then you’re a baldie,” you point at his eyebrow slit, snickering. “besides, sooner or later you’re going to start showing signs of male-pattern baldness, so you should just get used to it.”
“teach!” riki elbows you in the torso, “stop being so mean!”
“it’s okay,” jongseong shakes his head, folding his arms. “you get used to it. at some point, she just sounds like a barking dog.”
“did you just call me a dog?” you gasp incredulously. “yeah, well, you’re a balding rat!”
“ha,” jongseong snorts. “well, rats on average have a greater IQ than dogs, so i guess these analogies are fitting, miss second place.” he smirks triumphantly, spinning around on his heels as he guffaws away. you gasp incredulously, stomping after him while yelling strings of incessant curses.
it’s been an hour since you arrived, which means every minute, you’re counting to sixty.
you want to go home.
it’s not that the party is bad, it’s just that it’s not for you.
your anatomy just isn’t oiled for social events.
in actuality, the party itself is pretty great. it’s amazing, actually – it bustles with energy because heeseung’s been a really great host. he’s constantly playing music the greatest volume his speakers allow, enough that you’re convinced it reverberates through the ground. drinks are being served like waterfalls, though you’ve declined every drink you’ve been offered. there are board games, drinking games, karaoke, and he even has a billiards pool table. his house is situated within seoul’s wealthier, upper-scale residential areas, meaning it boasts of palatial rooms and expansive walls, fitted nicely for the number of attendants.
the number?
big.
in all honesty, you don’t recognise many of the people here. you’re able to recognise a few faces here and there, though you mostly find yourself awkwardly loitering by the foot of the stairs, mostly picking at the skin of your nails and pretending to find interest in the water floating in your red cup.
it’s not that you care, because this was exactly your plan for the night – stay low, stay sober, and stay for exactly two hours and no more.
“want a drink?”
a voice catches you off-guard, but you snap your head upward and realise it belongs to heeseung.
the host. jongseong’s friend. lee heeseung.
you immediately shake your head, noticing the two glass bottles in each of his hands. “o-oh, no, it’s okay,” you sheepishly smile, laughing awkwardly. “but, um… thank you.”
“it’s apple cider,” heeseung frowns, holding out the glass bottle for you. your eyes lock and he tries to smile encouragingly, though you’re pretty adamant on staying sober tonight. “it’s really low on alcohol and practically tastes like apple juice.”
“i think i’d just rather drink apple juice.”
he clicks his tongue. “my house, my rules, and i hereby instate a house-wide ban on regular apple juice.” he shakes his head disapprovingly, eliciting a giggle from you.
“wow,” you remark sarcastically. “what did apple juice ever do to you?” you stifle an amused laugh, lifting your cup to take a sip of water.
“well, it’s stopping me from offering drinks to cute girls, apparently.”
you almost choke on your water at his words, mostly from being caught off-guard. he gapes at you as you cough and splutter, though it’s only a matter of seconds before you recover and you desperately try to conceal any and all shreds of embarrassment.
“to be, um, fair, you weren’t exactly stopped from offering.” you manage to say, trying to brush it off with a laugh. “you still offered; i just said no.”
heeseung’s eyes circle. “wait wait wait, you thought i was talking about you?”
oh.
oh fuck.
did you just wrongly assume he was hitting on you?
your eyes widen with mortification, while your mouth flies open so you can start backtracking. oh god, you’re already ready to bolt your way out of this party and never come back.
however, heeseung suddenly ruptures into laughter, and though it takes a few seconds of stunned silence, you finally realise that he’s pulling your leg.
he’s teasing you.
“i hate you,” you huff in relief, shoulders deflating as you take another sip of water from your cup. heeseung’s laughs slowly fade, and that’s when he finally holds out the same glass bottle of apple cider again.
“ha, you’re too cute.” heeseung snorts. “but in all seriousness, you need to try some. it’s really good.”
you squint at him playfully, pressing your lips into a thin line. “do you swear on your first-born child that it is, in fact, really good?” you grin, though inwardly you wonder why it feels so easy to talk to him like this. though you’re not normally a brick wall to talk to, there’s usually always an inherent awkwardness when talking to strangers — heeseung, however, makes all that awkwardness dissolve.
he makes it feel as though you’ve been friends for a while now; that conversations like these are a subset of a routine.
you don’t feel so on edge when you’re around him.
“yep.” he nods confidently, flashing you a charming grin. “in fact, i even swear on my second-born child. heck, throw my third-born child in there too.”
“something tells me you’re not going to be the best father.” you stifle a laugh when he nods solemnly in agreement.
he sighs. “daddy issues, am i right?”
when alcohol tastes good, you know you’re in trouble.
at least, trouble is exactly where you find yourself, because it’s been hours since you were supposed to leave, though you’ve been stuck to heeseung’s hip all night, and he’s been continuously feeding you delicious apple juice that tastes so much better than regular juice.
so.
much.
better.
fun fact: you apparently love apple ciders now.
you also love soju.
and vodka and coke.
and champagne and orange juice.
actually, you bear a colossal love for all alcoholic drinks that don’t taste alcoholic. the only issue is that they hit you without knowing — unwittingly, you suddenly find yourself way past your tolerance limit; you’re stumbling even while standing still, you’re laughing at everything that moves; and you’re even playing tipsy card games with heeseung while seated at his dining table.
“stop cheating!” you whine, slamming your uno cards onto the table, pouting as you cup your face into your palms.
“man, you are a bad loser,” heeseung snickers, gathering all the cards into a single pile. “but i’m a bad winner, so suck it! ha! now you have to answer — truth or dare?”
“but… but…” you complain, though you soon cover your mouth to conceal yet again another hiccup. heeseung immediately points at you and laughs, while you jut out a lip and pout in misery.
these damn hiccups!
“stop laughing!” you cry. “and fine! um… i choose…” you squint, attempting to conjure a sound thought. truth? dare?
“we don’t have all the time in the world!” heeseung groans. “pick truth!”
and that’s when you flash him a gummy smile. “dare.”
“ha, jokes on you, that was reverse psychology.”
“just shut up and dare me already,” you roll your eyes, taking a sip of another apple cider, honestly unconcerned with whichever choice. truthfully, you’re too wrapped up in the fact that this night is turning out much more fun than you intended. sure, there are still many hours to go, but you’re inwardly ecstatic that your first senior party is this memorable.
heeseung’s nice.
he’s fun, he’s warm, and though you’re poking fun at him most of the time, he makes you feel like you’re welcome here.
heeseung chuckles. “okay, hm…” he seems to survey the area around you both. from where you’re both seated, a view into the kitchen and his living room is granted. now that the party is in full swing, there are people littered everywhere — and if they’re not inside, they’re likely tucked away into the backyard where the barbeque lies.
“hm, i… dare… you… to…” heeseung taps his chin, squinting with thought, before snapping his fingers as he reaches a decision. “dance with a stranger!”
“what?” you shriek, immediately shaking your head. “i can’t do that!”
“why not?” he retorts. “it’s easy! just walk up to them and start twerking! you know what? i can show you. jongseong taught me.”
you burst into laughter at the thought of heeseung shaking his ass. oh god. and you feel yourself uncontrollably laugh at the thought of him getting taught by jongseong. “please, i do not need to be scarred by that sight!”
“you don’t know what you’re missing out,” heeseung jests, “but come on! let’s dance!”
he grabs your wrist and pulls you out from your seat on the dining table. but he’s too quick — your foot gets caught, and you trip over one of the chairs’ legs, causing you to stand quickly, though you stumble straight into heeseung.
ah!
heeseung’s lucky enough to catch you, though you’re startled by the sudden feeling of his arms around you. you’re about to regain control over your balance to remove yourself from the situation, when suddenly, you feel a force yank you backwards.
you yelp in surprise, stumbling backward now, until you feel a soft thud that marks your spine landing into somebody else’s chest.
“watch it,” a low voice hisses, which you instantly recognise.
you freeze.
jongseong.
you practically jump off him, instead springing toward heeseung’s direction. you twirl around and scowl at jongseong, disgusted by the sight of his existence. why does he always manage to show up and ruin the fun?
“oh, hey, jongie!” heeseung beams, seemingly nonchalant to the way you and jongseong are scowling at one another. “what’s up?”
“i need to talk to piggy,” jongseong nudges his head toward you, eyes bouncing between you and heeseung.
“ew," is all you have to say. ew. just ew.
jongseong briefly swings his head to the side, scoffing in annoyance. “look, i don’t want to talk to your piggy ass either! but it’s about riki — his parents want him home, and he’s vomiting. i need his address asap.”
you freeze.
“wait, what?” you gasp, taking a few steps toward jongseong. “oh my god, is he okay?” you ask worriedly.
“he’s fine, just give me his address—”
“i’ll drive,” you nod agreeably. “i can drive him!”
“can you please think with at least two brain cells?” jongseong scoffs, reaching over as he pushes back your forehead with a finger. “you’ve been drinking, you piggy idiot.”
oh.
right.
“did you know that drinking while driving is illegal?” jongseong asks you with condescension, “or shall i say it in your language again? oink oink oink oink oink oink oink—”
“argh, shut up!” you snap, fuming. “fine, but don’t call me an idiot!” you scowl at his action, grumpily rubbing your forehead from his touch. “then i’ll pay for an uber, because you drive like a crazy person.”
“with what money?” he snickers. “did you get a part time job at piggies r us? waitressing at oink oink cafe?”
you fold your arms and outwardly scowl. “you know, you keep recycling the same jokes over and over again. why don’t you get creative for once? and hey, at least i know how to drive. didn’t it take you, like, two tries to get your licence?”
he gasps. “the first time wasn’t my fault! my instructor felt sick for a reason unrelated to my driving!”
“yeah, yeah,” you sneer, dismissing him with a wave. “excuses, excuses.”
“wait, wait!” heeseung interrupts, yelling as he waves his arms around to stop you and jongseong from physically brawling. it’s a good call, because you were just about to grab his shoulders and shove your knee straight into his balls.
“why don’t you just go with him?” heeseung smiles, holding your shoulders as he faces you seriously. “you can give him directions to riki’s house and also make sure he doesn’t crash into a tree.”
“are you asking me to babysit this little freak show?” you frown, inwardly whining when you think of having to deal with jongseong for a whole car ride. god, you think you want to shoot yourself.
“sure, why not?” heeseung chuckles. “i’ll give you some pocket money if you do.”
“wow,” you roll your eyes playfully. “how kind of you.”
“so what do you say, jongie?” heeseung turns toward his friend, and you soon follow his line of sight.
jongseong narrows his eyes at the both of you. the edges of his lips sink while his brows knit together. his eyes land on heeseung’s hands on your shoulder before he scoffs once, turning on his heels while shoving his hands in his pockets.
“why would i care? do whatever you want.”
//
to be continued.
author's note: hi everyone!!! thank u so much for reading chapter two (finally!) ;-; sorry the update took so long asl;kdjf i'll be quicker next time for sure, tho i hope u liked it regardless!!! and YESSSSS heeseung entrance finally 🤪 can u tell im in love with him ;-; also im sorry if this chapter was just absolutely horrible ASDLKFJD ngl i was half dead while writing it so uh i'm not even sure any of this makes sense???? BTW ARE WE STILL TEAM PIGGY/BALDIE OR HAS HEESEUNG CHANGED OUR MINDS????? anyway id really appreciate it if u could support me via liking + reblogging if u enjoyed it !! :> otherwise have an amazing day/night <333 p.s. the taglist is open! if u wanna join, just leave an ask or reply to this post! :>
#jay fanfic#jay x reader#enhypen#jay fluff#jay x you#enhypen fluff#jay ff#jay fic#jongseong fic#jay imagines#enhypen fic#jay scenarios#enhypen imagines#park jongseong fic#enhypen ff#enhypen x reader#enhypen scenarios#jay enhypen#jay drabble#park jongseong#enhypen drabbles#enhypen fanfic#jay imagine#jongseong imagines#enhypen jay#jay#jongseong fluff#jay edit#enhypen headcanons#doublespeak
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for the blurb request chris x reader, where the wedding ring gets lost and everyone is just panicking and come to find out it’s in the pants pocket 😂
ring bearer 💍
pairing: chris evans x fem!reader
word count: ~251 ish
warnings: none, still 18+ minors dni
author’s note: just a sweet, humorous drabble that I can def see CE doing. He’d be silly like that but then make it up to you in an endearing way, that’s for sure. Thanks for the request nonnie 🤎
This is not beta’d - any fuck ups are my own
“Do you have the rings?" The officiant kindly asks Chris amongst a sea of loved ones who were soon about to witness a greater baptism of fire.
"Oh yes I have them...right…" Chris whispers and soon your smile falters when he emptily pats himself down. "That's strange I thought—"
His crystalline blue eyes snap up and meet yours as a final prayer. It was a sure feat that he had lost the bands just as you were about to loose it.
"You're kidding right?” You hoarsely invoke. The auditorium starts to fill with whispers and disbelieving murmurs. Scott is close by and in Chris's ear, helping him backtrack even though the younger Evans brother is mildly disappointed by the trifling ordeal. He'd know better if you were his wife.
"Ah-ha! There it is." Chris hurrahs to himself, hand deep into the wells of his trouser pockets. "Found it!"
The crowd laughs, some nervously and others with relief as Chris manages to brandish the velour box out for show. He gives you a playful little wink that has you scowling some more.
“That’s not funny.” You sternly add while being isolated to your own swivet. “Chris.”
The officiant shucks your husband-to-be a ‘knock it off’ look before commencing with the ceremony. Once you’re declared husband and wife, Chris sweeps you up in bruising kiss that holds you by your bearings.
“I love you, Mrs. Evans. Y’know that?” He muses against your lips and you puff out a thankful smile, somewhat assuring him a continual lifetime of ceaseless antics and fortunate mishaps.
“I love you too Mr. Evans.”
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