#that exchange sent me
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The tragedy of ur boyfriends not letting u bite them just a little. As a Treat.
A Tup from @trudemaethien’s excellent fic Edeemi, Baby, One More Time that I drew back in May! I didn’t have a Star Wars tumblr at the time and wasnt planning on posting it anywhere so I forgot about it until now, but I had such a fun time playing around with lighting effects and his expression!
I really love their mer universe and I’m especially fond of Tup’s POV in this fic. It’s such a good job of expressing the confusion and frustration of communication barriers and reasonable, best-intent misunderstandings between all of them, while still leaning into the positive aspects of discovering the world and representing it from slightly different perspective than people normally take 10/10 highly recommended
Closeup of the sketch for his expression under the cut because I was super happy with it
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#clone trooper tup#mermay#my art#sw tcw#mermay bc technically i drew it may 23rd or smth#the background is very boring but im ok w that honestly bc i made this for myself to live on my tablet forever#actually i also sent it to my mom and she said it made her happy :)#anyway i vibed so hard w this tup and his confusion/frustration/rejection sensitivity at wooley going hoshit dont bite me#as someone whos Strong Feelings often get redirected into Bite Impulse the twin frustration and disappointment that someone takes it bad?#so real#me and tup shaking hands over partners who let us bite. as a treat.#the sketch i channeled the feeling of going to bite To Be Sweet and ur partner going ‘no!!! mean!’ real hard#like please i am overwhelmed with affection i need to feel it in my teeth#anyway @trudemaethian (sp?) u got me out of a literal years long art slump to start making meaningful amnts of content bc i was so Overcome#so thank u very much and very deeply for that!#in exchange the fruits of me relearning how to use my drawing program
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youtube
I keep thinking about this I'm just gonna fucking Poast it.
Hello RGBFverse-ers. Rotating the idea of Beef walking into YS's room solely to show him this and then leaving.
#ramblings#RGBFverse#wyd!BF#no words are exchanged. ys later messages beef like `why did you come over to show me that. you could have sent me it.`#`i needed 2 see the live reaction💙`#Youtube
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I wrote a sad song about gender roles and the long-term damage they do to us today
A Child Who Grew Up
Once there was a child Who fell into a library And never got out again
Once there was a child Who learned to climb up walls And was never contained again
Once there was a child Who grew up
And then there was a boy Who got teased for reading So he closed his books and learned to play rough
And there was a girl Told not to tear her pretty clothes By climbing, so she stayed on the ground
Once there was a child Who grew up
And now there’s a man So scared of being a man He never understood the rulebook
And there’s a woman Enraged by being a woman But she’s too weak to break the chains
But he used to read too And she used to climb too
#gender roles#music#new music#indie folk#indie music#my music#musicians on tumblr#original song#original music#cosmo gyres#i was thinking about how i used to be so athletic as a kid#and then after puberty that just kind of... fell off#it's not encouraged so much for girls#especially because their bodies are sexualized and when you get active and move your body as a girl that's often interpreted as 'sexy'#and then i was also thinking about this growing anti-education and anti-reading trend in men#(i had known about the anti-intellectualism trend for a while but i didn't realize there was a gender component to it until recently)#and how society forces all children into being either Category A or Category B#and then you're supposed to do only what kids in Your Category do#regardless of what you really want#anyway shout-out to mike in pennsylvania who i exchanged postcards with#as part of a fawm songwriting challenge this month!#his postcard mentioned both reading and climbing walls as being things that can lead to freedom#so he got me started on this song and i'm very grateful!#i hope the postcard i sent him proves equally inspiring
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#superstore#superstoreedit#mateo liwanag#cheyenne tyler lee#chateo#this exchange just sent me#cheyenne's face is too good
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Thinking about both of my Primarch daughters and their lives and the more I think about them, the more I am questioning who has shittier existence. Tho I guess in a way their existences mirror painful ones of their parents in specific way.
Medea in general did not deserve everything which now lays on her shoulders. She was a child when her planet was destroyed, her mother died, but not before using her psyker powers to transfer the vast knowledge accumulated over millenias only High Priestess was allowed to possess to her only child. The still fragile mind overcharged with insane amounts of information so much, Medea fainted, instead of dying, just because she has Primarch genes. After that child was laid down into special stasis sarcophagus which had to preserve the life of the last High Priestess of Prospero.
Even so, Medea was woken up once her stasis sarcophagus was found on random planet ravaged by war. Once cracked open back on Terra, Medea was hushed into fighting and yet no matter how much she done for Imperium in short span of time, she still was known as daughter of Traitor Primarch, Princess of Daemons or heretical mutant standing against doctrine of what Imperium now lived by. No matter how much hope Medea has or how much she tries it is never good enough, so Idk how long it is until that daughter turns to chaos worship...
Cornix has no less painful story. She was the most genetically accurate duplicate of her Primarch Father in comparison with rest of Primarch children, even to the point where rumors spread that Corvus had Cornix genetically engineered by his own image. Which wasn't true, but Primarch never revealing truth about mother of his child to anyone did not help to slow down the spread of misinformation.
Anyways, Cornix's life was harsh since she drew first breath. She has disease lots of Kiavahr-born children have, tho her case is lucky one just because of Primarch fast regeneration gene. Even so she came to this world through blood, death and pain and those feelings have stuck in her excellent, abnormal memory she also inherited. Nevertheless, maybe her Father knew of the fate Emperor already decided upon her and this is why he trained Cornix in ways of Primarch of XIXth legion, maybe he didn't and it was just a natural way how parenthood hit him, but Cornix grew prepared and very early showed abilities which could easily in time rival her own Father.
Tho no one is allowed happiness in the way how I develop stories, because Corvus took harsh decision to cast his daughter off to obscure planet. Some say such out of the character decision for Primarch, might have been due to Emperor's own conditions, but since that day forward Cornix' survival depended solely on her own abilities. Which she did succeed at, but with ton of mental and physical trauma. Also not to mention Cornix's apparent death added a lot of mental anguish towards already fragile mental state of her Father after his Astartes' mutations ravaged Raven Guard legion. News of his daughter dying in World Bearer's bombardment while they pulled back into the Eye after loss of Heresy, completely broke Corvus and he entered his one year seclusion, before departing into Eye of Terror to dedicate his life to hunt the traitors.
So yeah. I create innocent children OCs and fuck them up completely as adults. Fits Warhammer40k at least...
#Post#oc: medea of tizca#oc:cornix 'nyx' corax#warhammer40k#warhammer 40k oc#You know....sometimes i give my ocs horrifying stories and even i feel that is too dark for that franchise#But now? It fits#Warhammer just demands to give as fucked up stories to your ocs as you can#no one is allowed to have nice things#And because magnus and corvus to me are couple of the more tragic primarchs i use their stories to fuck everyone up even more#So yeah#I imagine when magnus called to tzeentch in order to save tizca and his people he hoped nef and medea will become deamons too#And they will be reunited in chaos worship and yet he was alone with his legion...#Similiar story i have for corvus#I like to imagine emps gave him untainted gene seed in exchange for cornix and her abilities by ordering her to be sent on that one planet#So corvus had to again use the lesson of saving many by sacrificing few tho now he had to give away the dearest person to him#Yep no one is allowed nice things. No one
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Absolutely ADORE all of Pastra's plush designs so far and I'm HIGHLY considering actually taking a commission to get the Lankmann plush because like. I missed out on the Clyde ones (which are TOP FUCKING TIER) but. Look at him. Absolute IDIOT with NO THOUGHTS /vpos.
#resort rambles#m.txt#coming out as a pastra fan he's like. a huge inspiration and if we had the skills to video edit i'd be making content similar to theirs.#just genuinely refreshing to see someone who's so openly neurodivergent and passionate about their interests AND is nonbinary.....#so anyway if anyone wants to drop like 30-35 dollars to get one of these thangs sent to us in exchange for art. hit me upppppppppp#pastra#dreams of an insomniac#<- sort of it's lankmann so
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Life is so sad when you're an artist that doesn't know how to write stories
LIKE MY BRAIN IS BRIMMING WITH IDEAS I DON'T KNOW HOW TO EXECUTE 😭😭
#i think this is what sent me into an artblock#mad respect to all writers out there#LIKE I JUAT WANNA TELL STORIES BUT DONT KNKW HOW#yes this is about my twst oc#sue me#but ayy any writers out there who wanna help me in exchange for some free art hmu 😏/hj#but honestly I'd be down for like a sorta exchange collab#twst#twst x reader
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feeling a little weird about this holiday season and i’m not really sure why
#I’m not upset that I’m not with my family. i think I’m just like. idk. i think I’m just sad#in general. like I’m glad I don’t have to be w my family this holiday season bc I. don’t like them#but. idk. I just feel Weird……. and almost apprehensive? idk#but I also keep thinking about how I don’t remember the last time someone got me a thoughtful gift without me asking for it lol#I think the closest I’m getting this year is the puzzle my mom sent me. but even then. I don’t have the space to put it together. so like.#and. thinking abt how the last couple times I’ve done a secret santa exchange I just. never ended up getting *my* gift bc people dropped#out and it never got figured out. and like that’s fine. shit happens. but when it leaves me giving and giving and giving… I get tired#boy I’m so exhausted lately lmao I popped an advil pm and now that I’m winding down I’m just. crying as I sit here w this lol#at least I’m included in the ss at my new job despite being Brand New and. I’m sure I’ll get something fun out of that lol#anyway. that’s my complaining for the night. time to honk shoo#i say things
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Chapters: 1/1 (2777 words) Fandom: Babylon 5 (TV 1993) Rating: General Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Delenn/John Sheridan Characters: Delenn (Babylon 5), John Sheridan Additional Tags: Hurt/Comfort, Holding Hands Summary:
Sheridan gets to know the White Star, and Delenn gets to know him.
Set in early Season 3, soon after "Matters of Honor."
#mai fic#my hurt comfort exchange fic for russetfiredrake! whom you can thank for this entire b5 spiral#the open ended prompt really sent me down the garden path#i started so many other fics before landing on this one#babylon 5
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So... since it's november now, aka 5 minutes until the end of it all (new year) I thought I would ask if any mutuals would like to exchange cards? I may or may not have caught the making small crafts bug after the concert and I may or may not have already made some small things.... so Uh :) if you'd like to hit me up 🫰😌
#lmao i feel so 😳 making this#but ive literally sent cards to moots from here multiple years so ?#but yeah! im already sending 2 for sure!#and i figured this way it makes it less awkward bc if youre comfy exchanging addys than you can dm me#rather than me dming people and asking outright awkwardly lol#and if youre not comfy thats also fine- dont feel bad!#but yeah.... given how quick time goes and depending on international mailing i figured i should ask now so i can get things going#so yeah#:)#i kinda think i have an idea of who will be chill with it so 😇#yeah 💌#hit me up if you would like to
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y
I believe you mean "Y". Letters should always be capitalised at the beginning of a sentence.
#The prosecution rests.#Exchanges with anonymous informants.#On the other hand... they should not be capitalised at the end of a sentence.#Bah. There is no punctuation either.#Whoever sent this was determined to get me in a foul mood.#Is it you Asogi?
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Don't you think obey me has enough characters?
Under Read More because it's a bit incoherent and lol. Sorry anon
It's not that I need more characters and more that RAD itself feels empty, I don't really think there's a point in the SF If you know the brothers are going to win anyways, it feels rigged, the brothers are the student council, the "top" but there's nothing to compare them to, because all students are either SC members or exchange students (who have certain "privileges" as mentioned in OGS2, like having easier clases and the like). Only exception to this rule Is Mephistopheles. Idk, you can't really feel how powerful the SC Is If you don't have a point of reference in how the 'lesser demons' act.
There's has been games with fewer characters that make more livid schools, but to do that you have to distribute their roles so It doesn't becomes numbing. Having more than one (in this case, two) perspectives makes things interesing.
Something I have talked before Is how in certain point in S4, Diavolo makes a survey about what the student body thinks about the exchange students. The result are... Really negative. Like, most of the students either don't care or hate the EEs. But why do they hate them? Or why should *we* care about what this faceless crowd thinks of us? What have we done to them to even warrant this response????
Another example, in the lesson from today, Asmodeus being sabotaged in the SF feels so out of nowhere, why did this demon do that in the first place? Just to win? I don't care that this random demon was punished because it feels the equivalent of moving a rock out the way. Obey Me in general would benefit from having some kind of antagonistic force for cases like these.
A good compromise would be like they did today with Blackjack/Red Devil/Nancy and just have them be a textbox (If you are cheap and don't want to invest in background characters) Michael has been like this since the beggining, Queen Rose was a niche character that had certain following when the dame events happened, and every scene with the Butcher in S3 was comedy gold. No mention of characters like Helene, Griselda, etc. So I think you can nail characters like these If you make the effort.
Hell, Mephistopheles before having a sprite had cult following just from chats and mentions in the main story. OG at least used to namedrop demons that existed in-universe, now it's "a demon" everytime something happens.
RAD just feels small, empty, barren, etc. and I have skipped most RAD related events since before Nightbringer was announced, lol
#obey me#obey me nightbringer#idk how to tag this so uh#ask to tag lol#there was this event where levi wasnbeing bullied for being an ptaku and I feel the same way like#idc about this bullies because I can't see the efect they have#you're just telling me that Levi is sad because X happened. but show don't tell blah blah#ask0400#anon#sorry anon for the incoherent rant. idk if this is what you wanted to hear#you probably sent this because the devs don't know how to manage screentime. right?#but that's a separate problem. maybe giving more screentime to the exchange students could fix this problem but idk#mephisto should be main character#idk now I feel a bit embarassed of posting that thing#but ignoring asks gives me anxiety so here you go
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sent a guy a letter on slowly and he responded calling me "querido" and telling me his number saying he's making a gc with his slowly friends. no bitch we here to send letters. write the fucking letter. lazy ass
#if i wanted to text you id be in some other social media im here because i dont do texting. texting kills the soul#he wrote me a bigass introduction letter being all polite and cool and asking me a bunch of things#i wrote him 800 words back being all lovely and interesting and shit#and then he hits me with that bullshit. no. nope.#1st of all we not even friends. i sent you 01 (one) letter#ive had slowly friends that exchanged dozens and dozens of beautiful lengthy letters w me and we still dont got each other's numbers#dont get ahead of yourself#2nd of all. i wrote him a huge paragraph explaining why i like slowly more than any other way of meeting people online#did he just straight up not read it#kind of possible he might be a bot and im getting mad about nothing tho. killing myself about it. i miss the olden days#slowly used to work#anyway that was today's episode of me getting mad about unimportant things and making it Your 🫵 problem#come back tomorrow for more
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Does Teyvat have checks??
I'm writing a fic where someone needs to be paid long-distance (the job can be completed in writing) and I realized I'm not sure checks exist in Teyvat. Sending a crate full of mora would certainly be inconvenient.
One of the original reasons for the invention of paper currency was that metal coins were just so damn heavy to carry around everywhere.
Has Teyvat gotten there yet? Mona lives in Mondstadt and works for a Fontainian newspaper; do we know how exactly they pay her?
#And if they do have checks where do they exchange them for mora#where's the bank#where's ANY bank in Teyvat that isn't in Liyue and run by the fatui#Zhongli please don't tell me you shut down the mint and thus almost certainly sent the country into an economic crisis#without even such basic infrastructure as banks to support them#and about that plan#even if the fautui do figure out how to use your gnosis to make more mora#what then?#THEY have the mint know#THEY have the economic prosperity and where does that leave Liyue huh??#what was so good that you risked all this economic disaster for in your contract?#mona megistus#genshin impact#teyvat#mondstadt#fontaine#liyue#snezhnaya#zhongli#rex lapis#morax
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Tabled 6
“Change the vocabulary!” Myka has just exclaimed in a hotel room in an airport in Chicago, in a full-throated effort to bring Helena around to her newly realized way of thinking, here in this story occasioned by @barbarawar ’s months-ago @b-and-w-holiday-gift-exchange request regarding what would have happened if Myka and Helena had had their Boone-proposed coffee. Much has ensued since then: meetings poor and poorer, rendering hopes faint and fainter, leaving potentials squandered and... squandereder? Seeing to it that emotional moves make sense is always challenging, I find. People want to make sense to themselves, want to make sense of themselves, and someone as thinky as Myka would, I imagine, double-want that. But while we all contain multitudes, we tend to bumble through situations as unfull representations of those multitudes: weird gotta-keep-moving sharks desperate to present consistency. I too keep moving: trying to land this thing, even as it fights against the stick, remaining *this far* above ground. Apologies as always, my strung-along giftee. See part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, and part 5 for the convoluted way we got here.
Tabled 6
“What?” Helena says, but it’s not her usual “what”; she’s obviously flummoxed, and her echo of Myka’s characteristic bafflement is precious. Preposterous, but precious.
Myka had hoped for some spark of recognition at her transformation of “change the rules,” but the confusion... it might be better. Sweeter. She tries not to make too much meaning out of this chime of similarity, even as she wants to pull that soft, bewildered “what” from the air and cradle it.
“I was trying to be clever,” she says. “Never mind that. And never mind fixing it, because we can do something else.”
“Repair it?” Helena says: a cautious, skeptical—and, yes, still baffled—synonym proffer.
Don’t laugh, Myka instructs herself, but faced with the idea that Helena really might think they’re playing a word game, it’s hard to follow her own order. “Never mind that too,” she says, a chuckle bubbling in her throat. “Because never mind. Because that’s it. Because you know what we actually can do?”
Helena raises her hands up, high, obviously in question, but really for all the world as if she were indeed being held at gunpoint.
This is not ending as it began, Myka tells the universe. Not as it began, or any other way.
She chambers the only bullet she has, aiming it right at Helena’s heart.
She pulls the trigger with a smile: “Ignore it.”
Hands still high, Helena opens her mouth slightly, and she squints, as if Myka has morphed into a dangerously unidentifiable animal.
Yes, Myka thinks, wildly, trying to live up to that wariness, I’ve been genetically engineered right here in this island of a hotel room! A Warehouse agent crossed with a yawper who has her very own plans! Amorphous ones, but! This infusion of abandon—Moreau power?—gives her the strength to hold Helena’s gaze.
The standoff lasts until Helena gets her language working again. “That recommendation is... entirely specious,” she says. “And you sound uncharacteristically overwrought.”
It’s a wobbly pair of objections. Myka draws even more strength from Helena’s lack of conviction. “What if it is? What if I am?”
“I don’t believe the slate can be wiped clean,” Helena says, a little more firmly. “Nor do you.”
So you do think we know each other. “I’m not saying it can. I’m saying I know it’s dirty, and so do you. I’m saying we ignore it.”
Helena’s face, from her “what” until now, has been a study in something Myka honestly never expected to see from her: full (fully wrong-footed) incomprehension. Myka doesn’t blame her, for she’s finding herself pretty incomprehensible, but she presses on. “You were ready to ignore my Boone-changed opinion of you. Weren’t you. When you hoped I’d know I was the someone else.”
After a pause: “That was then,” Helena says, her resentment at Myka for having worked her way to that truth—and for having articulated it—very clear.
“Oh, not anymore?” Myka pushes. “Even though now we both know I was that someone, and that there wasn’t a Giselle?”
“That was then,” Helena repeats.
Wait... “There’s a Giselle now?” Myka can’t process it, if it’s so. If it’s so, she will have to let Helena leave, then bury her face in one of the expensive pillows from this room’s unignorable bed and scream.
Another head-toss, the most dramatic one thus far, accompanies Helena’s next words. “I’m of a mind to say yes. But pursuant to my previously articulated policy, I’ll tell the truth: there isn’t, but there could be. In the future. I agreed to meet with you today to ensure you wouldn’t mistake yourself over Pete, but I have no intention of stepping into a similarly mistaken place. I’ve done my best to let this go.”
Myka can’t accept any of those words. “Ignore that too,” she says. She would like to point out that that whole litany was pretty rich, coming from Ms. To-Continue-to-Speak-Together, but instead she zeroes in on what seems the clearest contradiction. “But if you’re letting this go, why do you care about me mistaking myself over Pete?”
“Why did you care about me mistaking myself in Boone?” Helena counters, sour.
The response is uncharacteristically incompetent, particularly because Helena already knows the answer. “I could repeat something somebody once told me, about not walking away from what she called ‘your truth,’” Myka says, with what she hopes is a “that was then” fillip. “But I won’t. What I’ll really say is, I asked you first.” She allows herself a half-breath to marvel at how unusual it is for her to have this much of the upper hand.
“I could say the same thing.” Helena is visibly struggling not to acknowledge Myka’s advantage, but she collapses, saying, “The former, not the latter. I didn’t ask you first,” her devotion to accuracy (or so Myka reads it) defeating her. “Nevertheless I could repeat the something somebody once told you. As the why.”
Myka continues to press. “But isn’t repetition boring? You hate being boring.” She hopes this observation might visit upon Helena that kick of so we do know each other: “I bet you threw your coffee on me just so I wouldn’t walk away thinking how dull you’d been.”
“That was not the reason,” Helena says, but with a press of lips that suggests a ripple of otherwise.
Here, Myka shouldn’t press. “Then what was the reason.”
“You were being recalcitrant, and you know it,” Helena says.
“And what are you being now?” Myka asks, as laconically—as lean-back, as Helena-esque—as she can.
That question causes Helena to scowl and move energy into her hands, extending and then bending her fingers; though she doesn’t quite form them into fists, her intent is clear: she wants to deck Myka. It’s glorious. Please, do it, Myka urges internally, so we can get this all out in the physical open.
But Helena resets her face and waves her hands, the flutter of fingers dispelling the energy and its threat. “Realistic,” she says, prim.
Quit acting like me, Myka would tell her, but for the fallout. What she says is, “I wish I still had this coffee,” pointing at the table, the tragic cup-ceremony of which probably now deserves replaying as farce. Or was it farce the first time? No surprise, really, that they would skip-jump their way over the natural course of history.
“Yes, because stains solve problems,” Helena sarcastics.
Maybe; maybe not. Nevertheless, Myka says what’s true: “You seemed to think they would. And anyway, they redound to your benefit.” Helena greets this with a completely reasonable additional “what,” but Myka blows past it with, “Maybe because you ignore them? Anyway, this one here”—she gestures to the now-dry coffee-map on her shirt (it looks like no country, and she’s disappointed to be unable to name it as “this Brazil” or “this Azerbaijan”)—“kept me from walking away when you thought I shouldn’t.”
“A delaying tactic,” Helena says, offering only bored disdain, as if the very idea of it had been in the end inconsequential.
Keep pushing. “How long was that delay supposed to last, anyway?”
Helena doesn’t have an answer; Myka knows it because she begins to pace. She starts, of course, at the doorway, then walks past the bed, over to the window, and back again: bed then doorway, doorway then bed, bed then window, back and forth—six times, Myka counts—before she leans her back against the door, crosses her arms over her chest, and says, “Why are you tempting me this way? Why this way? What’s changed? In this room, in the few breaths since resignation and coffee, what’s changed?” It’s a fret.
“Well, what’s changed for you?” Myka asks, with no fret at all for once in her life. “More breaths since, but why did authority let you out of Boone-prison?”
Helena’s face produces an inscrutable scowl-smile hybrid. She thrusts herself away from the door, walks to the bed, rubs her hands together. Re-gathering energy? “I suppose I could offer a long-winded explanation about having been given to understand that the balance of safety and threat had shifted. But instead, to quote: ‘What I’ll really say is, I asked you first.’”
“Well played,” Myka admits. In return, she’s gifted with the little acknowledging bow of head she loves. (Loves—yes.) It draws her physically closer, that head-bow: only a few shuffling inches, but enough that she can answer, more quietly, “What’s changed is I saw a future. And I saw how much I’m willing to ignore to have it.”
“I do not understand your morality,” Helena says. This time, she sounds a note of wonder rather than censure.
So much recursion in what they say, think, feel, do—once, then back again, and then again. Maybe they’re bound to get something right, if they try everything over and over? This particular repetition-with-variation seems a little better than usual, tragedy repeated not as farce but as fairy tale... or, no: Warehouse tale. Because for better or worse, there’s no escaping the Warehouse, the curse but also blessing of wonder. She and Helena are here together today only because of the Warehouse—that necessary condition of their meeting and connection.
Myka could dilate forever upon fate and purpose, but “ignore it” must be her mantra now, her grounding principle. For better or worse... for better and worse. The true moral of any Warehouse tale.
“I don’t understand anybody’s morality,” she says, “especially not mine or yours. I’m not trying to. I’m ignoring that too.”
But what she can’t ignore—not now, not anymore—is the way in which their bodies have, so gradually, continued to near, with Helena slowly mirroring Myka’s movements, these little distance-closing developments. So small is the gap between them now, the displacement it would take to touch surely must be measured by time, not distance.
And yet she hesitates, for this raise of hand must speak correctly: not want, but offer.
Slow. Stretch that time, turn it back into space.
She does that, moving as slowly as she can. More slowly than she ever has.
Helena doesn’t retreat.
Minimalist increments... yet their yield is immense: Myka’s right hand meets Helena’s left, and their fingers link and twist, palms not pressed but near.
It is their first genuinely mutual touch since Boone.
“I will be blunt,” Helena says, soft, burred by the contact. “I need you to... just say.”
Blunt. This knife of request—indeed unsharp—meets Myka’s fears, at first bending against them, yet still bearing threat. The force of it makes her glance away, and again she’s drawn to the clock. All she can find to articulate is, “I missed my flight.”
It could have been a way of saying, but Myka didn’t mean it like that, and Helena knows it: she raises an eyebrow. The leavening takes away the knife, and it gives Myka leave to lighten too, to postulate, “Maybe we’re constitutionally incapable. Of the saying. Or maybe it’s just me? Okay, not maybe—probably. Is that a dealbreaker?”
Now Helena cocks her head, completing the gesture with a lifting twist of chin. It calls of early, early: Helena handcuffed in a chair, Myka foolishly imagining she knew how all the ensuing moments would go—then being flung up to meet the ceiling.
The book would have known that would happen, but Myka didn’t. Hasn’t. Flights, crashes. Over and over, each as unpredictable as every other. Which will Helena choose to inflict now?
“Have we agreed to a deal?” Helena asks. The question isn’t coy. “Ignoring may be a way forward, but historically, you do seem to presuppose the existence of agreements that you fail to inform me I’m a party to. That you then accuse me of violating.”
So: an objection, but one grounded in their shared history. A flight and a crash. “That is an uncomfortably accurate description of what I do,” Myka admits. “Let me start again. I missed my flight. Did you?”
“Miss your flight? Yes.” More leavening: unfunny joking, words for the sake of them. To continue to speak together... of course this has been what Myka wished too. Of course she would listen to Helena saying words about anything.
Not anything, her Boone-and-Giselle-haunted memory reminds her...
“But that was not the issue under discussion,” Helena continues. A providential interruption.
“Right. Dealbreaker. Saying. Inability.” Why are you vamping? What is the impediment? The answer is immediate: You are the impediment. “Change the vocabulary” was a nice idea, but one word was never going to be enough. “Look,” she begins, determined now to do better, “I—”
Helena tightens her fingers’ grasp against Myka’s. It’s a very different way of getting things out in the physical open. “Wanting you warps all I do,” she whispers. The words, the grasp: both are saying. Out in the open.
More even than the oh-so-welcome grasp, the words mean everything to Myka. And their meaning is itself everything—everything that matters—so she steals them and says them back: “Wanting you warps all I do.” It’s mind-clearingly correct. The relief of at last having an accurate description of the past half-decade: it hits her like that slug she’d perversely hoped Helena might deliver.
But having used Helena’s words, however perfect, while coming up with none of her own pains her, so she feels she has to modify, “Warps. And warped, but not in any of the ways that might have helped. I can’t apologize enough for how I got it all so wrong.”
Helena’s tilt of head gentles. Her chin drops. “Someone has recently recommended, rather eloquently, ignoring such things.” She smiles. “You are terrible at following your own prescription.”
Helpless to object, Myka says, “That can’t come as a surprise.”
“A surprise? No. Perhaps an obstacle.”
“Would you... surmount it?”
Helena says, “For you...”
Myka fears she hears a lift of question. “That’s what I meant. Would you?”
“As stated: for you.”
The certainty is... transporting. Nevertheless, “I don’t know how this will work,” Myka admits. “If this will work.”
“Nor do I,” Helena says, yet her admission is a balm.
So much remains to be negotiated. So fragile this semi-resolution between their hands.
Then: “I’m so tired,” Helena says, actual rather than despondent, and Myka is ready to agree that yes, she is tired too, that everything that’s taken place in this room has taxed her to her limits, but Helena follows that admission with, “Will you lie down with me?”
Myka tenses. Her immediate, insistent bodily approval of the idea jangles against her just-as-immediate worry over where such a request—and such approval—might lead.
No doubt feeling that stiffening via their still-joined hands, Helena says, “For rest. Rest, in privacy, and nothing more.”
Myka believes her. She doesn’t trust herself, for her self is a serial liar with terrible impulse control, but she believes Helena.
Who is also a serial liar, one with similarly terrible impulse control, but saying “no” to this person who has so lately spoken of want and warp, this person whose hands continue to grip hers, is not an option.
Thus in a hotel room in an airport in Chicago, Myka lies down on a bed, and Helena lies beside her. They shift their bodies awkwardly, then less so, as they find a fit: Myka on her back, Helena on Myka’s left side, curled like punctuation around everything they’ve suffered.
From a position moments ago unimaginable, Myka finds room to ask, “What are you doing?”
“What? Nothing,” Helena says, as if Myka has made an accusation. She stills the slight, slight stroke her fingers have begun to apply to Myka’s hair.
More unfunny comedy. “I don’t mean with your hand. I mean, every day. In your life.”
“Oh,” Helena says. The stroke resumes. “Waiting.”
“You said you hadn’t stopped living.”
“That is not what I said.”
“If you could press pause on the semantics.” It’s true that Myka could—should—quote with greater accuracy, given that she knows exactly what Helena said. But Helena knows that Myka knows exactly what Helena said, and while continuing to speak together is the weirdly frustrating joy it is, they should really try to get somewhere.
Helena sighs; the sound contains a put-upon “fine.” She says, “I pretend to have expertise in several areas, including forensic analysis, for which pretensions I’m paid absurd amounts of money.”
“Ends before means?” Myka asks, a tiny joke.
“My own fabulism is unsurpassed.”
That’s probably a joke too, but thinking back on her own vast course of lies, Myka finds it important to counterclaim, “I’m not sure that’s true.”
“Does competition truly matter at this late date? A win in this category is dubious—sinful, even—but today I’m inclined to concede your victory in anything you like.”
So she understood Myka was talking about herself; is that pleasing or disturbing? In any case, Myka does know the concession as a surprise: “You are?”
“Today. For here we are, at rest. Salvaged. By you.”
“But only because you wrecked my shirt,” Myka reminds her.
They’ve been wrecked, over and over, with stained shirts only the most recent, small detritus. Yet here they are, salvaged, washed up on some unfamiliar shore... this island of a hotel room: no Moreau; instead, uncharted.
Would that it were an island, one they could make their home.
“Only because,” Helena echoes. “Only because you were being recalcitrant... but we can’t carry such recursion back ab ovo.”
“Or we can,” Myka says with a hiccupy laugh, momentarily captured by the possibility, seeing it as a burrowing-in, a we-got-here-and-this-is-how affirmation.
“This from the woman whose mantra would be ‘ignore it’?”
“Game show,” Myka goes on, the laugh persisting; there’s no escaping the beautiful fact—she might have imagined it would be true but now it’s a fact—that lying with Helena wrapped around her makes her giddy. “Whoever buzzes in with the preceding turning point the fastest gets...”
“What?”
“I was about to say ‘a point,’ but that sounds weird. A point for a point?”
Helena’s cheek flexes against Myka’s, in what Myka suspects is her I-don’t-quite-understand squint. “A point for a point... surely that should be the name of the program? But I’m not conversant with game shows.”
“You are a little. Whammies.”
Another flex of cheek. “The current argot for being affected by an artifact?”
She’s right. But. “It’s from a game show. The coinage... it’s Pete’s.” Myka wishes she could have forever avoided introducing him into the conversation, the room, the problem. But in the end this hotel room isn’t an island.
Helena nods. The movement is an acknowledgement of what Myka has done—but it’s also yet another blessed slide of her skin against Myka’s. “What will you tell him?” Helena asks, and Myka can face the question only sideways, through the warmth of the slide.
Lying in bed is unquestionably better than sitting at a table. Myka nevertheless feels an incipient lie forming, a dodge to push off difficulty: I don’t know, she could tell Helena, and maybe that lie of omission would suffice, here as they lie in a comfort Myka has already disturbed more than enough.
However. The truth is she’ll tell him whatever she has to, to get herself free. To make him let go. So that’s what she says to Helena: “Whatever it takes.”
To her shock, the out-loud saying wallops her with a vision of a still different future, one stark and Warehouse-less. The view is empty: of purpose, of feeling. A disaster. “What happens if I burn it all down?” she asks. Her heartbeat speeds; her blood floods fearful.
“As you should have in Boone?” Helena responds, with acid; then, “Sorry. Momentarily failed to follow the ‘ignore’ prescription myself.” She raises herself on an elbow and looks down at Myka. It’s a new, breathtaking view, one that Myka feels her prior lack of as acute deprivation.
Into that negative space, Helena says, “If you burn it all down, then you and I will rise from the ashes.”
Every word is clear as still water.
Purpose: Myka and Helena, rising. Not empty of feeling; rather, replete. That reward would elevate.
“Is that what you want?” Helena asks. “To burn it down?”
“Yes.” Myka can say it; it’s true, if the rise is the result. And yet she can’t uncommit her professional self so easily and entirely. “But also no. And I have to tell him something.”
“‘Ignore’ is a powerful word,” Helena observes.
“I don’t think that will work,” Myka says, for she can hear his escalating “but why” iterations as clearly as if she were herself the Ladies’ Oracle of the uncanny book. “I’ll have to explain. That I was wrong?” she tries, but that’s too small. “That I’m always wrong and he should have known that?”
“Really? Then you must be wrong about me as well.”
“Don’t use my overgeneralizing words against me,” Myka says. She touches Helena’s temple, intending it as a rebuke.
It lands instead as a caress, against which Helena leans and nestles. “Aren’t I using them against me?” she asks, low and amused.
Myka says, because she can’t not, because the words are desperate to be said, “This. I want this.” Joking, disputing, speaking, bodies together (and so much more of bodies together): all of this.
“Me using your words against myself? I see why you would.” Helena smiles against Myka’s neck, then raises herself up again, her expression changing over. “But thank you. For saying.” She follows this by reclining, nestling closer still.
The words, and the movement, are warming, but leaning all the way in would lead down a path too tantalizing. “You’re welcome,” Myka says, but she follows it with, “When we leave this room. What will you do?” she asks, because this is something she doesn’t know but might now learn, no book required. Just a Helena.
But there’s no “just” about Helena, and particularly not when she’s gazing up at Myka, sweet yet flinty, and that look tempers her answer. “Wait,” she says, differently than she said “waiting”; now the task rings of burden and freedom both. Waiting for something, rather than waiting, without predicate.
However, that predicate: Myka is the one who must act. “I’m sorry,” she says.
“I’m accustomed.”
The little shrug of resignation that accompanies those words: Myka feels it small against her shoulder, but its implications make it seem a larger shudder. Helena has waited through so much—decades of punishments, and Myka should not make her suffer anything even vaguely similar. She’s about to say “I’ll hurry,” even with no idea of what that would look like, but she’s preempted by Helena saying, into her ear, “But please hurry.” A breath of telepathic direction.
So. Now she must.
Yet that direction requires changing not the rules, nor even the vocabulary, but the speed with which the future is ushered near. It’s a daunting prospect.
Daunting but necessary, if Myka is to blunder satisfactorily. “I will,” she says. But what is necessary isn’t sufficient, not if the goal is to bring about the truly desired future. “Once I’ve done... that. What comes next?”
Helena shifts her position again, un-nestling herself from Myka’s neck, her head still on the bed but reared back a bit, looking up, and Myka tilts her head to look down. She’s often had to angle down, just that bit, to look into Helena’s eyes, but this prone person is a dramatically differently enjoyable inflection of the standing version.
As she appreciates the view, she receives Helena’s answer: “You should text me.”
So strange to hear that voice say that sentence. But relief dizzies Myka, even as she’s reclining and looking, for she realizes it’s just strange; Helena saying it doesn’t make her seem a stranger.
“And then we should meet for coffee,” Helena adds—lightly, but not throwaway.
“Or save the world?” Myka says, trying for the besting echo. Trying to overwrite the words said in Boone.
“And save the world,” Helena says. “Our world.”
The modified callback is pointed and just right; it overrides both Boone and Myka’s attempt. Myka shakes her head and says, “I’m no match for you.”
“Counterpoint: you are the match for me.”
How can it be true that Helena is saying these words? Ever, but more so here, on this day, the one Myka intended to end with the end, this day, that is instead ending with a beginning.
Not enough of a beginning, though, and Myka wants to make that clear—that, and her regret at its clear, clear, clear, yet absolutely necessary insufficiency. She says, “I want to kiss you more than I’ve ever wanted anything in my life.” Helena doesn’t move; she has to know what’s coming next, and Myka delivers it: “But I can’t.”
Helena sighs. “I do not understand your morality.”
Third time the charm—the Helena-knows-it charm.
She might as well know it, because who is Myka, really, to recognize and hold to some bright line? But to start now would entail a foundational lie—“I’m free”—one that would infect all that came after.
You could ignore that too...
Animals, animals. Of course they would advocate for the body getting what it wants, regardless of consequences.
But the dismissal of obligation, though it might seem easy now, can’t help but make realizing the future more strenuous. Myka should not increase the burden. Thus in the end, despite the pain of want, she has to get herself out from under the bodily lie she so desperately and foolishly told—she has to do that before she can give herself leave to know the bodily truth. It may be just as desperate and foolish, if differently so, but she wants, wants, wants to know it.
“Like I said, I don’t either,” she says, to ward off, for what she hopes will this time not seem forever, Helena’s charm. So as to think herself as far away as possible from the basic physical reality that a tiny turn of her head could “accidentally” join their lips, she turns the opposite way and tells the ceiling, “I have to rebook my flights now.”
“To set the future in motion,” Helena says. Agreement, but aggrieved.
Myka smiles at both of those, allowing herself a minimal turn back toward Helena. She’s a far better sight than the ceiling. “You do know something about that.”
Helena breathes out, probably in more-aggrieved affirmation, and she makes no move to sit up. Is it possible to be aggressively still?
Helena’s answer is an impressive yes.
Myka allows herself a dispensation, as she did when she watched Helena approach in the airport, so many hours ago: twenty more breaths before she takes the get-up initiative, as Helena very clearly intends to force her to do. So she breathes. Very. Very. Slowly. Inhale: beat... beat... for as many beats as she can manage. Hold, for the same: an the number is not small. Exhale again as many, then again, hold. That’s one. Inhale. Hold. Exhale. Hold. Two.
Eighteen more of these with Helena warm against her; it isn’t how she ever imagined heaven, or its earthly approximation, but here it is.
For now.
Right as she reaches inhale thirteen: “Are you asleep?” Helena whispers.
“Sssh. I’m counting.”
Helena doesn’t ask “what.” She stays still, now solid and present only, until Myka reaches the pause after her twentieth exhale.
Disengagement is difficult.
After, they busy themselves with phones and booking. Myka situates herself at the desk, while Helena reclines on the bed: these stations they might have taken if they had done nothing but inhabit this room as travelers, travelers now bored before departing.
Helena finishes before Myka does, at which point her reclining becomes reclining, a grandiose occupying of space. A new Helena aspect, and Myka would never have seen it, never if not for salvage, wrecking, recalcitrance... back and back and back. How they got here.
“I don’t want to leave,” she tells that new grandiosity.
Helena stretches, arms up then sweeping wide, as if making a snow angel. Then she props herself up on her elbows. She moves both her hands, a finger-flutter suggesting that whatever statement she about to issue is obvious. And it is: “Then we’ll stay forever.”
For a brief counterfactual burst of cosmology, Myka believes they could. But this time Helena is the one to rise and dismiss the possibility, although she does it with still more ostentation: “And yet this room is entirely inappropriate as anyone’s final resting place.”
Myka loves every muscled, meaningful emphasis. From inside that love, she pities her earlier-today self, the one who thought she could have lived without the continued possibility of this.
Well. She could have lived. But it wouldn’t have been living.
For all their need to speak together, their final minutes in the room are silent, as if refraining from using that small duration of their privacy to the purpose they set, they might be able to bank it. Against some unprivate, nonspeaking future.
As they reenter the unprivate hallway and head toward the far greater unprivate spaces of transit, Myka says, “That coffee was expensive.”
“Worth every penny.” The and you know it is inescapable.
Inescapable and true.
Helena’s flight is scheduled to leave well before (the first of) Myka’s is—New York is so much easier to reach than anyplace named Dakota.
“Not The Dakota,” Helena says when Myka shares this gloomy observation with her, as they wait for the tram to the terminals.
Myka doesn’t know whether to groan or congratulate her on the reference. She settles for a sincere “Touché,” then asks, “Should I come to your gate with you? To... sit?” She’s thinking on sitting together. Sitting together. What people see when they look.
“Should you?” Helena asks back, with an eyebrow.
“No,” Myka has to concede. “I’d want to kiss you goodbye.”
“Anyone looking would expect you to kiss me, and/or me to kiss you. Goodbye or otherwise. But you’ve made it clear that isn’t in the offing until we can fulfill everyone’s expectations.”
“Everyone’s?”
“Ours and those of fortunate observers.”
“Of course you’d think they’re fortunate,” Myka says; she hears and feels affection—distinct from want—in her voice. Affection has been gone for so long between them... she welcomes its old-friend tenderness, gently yet insistently shouldering its way through all that must be ignored.
More eyebrow, differently inflected. “Of course they are fortunate. You underestimate our beauty but, more significantly, your own.”
Such a compliment is unassimilable right now, so Myka counters with, “But not yours. I don’t underestimate yours.”
Helena leans backward. “Your saying such things is why you should not come with me to my gate,” she says, and Myka reads the lean as speaking commensurately about what is unassimilable. “Because I want you to come with me,” Helena goes on, to Myka’s delight, “and then to board the flight with me.”
“Burning it all down,” Myka notes.
“Which you don’t want to do,” Helena notes back.
“But I will if I have to.”
Helena now offers a wrinkle of brow. “There is almost always a better way. You showed me that.”
The wrinkle doesn’t belong, so Myka tries to smooth it by saying, with a lightness, “You were going to freeze it all down. Totally different.”
“In any event the way found then was better... and, I must say, better than shooting you in the head.” Helena says this dry, joking back, yet also a little stunned, probably at the idea that Myka would joke in the first place.
Myka answers that surprise with, “I’m pretty happy you thought so.”
Helena doesn’t move, but she says—tight, as if dampening some vibration—“Your understatement is rhetorically effective. In that I now want to kiss you more than I ever thought I could again be capable of wanting.”
This should be simple. Grab her right now and never let her go. But nothing is as simple as it should be, so Myka says, “I’ll bear that understatement thing in mind.”
“I suspect I’m weak for a wide array of rhetorical techniques. When deployed by you.”
The bubbling of possibility is... irresistible. “I’ll make a study,” Myka says, exerting great effort to keep herself under control. “Maybe litotes next.”
“Not ineffective, you may find.”
They are tuned tight to each other now. In public, but speaking privately. If they can keep this alignment... they’ve had it before, lost it, got it back. Myka lets herself dissolve into one final dispensation: the blissful idea that they will always get it back.
Are there any words to describe what she is, other than “in love”? If so, she doesn’t want to know them.
She also doesn’t want to watch Helena walk away. She’s mourned such walks too often. So they clasp hands one more time, then let go; Helena turns away, and Myka, after enjoying the movement of Helena’s hair the turn occasions—that swirl of fluid promise—does too.
****
At the Sioux Falls airport—which Myka, hating its provincial familiarity, always greets with an internal but why do I have to know this place whine—she wants nothing more than to roll off the plane and into the car she’d parked in the absurdly small lot so many hours or days ago, thence rolling on to the B&B and into some state that might, if she’s lucky, resemble sleep.
What she wants is not what she gets.
Mrs. Frederic is standing by the security exit.
TBC
#bering and wells#Warehouse 13#fanfic#Tabled#B&W holiday gift exchange#part 6#barbarawar#I tried so hard to make it end here#but no dice#I can't apologize enough for getting tangled in the complications#(it occurs to me that maybe there's an artifact in that hotel room making it all so wordy)#(okay not really)#(but this thing might've worked better if M and H had had to deal with a coffeemaker that brewed up a djinn or something instead)#(could've sent the story into territory too unserious though)#(which seems like it would have been cheaty)
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hey, did you know? if you want me to draw something, you can pay me to do so!
my commissions are currently open (and likely will be so year-round!) and you can find the price sheet for them here -> commissions
#& if you can't pay but you live in or near the netherlands (or further but can easily ship things): i'm cool with bartering too!#just dm me either here or on discord (@xejune) & we can figure something out ✨#is this because a certain someone who's been harassing me for over a year bc i dont draw fanart for her rarepair#just sent me an anon ask thats just a fic excerpt? maybe <3#also im happy to write or beta-read in exchange for money too! as well as translate & write captions/transcripts#& some other little services#essentially: if u'd like me to do something for you; be prepared to do smthng for me in return (like pay)#sometimes i do take requests (i always make a post when those are open!) but those come with a risk of me not getting around to doing them#or not doing a few of them because its simply not what i want to draw#commissioning me makes sure that i'll draw what you'd like me to draw <3#joon talks
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