#this one actually took FOREVER
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Craning just a little, Shen Qingqiu looked past the lordâs shoulder.
Luo Binghe stared down one of the most powerful cultivators in the human world, and scoffed. His lips twisted into a smile that was anything but happy. Shen Qingqiuâs heart stuttered - though maturity had given his former apprenticeâs features grace and refinement, they were of course still familiar to him. But he hadnât ever seen such an expression on them before. It was the kind of look that taunted the person across from it, as if to say âcome pick a fight with me - Iâll enjoy watching you loseâ.
The bolt of heat it shot right through him was entirely inappropriate, and he immediately decided to pretend that it never happened.
-
âI Wish You Were My Husbandâ -by Feynite Chapter 4
#svsss#scum villain#shen qingqiu#luo binghe#yue qingyuan#bingqiu#Qijiu#??#AUGHHHHH#THIS TOOK FOREVER AND I STILL FEEL LIKE IT LOOKS SO SLOPPY AND UNFINISHED#this actually originally just started as expressions practice#but you can blame @belovedstill for getting me hooked onto this amazing fic#still havenât finished yet but I LOVED THIS SCENE AHRJRHJAJS#maybe one day Iâll color in more pieces#also donât look too closely at the backgrounds ok cause I hate it and I got impatient with it#fic fanart#I wish you were my husband#everyone ignore the fact that LBHâs huadian is missing in one of the panels#if you mention it you get blocked immediately#/joking!!#hoot art
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
[insert poetic title here]
fun fact: this did not start out as isat fanart
(rambling in tags)
#I was actually doing some personal writing and when I read it over a few days later I could only hear it in loops voice#speaking of which#i totally recommend watching ShortOneGaming's playthrough of the game#their voices for the characters match so well in my mind i can't separate them XD#also i have no clue why but this took FOREVER#I had the thumbnailing and paneling done so quickly but my motivation to finish it just left me midway through the third page T-T#Even though this is one of the shorter comics I've made (AND NO COLOUR) it somehow took my like twice as long -3-#loop is so fun to draw!#well actually fun to colour would be more accurate lol#also did you know that a keyknife was an actual thing??#I wanted to check if their was an a visual asset of it in the game only to find out they're just everyday objects you can own???#maybe im just seriously out of the loop lol#and i know the buttons are wrong but i was already mostly finished inking by the time i realized so lets just say its a stylistic choice#isat fanart#isat spoilers#sasasaap spoilers#two hats spoilers#cw body horror#??? i think#comic#artists on tumblr#fanart#digital illustration#digital art#isat#isat siffrin#isat loop#in stars and time spoilers#my art#my comic
3K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Mightier Than The Sword
Gerson had one regret, but now Alvin has many. A fancomic about my thoughts and theories and who -and what- the Knight is!
While not directly connected, I'd say this one is in the same vein as the Deal With The Devil series! Hope you enjoy!
Alt text for this comic under the read more:
Page 1
Panel 1 - Wide shot of the interior of the Boom household. Several monsters are gathered in a clean-looking hall, dressed in somber clothing and talking quietly in small groups. The monsters include QC, Cat Mom, Toriel, Asgore and Mayor Holiday. Father Alvin stands waiting at a door in the hall as his sister, a red-headed turtle monster in a pink dress, exits through the door and speaks to him. âAlvinâŚheâs ready for you.â
Panel 2 - Mid shot as Alvin prepares to enter the room. Ms. Boom steps out of the way, and puts a reassuring hand on his shoulder. Both of them look somber.Â
Panel 3 - Alvin enters the room, mostly dark and lit by a few candles on a nearby desk. Gerson Boom is lying on a bed ahead of him, watching him enter. Alvin closes the door behind him and says, âFather, Iâm here.â
Panel 4 - Alvin approaches his father, lying in bed. The bedroom has a few amenities, including a footstool set off to the side, a large rug bearing the delta rune, and a massive bookcase filling the entire back wall. A few books and papers litter the ground. Alvin bows his head, and says, âThe hammer is ready forâŚfor afterwards.â
Gerson just smiles, and responds, âWa ha, is it? Well, itâll do fine, I suppose.â
Panel 5 - Closer shot of Gerson extending his right hand towards Alvin. Heâs smiling still, content with where he is. âCome here, son.â
Page 2
Panel 1 - Closeup as Alvin takes his fatherâs hand in his own, and clasps it tight. âWhatever you needâŚIâm here,â he says from offscreen.
Panel 2 - Alvin kneels by his fatherâs bedside, still clasping his hands. Gerson says, âOf course you are. Wa haâŚyouâre such a good and kind man, Alvin.â
Panel 3 - Closeup on Alvin as he just holds on to his fatherâs hand. Tears prick at the corners of his eyes.Â
Panel 4 - Focus on Gerson as he holds up a hand to conspiratorially whisper to Alvin. âAnd I know I can trust you with a secret, right?â
Panel 5 - Closeup on Alvin as he looks back up, face earnest. â...Of course.â
Panel 6 - Gerson holds up one finger as he speaks to Alvin. âI told your sister I had no regrets, but that was a BIT of a fib! Iâm afraid I have one regretâŚâ
Panel 7 - Side view of Alvin as he learns closer, his face now worried. âFather?...â
Page 3
Panel 1 - Focus on Gerson as he leans back on his pillow, looking up at the ceiling. âI wish I had started earlier. Writing stories, I mean. Seeinâ you anâ your sisterâs eyes light up whenever I read you a new chapterâŚand then seeing all that joy from so many young folks after those stories were published!â he says, looking wistful.
Panel 2 - Alvin watches on sadly as Gerson continues, âIt was the greatest feeling in the world, Alvin. Itâs what lifeâs all about, yâknow. Helping the young folks grow.â
Panel 3 - Gerson closes his eyes and looks back towards the ceiling again, still wistful. âSo, I wish Iâd started writing stories sooner.â
Panel 4 - Closeup on Alvin as he bows his head, still holding Gersonâs hand. âI truly do cherish those times you read to us, fatherâŚâ he says.
Panel 5 - Closeup on Gerson as he closes his mind with happy memories. âMe too, Alvin. Itâs a shameâŚIâve still got so many tales to tell! Butââ
Panel 6 - Gerson is interrupted by a round of hacking coughs. His time is fast approaching.
Panel 7 - Gerson settles back in to his bed and says, âThe Angelâs given me SO many good, happy years. Doesnât seem fair to ask for more.â
Panel 8 - Closeup on Alvin as he continues to hold his fatherâs hand tight. âThis doesnât seem fair, eitherâŚâ he says, tears still pricking at his eyes.
Page 4
Panel 1 -Â Insert closeup of Gerson as he smiles at his son. âThatâs life, Alvin!â He doesnât seem bothered by his imminent passing.
Panel 2 - Side view as Gerson leans in closer to Alvin again, hand raised, back to sharing his secrets. âBut, knowinâ my secretâŚthereâs something Iâd like to ask of you.â
Alvin faces his father with seriousness. âAnything,â he replies.
Panel 3 - Closeup on Gerson, as he looks hopefully at Alvin. âYou have a good heart, Alvin. I want you to know this joy, too.â
Panel 4 - Gerson continues in the next panel: âPlease try writinâ stories of your own, alright?â Closeup on Alvin as he looks shocked and a bit worried by the request.
Panel 5 - Mid shot as Alvin holds up a hand to Gerson in protest. He says, âFather, IâŚI have no talent for writing fiction. Not like YOU.â
Panel 6 - Closeup on Gerson as he refutes his son: âHogwash! I know you can.â
Panel 7 - Wide shot as Alvin stands up, and looks around the room. âNo, IâŚâ
In the foreground, thereâs Gersonâs desk, currently showing some lit candles, some paper, an inkwell, a notebook, and his favorite fountain pen.
Page 5
Panel 1 - Closeup as Alvin grabs two objects off of the desk: the small notebook and the fountain pen. Offscreen, he says, âIf you justâŚâ
Panel 2 - Back at Gersonâs bedside, Alvin pulls up the footstool and puts the pen and notebook in front of him, intending to use it. He faces his father, and says, âTell me your ideas, I could write them down, andââ
Gerson interrupts him: ââFraid it doesnât work that way, Alvin!â
Panel 3 - Gerson holds up both of his hands and smiles as he explains: âMy tales are between my soul and the pen. Youâll need to make your own.â
Panel 4 - Gerson watches as Alvin, tears in his eyes, looks down at the notebook and pen in hand. âIâI cannotâŚâ Alvin starts, looking despondent.
Panel 5 - Side view of Alvin as tears continue to stream from his eyes. He says, âNot without you!â In the background, in grayscale, there is a scene from Alvinâs memory: Gerson reading a book to his two children by the fire. Gerson looks happy, and both kids are enraptured, with Alvin clinging to a cat doll that looks like Seam.
Panel 6 - Closeup on Gerson, his face now more worried and pleading towards Alvin. Gerson says, âY-you can⌠Itâs all I askâŚâ
Panel 7 - Gerson turns away as heâs again interrupted by a round of terrible sounding coughs. Alvin stands holding the notebook and pen in the foreground.
Page 6
Panel 1 - Horror comes over Alvinâs face as his father continues to cough loudly, clutching his chest. He realizes that his father might be close to death now.
Panel 2 - Wider overhead shot as Alvin turns away from Gerson, looking frantically around the room. âNo! Not yet!--â he says desperately. Gerson is still racked with coughs.
Panel 3 - Closeup as Alvin grabs the candles from the deskâ
Panel 4 - And then pulls a book from the bookshelf, with the delta rune on the front â
Panel 5 - And then finally pulls out what appears to be a beaded rosary, with the delta rune made of beads at the end of it.
Panel 6 - Wider shot as Alvin places the objects in front of him, candles to the side, holy book in front of him. Gerson can only lay there as he does so, trying to catch his breath.
Panel 7 - Front view of Alvin as he clasps his hands together in front of his face, the rosary threaded between his fingers. He closes his eyes and bows his head in prayer. âAngelâŚAngel above! Please, heed your servantâs prayer!â
Page 7
Panel 1 - Closeup on Alvin as he continues to pray, the candles glowing around him. He keeps his eyes shut even as tears well in them. âI know you call back my fatherâs soul, but please! Please refrain!â
Panel 2 - Gerson desperately reaches a hand out towards his son, shaking, but unable to reach him. In the foreground, the fountain pen sits on the footstool between them. âA-AlvinâŚâ Gersonâs voice is shaky now.
Panel 3 - Aerial shot as Alvin prays over the book, and Gerson is still confined to the bed, only able to watch. âThis world still NEEDS his gifts!â Alvin says. âI pray to you, donât take them from us now!â The shadows around Alvin start to grow strange, not matching the candlelight.
Panel 4 - Gerson continues to hold out a hand, now not looking well. âNoâŚâ
Panel 5 - Closeup on the candles as they spark to life, now glowing stronger.
Panel 6 - A strange bright glow begins to emanate from Gerson. Behind him, the books in the bookcase all rattle and shift as if in a localized earthquake. The colors of the room grow brighter and stranger.
Panel 7 - Still reaching out a desperate hand, Gerson lets out a soft breath. His soul, an upside-down white heart, comes up from his body. On the footstool in the foreground, the fountain pen also begins to levitate, as if by magic.
Page 8
Panel 1 - Front shot of Alvin as he continues to pray desperately, his head bowed and hands together. âGrant us the love shown between his soul and the pen!â Behind him, the colors have grown stark and bright, and a shadow resembling the angel looms behind Alvin.
Panel 2 - Alvin looks up to discover something amazing and terrible: Gersonâs soul has been drawn to the fountain pen, and begins to flow down into it.
Panel 3 - Closeup as Gersonâs soul is completely absorbed into the pen, hovering high over the bed.
Panel 4 - The candles turn strange blue and pink colors, and the books in the bookcase shake and rattle relentlessly.
Panel 5 - Extreme closeup on Alvinâs eyes as he sees this miracle; the light of his fatherâs soul reflected in his eyes.
Panel 6 - Closeup as the pen suddenly drops, and clatters back on to the footstool.
Panel 7 - Wide aerial shot as the room very suddenly goes completely dark and silent, the bright colors and lights now gone. Alvin stands up and backs away from the bed, still clutching the rosary, his face filled with horror. Gerson now lies unmoving in his bed, having passed away.
Page 9
Panel 1 - The same shot as the first panel of the first page, with the other monsters waiting in the hallway. No one says anything as Alvin emerges from the bedroom, leaning on the door for support, his head bowed. Everyone in the room knows that Gerson has just passed, although they donât know the rest.
Panel 2 - An establishing shot of the forest and mountains surrounding HometownâŚthe skies are a dark, gloomy gray.
Panel 3 - Above shot of Gersonâs newly dug grave. At the bottom of a small pit lies Gersonâs hammer, covered in his dust. Politics Bear stands over the grave, holding a shovel.Â
Panel 4 - Closeup as the shovel begins to dump dirt over the fresh grave.
Panel 5 - Another closeup of Gersonâs headstone, with bundles of fresh funerary flowers laid in front of it.
Panel 6 - Wide shot of Gersonâs funeral. Alvin stands over his fatherâs grave, reading last rites from one of his books. Lots of monsters are in attendance, including Alphys and Undyne, Napstablook, the Holiday and Dreemurr families, and more. A very young Kris, Noelle and Asriel are present, but Dess is not. Everyone is dressed in dark mourning attire.
Panel 7 - After the funeral, Toriel approaches Alvin and puts a hand on his shoulder. She says, âBeautifully said, Alvin. I know your father is watching proudly by the side of the Angel.â Alvin looks distant and mournful.
Panel 8 - A closeup of the fountain pen laying forgotten on the desk in Gersonâs room. Gerson is, perhaps, not actually with the Angel right now.
Panel 9 - Back at the funeral, Alvin bows his head, eyes closed. âYou are too kind, Toriel,â he says.
Page 10
Panels 1-3 - We see the seasons pass through the changing of the treesâŚfrom the barren white trees of winter, to colorful pink blooms for spring, to the bright oranges and reds of fall.
Panel 4 - Sometime much later, Alvin again enters his fatherâs old room, alone.
Panel 5 - Much of Gersonâs room has remained untouched. The fountain pen still sits on his old writing desk in the foreground. Alvin steps inside, and carefully turns on the overhead light. âItâs been years,â he says.
Panel 6 - Alvin cautiously approaches the pen, which seems to loom large ahead of him. He hesitantly picks it up.
Panel 7 - Alvin places some blank pages on the writing desk. âSurelyâŚâ
Panel 8 - Alvin sits in front of the blank pages, still holding the pen cautiously. âSurely by now, I can do it.â Heâs going to try writing.
Panel 9 - Closeup as Alvin dips the pen in the inkwell, and it comes away full of ink.
Panel 10 - Closeup as Alvin holds the pen over the blank page. The pen trembles slightly in his grip.
Panel 11 - Alvin tries to put pen to paper, but heâs still trembling. He looks down with great anxiety. âIâŚIâŚâ
Panel 12 - Closeup on Alvinâs face as he looks more panicked, shaking and sweating. In the background, his memory of his fatherâs soul being absorbed into the pen plays back at him. This is still his fault.
Panel 13 - Closeup again as Alvinâs hand shakes uncontrollably, and the pen with it. Ink spots begin to dapple the blank pageâ
Page 11
Panel 1 - Alvinâs shaking hand accidentally knocks over the inkwell, and it spills black ink all over the blank page.
Panel 2 - Alvin picks up the ruined paper and folds it in half to try and stem the ink spillage. He quietly curses to himself.Â
Panel 3 - Closeup as Alvin holds his head in his hand. Itâs clear that this isnât going to work. âI canâtâŚâÂ
Panel 4 - Closeup as Alvin puts the ink-stained paper back on the desk, and quickly grabs up the pen and inkwell.
Panel 5 - Taking the pen and inkwell, Alvin exits his fatherâs room again, head bowed and expression sad.
Panel 6 - Left behind, the folded paper slowly peels apart and unfoldsâŚ
Panel 7 - To reveal that the spilled ink has created a rorschach ink blot image of a titan.Â
Page 12
Panel 1 - Wide shot as Alvin trudges down the streets of Hometown, alone. His head his bowed, and heâs still clutching the articles he took with him. Itâs almost nighttime, and the sky is dark. âI cannot bear this kind of burden,â he says to himself.
Panel 2 - Shot from behind Alvin as he approaches the school building. Itâs dark, and no students or teachers should be there. âMaybe you belong where you always haveâŚâ
Panel 3 - Now indoors, Alvin continues down the empty hallway towards a particular destination. âWith the youth.â
Panel 4 - Alvin opens the door to the storage closet at the end of the hall. It opens with a soft creak. âTeaching. Telling stories,â Alvin continues to say to himself.
Panel 5 - Alvin places the fountain pen and inkwell on a small shelf in the storage closet. The closet is almost completely black.Â
Panel 6 - The inkwell and pen are left on the shelf as Alvin closes the door behind him. His expression is mournful as he locks these reminders of his father away. âInspiring someone better suited,â he says, hoping this is a suitable escape of his responsibility.
Page 13
Panel 1 - But in the storage closet, the objects are subject to something else already there: the grand Dark Fountain. The pen, ink and papers all fall into the darkness of the fountainâ
Panel 2 - And start to change, the pen seemingly turning into liquid itselfâ
Panel 3 - As the pen falls deeper and deeper into the dark, the liquid begins to reshape into something new, something resembling a personâ
Panel 4 - Until it lands on empty ground, now a person in knightâs armor, knelt over and holding his head in his hands.
Panel 5 - The Knight comes to, and starts to become more aware. Heâs dressed in armor resembling the dark metallic sheen of the fountain pen, his mask resembling the pen tip. A bright deep red cape flows from his shoulders, and a single red-orange feather tops the helmet. âWhereâŚam I?â
Panel 6 - The Knight again touches his helmet with both hands, as if not sure exactly what he is.
Panel 7 - Interior shot of the helmet, which reveals a figure much like GersonâŚbut much younger, more idealized-looking, with colors not matching his actual self. A Dark World interpretation. âWHY am IâŚ?â
Panel 8 - A closeup of the Knightâs hand, slightly trembling.
Panel 9 - The Knight stares down at his own hands as realization begins to flood him, or at least something that looks like realization. âWait. I see why. I KNOW.â he says.
 Page 14
Panel 1 - The Knight holds up his hand, and a sword appears in it in a flash of lights. The sword resembles the tip of a fountain pen, almost split neatly in two. âI serve the Lightners! That is my purpose!â Says the Knight.Â
Panel 2 - The Knight draws the sword back with great fervor and determination. His thoughts echo around him in strong letters: âA purpose so bright, so clearâŚâ
Panel 3 - In the final panel, the Knight drives the sword into the ground, causing an eruption of black ink-like material to spew from the groundâŚthe creation of a new Dark Fountain. In the fountain itself, words reflect his purpose: âI EXIST TO GIVE THEM STORIES FOREVER.â
#lynx art#deltarune#deltarune fancomic#gerson boom#father alvin#the knight#and a host of other very short cameos#cw: parental death#cw: character death#HOLY CRAP I CAN'T BELIEVE THIS IS DONE#this one took so dang long to do#I may have uh. Gone overboard on the colors there honestly#but yeah I've had this rattling around in my head in terms of Knight theories forever#and FINALLY got the actual Scene for it in my head enough to express that in art
3K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Despondency / Refuge
that's supposed to be Bennys lighter, the Courier is dealing with cosequences of being thrown into a mess they had nothing to do with
the halo was something that turned out on an accident but i love it
Rant below
#ARCADE PLS STRAIGHTEN OUT YOUR COLLAR ITS DRIVING ME MAD#fallout new vegas#arcade gannon#courier six#fnv#courier 6#my art#smoking#artists on tumblr#the cool halo effect is actually just moon photo set to burn on a white circle and yellow border#and the sky is a photo lmao#dont ask me where the light came from ive no idea its somewhere#i only know how to draw one type of shoes i rarely draw humans#furries mostly#yeah its gonna be a while probably till i draw anything like that it took FOREVER but damn im glad#fuck im lonely#once i wanted to go to art uni but then saw average pay in my country#back to studying#also from the last gannon post i read all the tags i love yall#vels spolski#firealpaca
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Well I was going to do the next part all in one go (why the format's a little weird, I did pages) but then I went and got sick, so for the sake of not keeping you all waiting for another week or two, here's the first bit of part 3 of the Rolan comic
I'm hoping to post the rest of this part in one go (there's another 11 pages so we'll see if that actually happens) and then we'll finally be back to Rolan again
Part 1 ⢠Previous Part ⢠Next Part
Here's the pages in their original format as well. Realized they might not be super great to read on mobile, so maybe chopping them up was for the best.
#baldur's gate 3#bg3#bg3 comic#my Tav finally has an actual name! Took forever to settle on one#But she's officially named Ember#bg3 astarion#rolan x tav#tav x rolan#astarion#my tav#sharky's tav#tav: ember#oc: ember#sharky art#rolan x ember
4K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Day 3: Coffee
#inktobertale2024#yes i used actual coffee#but the coffee couldnt get dark enuf without being a goopy sticky mess that took FOREVER to dry#so i mixed in some dark brown ink#my hands r so sticky#and my room smells like the inside of a coffee bag#the ants will have a field day with this one loool#ink sans
704 notes
¡
View notes
Text
A Wood Paneled Basement, 2024
Marina Constantine
Glass and plastic beads, found quilt squares, sewing thread and childhood artifacts on acrylic and cotton yarn
#art#fiber art#fine art#weaving#loom#artist#nostalgia#rainbow#artists on tumblr#also this took forever because i insisted on stitching each bead one by one lol#i havenât made work in so long itâs actually insane#i blame my last job for almost ending me#but i have new fancy job now and more time so hopefully more work soon#đ¤
393 notes
¡
View notes
Text
"What do you mean their name isn't Beef?"
(for @moondal514)
#TGCF#he xuan#I only know TGCF through having multiple people try and explain it to me + watching S1 of the animated series.#And fandom osmosis of some characters and plot points.#So I had a genuine 'A platypus? *PERRY* the platypus?' moment when doing research for this prompt.#My method for drawing novel characters is to read their description + personality and make a few drafts from there.#Sometimes I get curious and look up official art on a wiki. Ensue the: âhuh who is this (sees the female form) I KNOW WHO THIS ISâ#Anyways this is actually just a warm up. An unprecedented part 2 comes tomorrow.#Because the journey of âHow *would* I draw he xuan?â took me on a wild journey that nearly drove me into madness.#Spoilers: its not how I drew HX in this comic. It's more...on brand for this blog. Lets leave it there. Everyone gets a 24 hour warning.#Thank you Moondal514 for pushing me into the deepest waters on this one. I am forever changed.
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
"The Horse" a microfic based on once again, a not easy prompt by @sixlane and supported by @velanavis
âYou named the horse?â Regulus questioned.
âOf course! He deserves a name!â James assured him.
âJames,â Regulus scowled.
âWhat?â
âHeâs a non-living thing.â
James gasped and quickly covered the horseâs ears. âYou take that back right now!â
âBaby, itâs a stuffed animal,â Regulus said, taking the toy from Jamesâ hands.
With a frown, James snatched it back. âI never say anything about Whiskers.â
âThatâs because heâs an actual, living, breathing animal.â Regulus loved Jamesâ heart, he really did, but he also knew James was stubborn. This wasnât about the toy; it was about the âprinciple,â as James had put it.
He acted annoyed, but Regulus cherished every moment with Jamesâeven the ridiculous ones.
âOkay, but Patitas has feelings,â James pouted, stroking the back of the toy horse.
âAnd how will you feel when Patitas leaves our home because itââ
âHe, not it,â James interrupted.
Regulus sighed, ââbecause he is actually a gift for Luna.â
âThatâs fine; Iâll visit him when Harry goes on playdates,â James replied proudly.
Regulus nodded, sliding closer to James. âYouâre absurd, you know that?â
âYes, I do. Now, will you give me a kiss?â
Regulus closed his eyes and leaned over to kiss James, only to be met with the soft fur of the stuffed animal against his lips. He opened his mouth to protest, but James quickly set the toy aside and pulled Regulus close to kiss him.
âI love you,â James whispered.
âI love you too.â Regulus picked up the toy. âNow, letâs go. Weâre late.â
#this one took me forever to figure out#but it's cute and fluffy#and they are so unserious i love them#james will actually go anything to annoy regulus because he thinks he looks really hot when he's arguing with james#wives tag <3#james potter x regulus black#james and regulus#james potter#james x regulus#regulus x james#regulus and james#regulus black#regulus arcturus black#regulus black x james potter#jegulus#jegulus microfic#hp marauders#starchaser#sunseeker#james fleamont potter#rab#fjp#marauders#harry potter#marauders era#marauders fandom#fanfic#harry potter marauders#the marauders#marauders harry potter
382 notes
¡
View notes
Text
what do i do without f1 to watch this sunday....
#this took me forever. i finished the actual drawing ages ago but the stupid lettering took me WEEKS#well. more like a week and a half of thinking about it and trying to get it to look right#whatever this is the best ive got#oscar piastri#op81#formula 1#formula 1 fanart#f1#f1 fanart#formula one fanart#mclaren#my art
236 notes
¡
View notes
Text
the defiance of a life spent almost in touch
geto x reader âž 15.7k âž part one of two âž ao3 link
info! (canon au, haibara lives and geto never defects.) Your cursed technique allows you to read peopleâto see into their mindsâwhen you touch them. It's not pleasant, but to jujutsu society, it's useful. Which means you end up in close proximity to Geto Suguru, who you've been avoiding for nearly a decade since seeing just how frightening it is inside his head. Though it's something you vowed never to repeat, it seems that there are powerful people vested in having you read him once again. âž tw! reader is scared of geto, typical jjk gore/violence, geto is. mentally unwell. like he didn't defect but he's Wrong âž notes! part two should be out end of january!!!
When the jujutsu higher-ups ask you for help, they always send Kento, because you have a hard time saying no to him.Â
To his credit, he always looks sorry. You have the number of every other sorcerer you know blocked. He still comes in person because he knows the blow will be softer if you can complain to him after. He drives you to the appointed location, a small town on the border of Yamanashi Prefecture. The ride is mostly silent. When the car stops in front of a small, traditional house, Kento sighs deep, a sound you got so well acquainted with in high school that you can still conjure it in your mind on command.Â
A familiar look: why are you doing this. Another: you can say no.
âYou know why I have to,â you say.
The sigh again. ���Fair enough.â
You left jujutsu society for a few reasons.
The first: your cursed technique is useless in a fight. You had to rely on strength and agility alone, which got you to Grade Bâbut you saw what happened to Haibara. The higher-ups send lower grade sorcerers out as a test, a toe in the water. They misjudged the grades of so many curses that at a certain point, you started to suspect that they were making it all up. That they had no way to accurately measure the strength of a curse until it had drawn a sorcererâs blood. You didnât want to be a body in a hospital bed, cut so deep through the middle that you had claw marks on the inside of your spine.
Haibara lived, but not without consequences.
The second: three men wait inside the house youâve been called to. The window that alerted the higher-ups, a non-sorcerer passed out on the groundâand him. Geto smiles warmly when he sees you. You used to like his smiles before you saw the inside of his head. Now all you see is fox teeth hidden behind a stretched mouth.
Though your cursed technique isnât useful in a fight, itâs still useful. Skin-to-skin contact allows you a look into another personâs mind. Just flashes, and nothing specific, but itâs helpful when the only witnesses you have are comatose or otherwise indisposed. Youâre allowed a normal life for these few visitations. The higher-ups donât bother you anymore. Even Gojo stopped asking you to come back and teach somewhere along the line, distracted by things more (or less, knowing him) important than your existence.
Geto never tried. You can at least respect him for that.
He explains to you that six people have been found in the same state as the man in front of you. Itâs not a normal comaâsomething is smothering their soul, stretching it far from their body. As if theyâre standing on the sidewalk across the street from themselves, watching the inside of their head through a lit window in the middle of the night. Youâd forgotten what Getoâs voice sounded like, all friendly tones and half-hidden condescension.
When you touch the unconscious man, you donât see anything at first, which is odd. His wrist is clammy and cold, his whole body covered in sweat. You briefly wonder if his soul is so disconnected that you wonât be able to read him.
And then, memories:          noodles in warm broth,         a pair of leather shoes      with buckles,                   a live wire at the power plant,         what it would feel like     to put your hands on it?,         to feel electricity for the first time in so long?,         to take something into you                                                                  r body that was never supposed to be there?,         hands wrapped around spark-soaked copperâ
Outside, you throw up behind a camellia bush. Bile burns your throat, the roof of your mouth. The flowers smell of putrid rot when you know they shouldnât. Cold air digs needles into your cheeks, so youâre stinging inside and out. Kento hadnât given you enough notice for you to skip breakfast, but the higher-ups hadnât given him any notice that theyâd need you.
People are predisposed to show you either wants or memories. Never both, for reasons beyond your understanding. Memories are worse than wants. They burrow deeper, which makes them harder to expel.
Instinct tells you the hand is coming before it connects, and you dodge contactâGeto at your shoulder, asking if youâre alright. He doesnât miss that you flinch away from him. âIâd have brought a bucket inside if I knew,â he tells you. His face says: Iâm sorry for overlooking this detail. Heâs very good at lying with it.
âItâs at the power plant,â you say. âWhateverâs causing this.â
âDo you want to read any of the others before you go?â The question feels cruel. His face says it isnât.
You shake your head and leave without a word.Â
Kento drops you off at your building and you thank him. You could invite him up easily. The two of you have known each other for so long, have experienced so much together, that being with him feels natural. Itâs possible to turn off your brain around him, to touch him and only experience the smallest flashes of memory.Â
You thank him and say good night.
It would be selfish. You would give anything to be the kind of person that could be a good partner to him. Heâs an easy man to love, which is exactly why you can never love him. Youâre difficult, a puzzle that comes with a sizable warning.
When you fall asleep in your cramped apartment, you see soup and silver buckles, live wires and burning flesh.
âž
An unknown number calls when youâre at work. You pick up because it breaks the monotony of clicking around account records and absorbing none of the numbers on the screen.
âAre you busy?â the person on the line asks, and you realize you never blocked Getoâs number because you never had it in the first place.
You tell him youâre not, even though you have a project deadline this week. If you sit in this closet-turned-office for five more minutes youâre going to explode all over the walls. You're not sure why you entertain himâwhy you didn't just hang up the second you heard his voice. There's something about him that compels you. A terrible, morbid curiosity that sometimes, when you're not looking directly at him, overrides your fear.
He meets you at the same house as last time, but today thereâs no window. Just you and him. Kento didnât drive you. For some odd reason, you thought thereâd be someone else here, as if jujutsu society at large should know that you always need a buffer when it comes to Geto. A witness. And you realize that despite the curiosity, despite the compulsion, you should never have entertained this man on the phone for more than ten seconds. You shouldn't be here. You keep your keys spiked between your fingers, as if youâd ever be able to stop one of the most powerful sorcerers alive from doing whatever he wanted with you.
âI didnât find anything at the power plant,â he says, leading you down a wooded path behind the house. You emerge onto a dirt road on the other side, a near-identical house sitting before you, its sloping, tiled roof dripping with excess morning rain. âHave you had lunch?â
You shake your head. He smiles with his hidden fox teeth.
The man you read this time is just as feverish as the other, but his wrist is hot. This isnât relevant to reading a person, but you notice these things because you touch people so infrequently. Each time you do itâs a research experience, notes taken inside your head, recorded to compare against other studies youâve done over the years.
The memories are instant: rough hands that have hardened from years of manual labor, watching baseball with the other construction workers after projects done in town,                    your daughter         moving to Tokyo for college, radishes that she used to grow in the backyard that she boiled and roasted every day after harvest, and          who     will you eat them with now? and who     will grow them? and who      will you make your hands rough for? you donât like baseball.
Pulling away from the manâs mind is like extracting yourself from honey in the process of crystallizing. His consciousness clings to you as you leave, trying its best to suck you back in. Youâre the only company itâs had in a while.
âI didnât get anything,â you say, and your voice is rough. Your throat burns even though you didnât throw up.Â
Geto sits in one of the two plastic folding chairs in the houseâs main room. He plays with the piece of his hair thatâs loose from his bun, twirling it between slim fingers. You havenât seen him in a jujutsu tech uniform since high school, though youâre pretty sure Gojo still wears one daily. Getoâs always in crisp white or black button-downs, slacks, expensive oxfords. Maybe playing dress-up makes him feel less like a sorcerer and more like a human.
âI can try again,â you say, and youâre not sure why. Itâs for this suffering man, you think, even though your savior complex was left behind with the jujutsu world.Â
âYou donât have to,â Geto says, dropping the strand of hair and leaning forward. His language is careful. Heâs not telling you no. The way he watches you, elbows on his knees, hands clasped in the middle, makes you feel like youâre being tested.
You try again. This time: getting your wedding ring engraved,         sitting on the porch in late spring sipping on plum wine,         nearly crying when you see your daughter playing with                    the girls that have caused the town so much misfortune,         the relief when           they âre finally gone,         the relief when your daughter brings new best friends home and         their eyes         arenât shadowed and sharp and too old for their socketsâ
Retching is your second-least favorite thing, right behind actually vomiting. Your body rejects the images youâve seen, trying to empty your stomach before the memories can begin to digest.
You tell Geto what you saw.Â
His question: âDoes he remember what happened to the girls?â
âIf he does, I didnât see it,â you say. When Geto is silent, you tell him, âI canât do it again. I canât.â
After a tense, quiet moment, he smiles at you. You still feel nauseous, but you canât tell if itâs because of your cursed technique or because of the bone-deep malaise that spreads into your skin like a balm when he looks at youâwhen youâre reminded of what you once saw lurking in the corners of his mind. âOf course,â he says. âLetâs get you home.â
âž
Kento meets you at your usual coffee shop a few weeks later. Your throat no longer feels raw every time you swallow. He has a drink waiting for you when you get thereâ(describing Kento as punctual would be doing the man a disservice)âand itâs your favorite, with all the little add-ons that you get too nervous to ask for at risk of being a burden to the already overworked baristas. Youâre positive he tipped heavy after putting in your order.
He asks you what you think about the murder mystery youâve both been reading. You tell him about your job, the monotony, the fantasies of exploding. He tells you about jujutsu business, even though heâs not supposed to. This has never stopped him in the past and wonât ever stop him in the future.
âThe higher-ups are pleased with your work,â he tells you. He doesnât sound pleased.
âKento.â A warning.
He hmms at you as if actually considering your warning before speaking his mind. âHaving a foot in either world is difficult. Itâs impossible to keep your balance.â
Your drink suddenly disgusts you. You taste bile. The cup is hot between your hands as you roll it back and forth with your palms. âAre you saying I should come back to Jujutsu Tech?â
âIâm saying that if you want to leave entirely, you should.â
You consider this: a normal life, surrounded by normal people, with a normal job and normal friends and a normal partner, maybe, if youâre lucky. The higher-ups would never let this happen. If you wrong them, they make sure to wrong you back. âYou know why I canât.â
âIâd take care of it. You wouldnât be bothered by anyone.â He speaks with such confidence that you could almost believe him.
You tell him youâll think about it. The coffee stings your palms. A terrible feeling sits in your throat like a weathered rock.
Thereâs something other than the threat of retaliation that stops you from pulling the triggerâfrom fully leaving the world you grew up in, as Kento once did. Maybe youâre not as brave as him. Maybe you canât reconcile how quickly he ended up going back. Or maybe you just feel so inextricably tied to the world in which you were raised that you need to have it in your life somehow, even if itâs in brief, unpleasant flashes of memory and want.
âYou can make your decisions for yourself,â he says. Heâs not disappointed with you, youâre sureâjust worried. The same way you often worry about him. âTheyâre pleased. Geto found the curse and exorcised it the same day thanks to you. I can see why the higher-ups donât want to let you go.â
The stone in your throat grows edges, forgets its weathering. His name always unnerves you, but Kentoâs words unnerve you more. âHe exorcised itâthe same day we drove out there?â
Kento nods, sips his tea. âHe can be vicious.â
A tremor begins in your fingers and lodges deep in your elbows, your shoulders, your very soul. âHe didnât need me to read another victim?â
Kentoâs a smart man. His eyes narrow. âNot to my knowledge. Or anyone elseâs.â
You wave off his concern (suspicion, really, but you love to downplay these things), and your coffee is finished, and you really should be going, anyway. âHe didnât do anything,â you lie, standing and folding your coat over your arm. âHe called and asked me to come back out, but I said no.â
Itâs easy to see that Kento doesnât believe you, but he doesnât press you either. He knows that if you tell him half-truths, once you have all of your feelings together, youâll tell him everything. Heâs done the same, and youâve given him the grace heâs currently allowing you. He puts up with a lotâbut thatâs the nature of living the lives into which you both were born.
âThank you for the coffee,â you say.
âYouâll call me soon?â
âYouâre on speed dial,â you tell himâand itâs true. His contact is the only one in your phone thatâs favorited.
Kento smilesâsomething you rarely see. You wish it didnât call to mind the shine of fox teeth.
âž
How you ended up coming into contact with the wants of Geto Suguru: he showed up at Ieiriâs dorm with his ribs visible through his uniform.
You remember very specific things from that day. The heavy knock, the thud of him collapsing, blood soaking the tatami floors. Shockingly white bone beneath torn skin and muscle, his ink-black hair coming undone, silk-soft and slipping across your fingers as you dragged him inside. Ieiriâs hands were shaking. She smelled like cigarette smoke and metal. Pressure here, she told you, ripping away the remains of Getoâs jacket, and when you touched him everything was skin-muscle-bone-blood and: bodies. bodies of people that have wronged you. people that havenât. their blood thick beneath your fingernails         like orange peel. how easy it is to snuff out each life. to take from them what they have forgotten to value.                    you could kill more.                    you could kill everyone.Â
When you pulled away from Geto, his skin was knitting together beneath Ieiriâs shaking handsâhands you knew well, her black nail polish chipped around the edges because she bit at her nails when she was somewhere she couldnât smoke. His ribs faded from view, and then muscle, and then his skin was pink and shiny, scar-new, as if whoever had done this to him had simply taken a paint brush to his bare chest and drawn a bold X.Â
Blood was underneath your fingernails. Orange peel. Itâs all you remember about the aftermath. Getting back to your room and locking yourself in the washroom were voided from your memory. Your head was all bodies. All bone. An undeniable feeling of righteousness, completely sure that they hadnât deserved what youâd taken from them. And on top of that, the most frightening thing: relief that they were dead.Â
You washed your hands so much that the skin was raw, peeling, but you still couldnât get your fingernails clean.
âž
You ignore his calls.
The frequency with which you receive them makes you uneasy. You donât have his number saved. The first few digits become a bad omen.
In school, he and Gojo had a reputation for toying with people. Mostly women, mostly in a romantic sense. The difference between the two is that Gojo was easy to understandâa spoiled boy-prince that liked the attention. He wanted girls to fawn after him, to beg for more when he finally graced them with a kiss, to cry when he dropped them.
Geto always seemed worse, somehow. He would date girls and leave them behind like candy wrappers, charming them into giving him a taste and only revealing his true appetite when his prize had reached the inescapable vicinity of his jaws.Â
Itâs more insidious than simply liking attention. He liked power. Having control over someone.
Whatever heâs doing now is insidious in nature, too. You can feel it. So you ignore his calls and keep working the days away until you canât ignore him, because he shows up at your office with the confidence of someone supposed to be there, hands in his pockets, leaning against the frame of your door.
You jump so hard that your bones creak, almost louder than the creaking plastic of your poor hand-me-down rolling chair.
âYour instincts are a little dull,â he says. âI thought you wouldâve heard me coming.â
Standing up feels necessary. You donât want to feel smaller than him, even though he towers in your doorway. âIâm not supposed to be bothered by sorcerers without advance notice.âÂ
He smiles. âI tried calling.â
Your heart is pounding like a rabbit at the foot of a wolf, partly torn to shreds but conscious enough to experience the abject terror of what comes next. âWho let you up here?â
âI was hoping you might be willing to humor me without advance notice.â
âIâm calling security.â
âI need your help,â he says.
âLike you needed my help last time?â
He sits with that for a moment. âIs it a crime to be curious about you? What youâre capable of?â
âYou lied to me,â you reiterate. âYou didnât need me to read that man. And, whatâit was so you could see more of my technique?â
âYes,â he says plainly, as if it's a perfectly sane response.
âWhy didnât you just ask?â
He chuckles, the sound rich and deep and calm, as if youâre having a nice conversation between old friends. âAre you saying youâd have responded well if I just asked?â
You remain silent, staring at the sticky notes on your monitor with reminders and deadlines written in blue pen. Tanaka account today. Get stapler back from Yoishi!!!! You both know his question is rhetorical.
He crosses his arms, taps his long fingers against his bicep. Is it impatience, you wonder, or his inability to sit still for too long? His face belies nothing. âWould you read me if I asked?â
Your veins feel too tight, constricting muscle. It must be a leading questionâheâs suspicious of your aversion to him, maybe. The exterior heâs built is charming and handsome and kind. Thatâs probably how he got to your office. You wouldnât be surprised if the receptionist saw a handsome face and caved immediately. Itâs not his fault you see through it. If you could go back and revoke your touch, remove the bodies from your memory, you would. But you canât, and the things in his mind scare you. Itâs part of what made you leave. The idea of working with a man like that, who held such terrors in his head, was incomprehensible to you. It still is. You would always be thinking about the ease with which you could become one of those bodies.
When you read people who project to you in wants, itâs usually easier. Makes you feel less sick. But not him. He wanted those people dead, whoever they were. He wanted blood on his hands. He was thinking, concretely, that he could have killed them all. That they deserved it.
The relief was the worst part. Seeing all those people dead, and the resounding thought that outshone everything else: finally.Â
He steps forward, hand extended slightly. âIf Iââ
âNo. Justâdonât,â you say, and you stumble a little as your legs hit your chair and push it, rattling, against the wall. Your office has never been this small. You never want to be inside his head again. You'd do anything to get him out of your space. âTell me what you need my help with and we can go.â
He doesnât look pleased. It seems people in your life are operating on a theme. Still, his hand retreats, and he smiles, slouches a little, as if to make himself smaller. Less intimidating. âThank you.â
As you leave your office, you give him a wide berth, though you could swear his body goes taut, as if suppressing the urge to touch you.
The Ueno Zoo is closed during operating hours. This hasnât happened in the entire time youâve lived in Tokyo. The woman at the gate is a windowâthe look she gives Geto is one of recognition, respect. He and Gojo are the most well-respected sorcerers currently active, though you believe entirely that Kento is much more deserving of respect than they are. The window lets the both of you inside without a word.
Geto leads you to the vivarium, just to the right of the gate. Itâs a beautiful glass building, the windows fogged with humidity to keep its plant and animal residents comfortable. You havenât been to the zoo in a long time, but when you used to come with family and friends, you always visited the vivarium before you left. The air was heavy and hot, birdsong piped in through speakers, echoing off the glass walls like prism-dispersed light. Every animal inside moved slowly, heavily, and if you listened closely enough, you could hear the soft slide of scales against stone, the heavy thud of a taloned foot into packed dirt. A haven for living in calm and peace.
Inside, itâs chaos.
Display cases are smashed, plants and trees are torn up from the roots, stone walls have been dismantled and crushed. In the center of the rubble, the strewn dirt and bundled roots: jaws. Alligator jaws, crocodile jaws, all long and horrible teeth, and when you look closerâthe jaws of snakes, fanged and dripping venom, and others from what you can only assume would be turtles, small and rounded.Â
The skin remains perfectly intact on every jaw. Muscle, bone, blood. You see bodies. You see limbs. You remember: finally.
âDonât look at that,â Geto says from beside you. âLook at me.â
With a deep breath, you doâthough looking at him does nothing to dispel the unrest in your stomach, the pit in your chest.Â
âGood.â Heâs not smiling anymore. You wonder if heâs decided to drop his disguise or if the orphaned jaws are more horrifying than the wants he carries like stones. âCome this way.â
He leads you away from the viscera, into a small office next to the stairs. A man sits in the single chair, staring into the security monitors on the desk in front of him. His gaze is absent, hollow. His hands clasp and unclasp on his lap. Blood is spattered across his face and the front of his cheery yellow jumpsuit.
âHeâs been like this since I got here,â Geto tells you. âI need you to read him.â
Ieiri used to tell you that if humans come into contact with curses and live, you have to monitor them closely for cardiogenic shockâstress and fear mounting to such a peak that the heart canât handle the pressure. Itâs not a peaceful death. âHe needs to go to a hospital.â
âIâll take him after.â
âHow long has he been in shock?â
âRead him first,â he says, more curt than youâve ever heard.
This is the thing lurking under the surface. The wolf peeking through the mouth of the sheepskin. It sits in him waiting to be called forth. Youâve seen it alreadyâitâs no surprise to you that it lives in him still. It is, however, a surprise that he let his facade slip so badly.
He smiles, fox teeth a little sharper than usual. âPlease.â
You put your hand on the side of the manâs neck, the only skin available to you. Touching peopleâs faces horrifies you. Such an intimate thing tarnished by the images that flood your brain.Â
Memories on a loop: guttural screeching,         death cries that couldnât be conjured by a human mind,         and from the ceiling,         from the ceiling         the jaws                    falling, falling,                                        falling, blood everywhere         and on you and you can taste it         ???         in your mouth         ???          on your tongue         ???           metal and rot,         and there is something discarding these jaws from the bodies of animals         it eats                   while clinging to the vivariumâs rafters something ???    when you met your wife you knew you were going to propose to her in the zoo in the vivarium because of the beautiful glass the beautiful plants she loves plants something          there is something         there is         something you cannot see         some         thing         ???
This time, Geto has a trash can waiting for you. Youâve gotten very good at gathering your hair up with one hand at a momentâs notice. He puts the trash next to the desk when youâre done, and you tell him everything useful that you gathered on the curse. Everything else, you keep to yourself. Youâve gotten very good at that too.
You wipe your mouth with the back of your wrist. The bile tastes more like copper than usual. âIs that everything?â
He holds his hand out to you and you hide your flinch poorly. âGum?â
The foil-wrapped stick shimmers green, held between his fingers like a cigarette. You stare at it for a beat too long. Itâs your favorite brand, spearmint flavored.Â
âIt wonât bite,â he says. He tilts his head to the side, eyes crinkling with mirth. As if you werenât tasting blood just a moment ago. When you still donât take the gum, he laughs softly and it reminds you of high school. His laughter has always been a little mean, as if it gets harder for him to hide his true nature when amused. It reminds you of a housecat playing with a bug. âI wonât either.â
A funny thing for someone with such sharp teeth to claim.
You take the gum from him, careful to grab the very end so thereâs no chance of your fingers brushing his. âThanks.â
He smiles and nods as if heâs done you a favor. You appreciate the gum, but youâd appreciate him ceasing contact with you more. âIâll see you soon,â he tells you.
âGet him help, Geto.âÂ
He smiles wide in response.
âž
You lost your virginity to Kento during your graduating year at Jujutsu Tech.
Haibara was recovering, still in the hospital for the third consecutive month. He had to learn how to walk again, the implants in his spine acclimating to him at the same rate that he was acclimating to them. You and Kento were the only two students in your year that made it to graduation. The two of you felt like celebrating but when you began drinking, you realized it was more commiseration than anything celebratory.
âDo you always see things?â Kento asked. He never drankâsaw it as beneath himâso when he did, he was a lightweight. âWhen you touch people?â
âYeah,â you said. The both of you sat against the headboard of your bed, passing a bottle of gin back and forthâthe only thing you could find in Yagaâs campus stash. It stopped tasting like liquor twenty minutes prior. âI can make it quieter. But I really have to focus. LikeâI couldnât make it quiet now, I donât think.â
Kento turned towards you and said, âTry.â
And always, you would protest when people suggested this. It was like a party trick to people that didnât have to deal with the fallout. They all wanted to know what you saw in their mind, whether it was wants or memories that jumped to the forefront, what their subconscious decided was important enough to broadcast.
You didnât believe at all that Kento was asking for those reasons. Itâs why you touched him.
Wedging the bottle between Kentoâs thigh and yours, you turned towards him and reached for his face. This, for some reason, was your first instinct. His skin was soft, a little dry. His mouth was set in a nervous slant.Â
And you got a few things from him: finishing your favorite book for the third time, going to the beach with your mother, finding out how cold the sea was. Memories, unfortunately. The feelings behind them.
But what you felt was mostly your own.Â
You pushed his bangs back from his face, and you couldnât take your eyes from the slant of his lips, and suddenly you were in Kentoâs lap, kissing him, and he was kissing you back, hands on your hips, groaning softly into your mouth.
The gin tumbled off the bed and spilled all over your floor. Your dorm would smell like liquor for weeks.Â
It was awkward the way a first time should be for teenagers, misplaced limbs and kisses with knocking teeth. You both tried to take care of each other the best you could while shit-faced and entirely inexperienced. You hadnât kissed anyone before thenâyou hadnât touched someoneâs face since you were little.Â
Youâd been scared. He figured out how to make that okay.Â
âž
Gojo is in your office when you come into work, reclining in your chair with his feet up on your desk. He peers at you over his glasses, eyes like jeweled robin eggs. âRunning kinda late, huh?â
âI donât have to be here until nine,â you tell him. âItâs eight forty-five.â
âSemantics.â
âYouâre in my office.â You donât even have the good grace to make it sound like a questionâjust an admonishment.
âOr is it syntax?â
âCan you please get out?â
âCanât you pretend youâre happy Iâm here?â He pouts, taking his feet from your desk. âI wonât even ask you to do anything. I basically just came here to say hey.â
âThat would certainly be a first.â You walk behind your desk and shoo him away from your computer, waking it from its slumber. An orange post-it note on the top of your monitor reminds you that tax reports are due TODAY!!!!!!, and you try to prepare yourself for a grueling eight-to-twelve hours of tax filing, depending on how smoothly things go. Gojo Satoru showing up at your office before you is not your definition of smooth. âYou said hey. Why are you still here?â
Gojo slowly spins in your chair, pushing himself in circles lazily with one long leg. Avoids looking at you. âYouâve been working with Suguru a lot lately.â
âTwice.â You open up the tiny K-Cup machine you have on your desk and start preparing the worldâs smallest cup of coffee. Three times, technically, but you still donât know what to make of the second time he called you out to Yamanashi Prefecture. When he lied to you. âThat hardly constitutes a lot.â
âEnough that it got back to me.â He slows the chair, then starts spinning the other way. âYou got any idea why heâs taken an interest?â
Your tiny mug clatters against the K-Cup machine. Geto is probably miles from here, dealing with important jujutsu business, but your heart beats like a prey animal nonetheless, the way it often does under his gaze.âI donât think heâs taken an interest.â
âAs much as Iâd love to be flattering you, thatâs not what I mean.â He stops the chair entirely, body directed at you. âYouâve been useful.â
Thereâs nothing you hate more than being talked about like a tool. Your coffee finishes brewing and you take a sip before you really should. It burns your lips. You lean against your desk and look at Gojo, trying to read anything from his face, his body language. As always, you glean nothing. Though you see Geto as the more insidious of the two, youâre keenly aware that Gojo is just as good at pretending.Â
âIâve been useful,â you repeat. âSo what?â
âYou donât think youâve been pretty unnecessary for the missions youâve been asked to help with?â Though his glasses are on, it's as if you can sense the intensity of his gaze through the darkened lenses. âSuguru couldâve found and exorcised either of those curses easy. I couldâve done it even easier.â
Every meeting with Gojo requires a mandatory ego-stroking period. You decide to get it over with quickly. âYes, youâre both very strong. Whatâs your point?â
âDo you know what happened that night?â he asks, taking off his glassesâand this is what really instills a fear in you that something terrible is about to happen. A full view of eyes like glittering sapphires. Thereâs no question what night heâs talking about.Â
You donât like thinking about that time in general. You donât like thinking about Getoâs ribs. You donât like thinking about the bodies. âA non-sorcerer tried to stop the merger. You guys⌠neutralized him.â
His gaze clouds for a moment. Youâre aware that Gojo carries his burdens, despite his unbearable ego. Heâs somewhere else, seeing things that you have the good fortune of never having to see. You briefly wonder whether youâd read memories or wants from him. Youâre content with not knowing. âDonât play coy,â he tells you. âYouâre smarter than that.â
âYou killed him.â
âI killed him.â
Gojoâs account of the day you read Geto: both he and his best friend so narrowly avoided death that they still remember its taste.
A mercenary whittled down Gojoâs endurance and attacked just as they were delivering Amanai Riko to Tengen for their merger. Gojo stayed back to deal with things. Geto escorted Amanai. Gojo was slit from throat to hip with a blade so sharp he didnât feel the pain until his blood was already varnishing the floor. Geto was carved apart by that same blade, left alive only because of the curses he stored and their indeterminable state upon his death. Amanai, quick on her feet, made it to Tengen. The merger was successful. Things settled down and another Star Plasma Vessel wouldnât have to be found for a long, long time.
Gojo shows you the scar on his forehead, shiny rib-white, usually hidden by his hair or his blindfold. Being so close to death changed him, he tells youâhe fully understood the limits of his cursed energy and what it could do.
It changed Geto too.
âIâm not telling you all this for nothing,â he says, a disarming smile appearing on his face so suddenly after a serious conversation that the speed makes you nauseous. âI just have one tiny favor to ask you.â
Itâs long into the day. The details took a while to get through. Your lunch hour is coming up and your appetite is nonexistent and tax forms sit unfiled on your desk. Gojo asking for a favor is always bad news. You can taste vomit and you wish you had a piece of gum or alternatively that you were born an entirely different person. âI donât want any troubleââ
âNo trouble. Promise.â He lifts his right hand, pinkie out, grinningâas if itâs funny that you, specifically, canât touch him. âI just want you to read him for me.â
Your heart slams into the base of your throat. âThatâs⌠You know thatâs not a small ask.â
He drops his hand, shrugs. âCâmonâlook, itâll give you an excuse to get close to him.â
âWhy would I want that?â you ask.
âAs if I didnât clock your embarrassing crush on him in high school.â
âExcuse me?â
âExcused. It wonât even be bad,â he says. âI only need you to read him one time, probably.â
âWhy?â
âJust curious.â
âGojo.â
Weighing the cost of telling you a half-truth versus keeping you in the dark seems to take a toll on him, his smile turning brittle at its corners. You think he knows that you wonât do anything for him without more information. Not that youâd read Geto ever, at allâbut Gojo hasnât always been good at believing people when they say never. Hesitantly, he tells you, âSomething happened.â
âLike what?â
âI donât know, something,â he says, finally a little exasperated. âI wouldnât be asking if I already had answers.â
There are things heâs not telling you, very obviously. Heâs minimizing. Jujutsu sorcerers are good at that. And he and Geto are best friends, two people so closely intertwined that they could count as one. âWhy canât you just ask him?â
For the first time in your acquaintance with him, Gojo is silent.
âHe doesnât know youâre asking me to do this,â you say. It would be a question if you werenât already so sure.
âOh, no, heâd kill me if he knew I was here.â
âIâll call him and tell him to come get you.â
âIâd like to see you follow through on that.â He grins, peeks at you over his glasses. âBet you wonât.â
Geto answers on the first ring, your name spoken in question.
âYour dogâs in my office. Come pick him up.â
He does.
Gojo could easily leave before Geto arrives, but he doesnât even try. He sits in your chair, still reclined, surely doing immeasurable damage to the hydraulics. Asking him about his motives would be wasted breathâheâll never tell you something he doesnât want to, regardless of how much you wheedle him. Heâll enjoy the wheedling, though, and you donât want to give him the ego boost of being begged.Â
Instead, you shoo him out of the way of your desk and start working on submitting the tax forms, leaning awkwardly over your computer. Gojo hums and your back aches, and you refuse to be curious about this entire situation because itâs none of your business. This is what you do now. Taxes and filing.
Geto arrives at your office once again without needing your permission to come up. You wonder whoâs working reception.
âSorry about him,â Geto says, leaning in your doorway. His hair is loose, strands falling softly against his face. You forget how tall he is sometimes. How handsome. It makes your stomach turn. âBadly trained.â
âI think the fault is more the ownerâs than the dogâs,â you say.
He shrugs. âIf you tried training the dog in question, maybe your opinion would change.â
âCan you guys stop talking about me like Iâm not here?â Gojo asks.
Geto grabs him by the back of the collar. âWalkâs over. Time to go home.â He smiles at you over his shoulder as he leaves, his hair so inky black that it almost blends into his dark dress shirt. You remember how it felt sliding through your fingers years ago. Even though you never touched his wound, you think you can remember the texture of his ribs.
You consider Gojoâs proposition long after youâve submitted the tax forms, after youâve arrived home late once again, after you stare out your bedroom window into the night sky and see nothing but storm-cloud gray.Â
You expect Geto to be the kind of person to keep secrets. It shouldnât worry you. But keeping secrets from the one person he views as an equal makes you uneasy. The bodies are in your head. You wonder how close you are to finally. When you sleep, itâs fitful, and you wake in the night to the feeling of silk-soft hair running through your fingers, falling so quickly that itâs impossible to grasp.
âž
Kento is antsy when he comes over for dinner. It wouldnât bother you if he didnât also happen to be the calmest man you know. He keeps bouncing his leg as he sits at the little two-top table in your kitchen, drumming his fingers incessantly on the tiled surface. Heâs not wearing his glassesâand he usually watches your cooking like a hawk, just in case you make a grievous mistakeâbut instead holds them in his hand, twirling them back and forth.Â
The one-sided conversation you have with him is unbearable. Did you have a nice day? Mmmhmm. No crazy assignments? Just the usual. Should I use soy sauce or sesame oil? Oil. My favorite author is doing a book signing next month. Do you want to go with me? Sure. Is something up? Not at all.
Eventually, youâve had enough. âIâm going to burn the cabbage.â
He glances over at the pan youâre wielding. âIt looks fine.â
âIâm going to do it on purpose and Iâm going to make you eat it,â you say, pointing your spatula in his direction so heâs positive that itâs him whoâll have to eat the ruined meal. âIâll spoon-feed it to you.â
Kento is bewildered by this, his eyebrows raised very slightlyâshock has always been a micro-expression for him. âIâm sorry. Iâve been a little absent.â
âMore than a little.â You stir the cabbage again. âYou know I donât want to pry.â
He nods. The space you offer each other is a give-and-take. If neither of you are ready to speak about something, thereâs usually no pressure to do so.Â
But this time is different. Youâre worried that the strange things happening around you are begging to connect, veins folding over each other to become arteries, blood flowing into your life and staining the foundations. You need to tell him about everything that's happened over the past few weeks. But first, you need to ask. âDoes this have something to do with Geto?â
His leg stops bouncing. His fingers quiet against the tabletop. âSo you know.â
You tell him everything. Being called out to the village again, going to the vivarium, the jaws. Gojo showing up unannounced, though that's the most usual thing out of everything that's happened. âHe asked me to read Geto,â you say. âThere are secrets being kept.â
You told Kento about the bodies only once. The two of you had just recently graduated. You shared a studio apartment in Tokyo for three months before your Jujutsu Tech paychecks started coming in. In his arms, you saw memories of a kind-hearted blonde woman, the scent of coffee and pastries, the cool chill of the air in the mountains of Denmark, and you had to pull away from him, trying not to gag and failing.
When you returned from the bathroom, teeth minty-fresh and tongue burning, he apologized so earnestly. As if he had done anything other than hold you close and thread his fingers through yours.Â
It was then you began to understand that you could never be his, though the realization didnât settle in for a while. You told him not to apologize. You told him that nothing was his fault. And then for some reason, you told him about the bodies and the orange peel and the finally and he asked if he could comfort you and you had to say no because you didnât want to throw up again. From then on, he was wary of Geto. Maybe not as much as youâthough thatâs understandable.
Knowing whatâs going on in his head is one thing. Experiencing it is another.
Kento sighs, familiar. He joins you in the kitchen, in the heat that radiates from the stove. The cabbage is burning slightly even though you never meant to follow through on your threat. Your attention has been elsewhere. âLet me,â he murmurs, and his hand brushes yours as he takes the spatula from you: fresh bread from the bakery at the end of the block,         long nights at the office alone,         a deep hatred of the word ergonomicâ He begins to peel the burning cabbage from the bottom of the pan. âHeâs been quiet lately.â
âIsnât he usually?â You remember Geto being reserved, but then again, maybe thatâs only because your memories of him are often in the context of Gojo.
âHe can be.â Kento takes the pan to the trash and scrapes off the burnt cabbage, then returns to where you wait for him, leaning against your counter. He opens the top drawer next to the stove and pulls out the menu of the Indian restaurant nearby that you both like. âHeâs exorcising Special Grade curses that he shouldnât even attempt to take on by himself, no matter how strong he is. There are days where heâs cleared missions back-to-back without stopping to sleep.â
âYou think heâs focused on work because somethingâs wrong.â
âYes,â Kento says, and chews on the thought for a moment. âI donât like it when heâs focused like this. He gets⌠obsessive.â
âHim and Gojo were always odd, though,â you say. Minimizing whatever is happening with Geto feels crucial. Youâve never seen Kento this worried.
He hums. âIn different ways, perhaps. Gojoâs obsessive nature is more self-centered. But Getoâwhen heâs consumed by something, itâs like nothing else matters. Heâd raze the world to ash if it meant doing what he felt needed doing.â
âShould I be worried?â you ask.
You should. You already know this.
Another sigh. He canât quite look you in the eyes. You both think: bodies. You both think: finally . âBiryani for you?â he asks. âOr do you want something different this time?â
âBiryaniâs fine.â
âGreat,â he says, proceeding to order your food. And you donât talk about it again that night.
âž
Youâve been a regular at the same coffee shop for nearly half a decade. The times you come in vary, depending on work or your weekend plans. You know the regulars and have seen thousands of faces pass through the cozy little building. Not once have you seen Geto here.
Yet heâs at the back of the line when you arrive, smiling pleasantly when he sees you walk through the door. Almost as if his arrival was timed.
If he hadnât already seen you, you wouldâve left. Even as you step into line behind him, you still consider it: bolting out the door and down the street, sprinting your way home as if heâd catch you if you stopped running. He stares at you expectantly while you think about your escape. It puts a shiver deep into your bones, his handsome face and kind eyes and warm smile, all tactics granted by genetics and lifted straight out of a manual on inviting body language. Instead of doing what your instincts tell you is right, you say, âHi.â
âIt's good to see you.â His smile widens, Cheshire in nature despite not showing teeth. âI didnât know anyone else knew about this place.â
You almost tell him you live close by, but then think better of it. âItâs Kentoâs favorite.â
âOf course,â he says. âHaibara took me here a few years ago.â
Yu is kind to a fault. Neither you or Kento have ever talked to him about what you saw in Getoâs headâmostly because you're scared to tell too many people, but also because of the blind respect Yu has for Geto. As if he's a story-book hero that could never do anything wrong. You care about Yu too much to disappoint him with the truth.
âIâve gotten the same thing here for a long time,â Geto tells you. He gazes up at the menu, such concentration on his face, pulling at the strand of hair loose from his bun for a moment before turning back to you. You remember what Kento said about him not sleeping. His obsessiveness. Nearly imperceptible purple smudges lurk under his eyes. âWould you like to try something new with me?â
You canât decide if you say yes out of sick curiosity or the fear of what would happen if you said no. Geto pays for both of your drinksâyou insist that he shouldnât, enough times in a row that itâs rude and very obviously makes the cashier uncomfortable, but his insistence wins out.
Waiting at the drink counter with him is torture. You hate when people buy things for you because it makes you feel like you owe them something. For Geto, itâs time. He paid for your presence, at least for however long it takes the baristas to make your drinks. He asks you about your work. You tell him about the books youâve been balancing, hoping to bore him. Instead he asks more questions about how you like your office, whether your coworkers are nice, if your boss is treating you well.
âAre you looking for a new job?â You fail to keep vitriol from lacing the underside of your words. âWeâre not hiring.â
If Geto is bothered by your attitude, he doesnât let on. He even seems a touch amused. âI enjoy what Iâm doing now, but thanks for keeping me in the loop.â
The barista calls out Getoâs name, and he grabs your drink first, hands it to you. You ordered a cappuccino with a syrup that youâve been curious about but have never tried. The coffee smells amazing even at arm's length, creamy and strong and a little like cinnamon.Â
âThanks.â You slowly turn to leave. âI should beââ
âWait,â he says, reaching towards you.
You flinch so hard that a slim stream of coffee shoots from the lidâs mouthpiece, burning hot when it lands on your hand. Geto never makes contact, but his arm is still outstretched, as if waiting for you to calm down so he can go through with touching you. You think of Gojoâs request, of the cases where Geto has asked for your help but hasnât needed it. Yu might have shown him this coffee shop however long ago, but why is he here now? Why have you never seen him here before if heâs a regular?
âGet away from me,â you snap, stern and quiet enough that your words lace themselves underneath the shopâs easy-listening music.Â
He does, hands raised and palms open, proclaiming innocence. Slowly, he lowers them. The barista calls his name again, his coffee still waiting on the counter.
âIf you ever make me read you against my will,â you tell him, âI will never forgive you.â
Your forgiveness probably means little to him, but itâs the only thing you can threaten. You donât know him well enough to understand what he holds dearâbut you remember respect being important to him when you were at school. Respect and forgiveness.
âI wouldnât,â he says. âNever.â
You thank him for the coffee again in lieu of a goodbye. The air outside stings against your face, your neck, the spots on your skin where the coffee burned you, steamed milk already drying to film. Youâll wash your hands when you get home. And youâll wash them again. And again. Eventually theyâll feel clean enough.
âž
Yu calls you at 3:06 in the morning. âTheyâre dead because of me,â he tells you, and then heâs crying and youâre already walking down the block, heading toward his apartment in your pajamas and large winter coat.
After his injury, Yu wasnât sent on more dangerous missions for a long time. Even when he was healed fully, despite the nasty scar that twisted and puckered the width of his chest, the higher-ups didnât think he would be psychologically ready to take on anything too stressful.
They were right. One of the few things youâve agreed with them about. Yu had always been the most hopeful out of all of you, the most caring. But he was also the most sensitive. Getting so close to death did nothing but make that worse.Â
Heâs on the couch when you get there, using your key to let yourself in. You and Kento were given copies at the housewarming party, which had consisted of four bottles of peach soju, the three of you, and Ieiri for a few hours before she was called back to the school. His eyes are red and puffy, and heâs curled into himself, laying on his side. It looks like heâs been crying for the entire evening. The worn leather of the seat is darkened beneath his face.
Youâre by his side immediately, brushing hair back from his face, wiping stray tears from his cheeks: i wish iâd known i should have !!!         known how did                                        how did i not know how i wish i âHey, itâs okay. I'm here,â you say, trying a little more pointedly to keep your fingers off his scalp. The thing he wants, simply: to have done better. âCan you tell me what happened?â
âI messed up,â he says, and youâve never heard him sound so defeated. Even during his recovery he sounded less broken than this. âI donâtâI donât know how I didnât see it.âÂ
At seventeen, you and your classmates began to receive solo assignments. Yu always got the easier onesâstill recovering from his injury, both physically and mentally. He tells you about a mission he had almost forgotten: a curse terrorizing a village on the outskirts of Yamanashi Prefecture. The curse was easily exorcized, easily forgottenâwhat Yu remembered well were the whispers that came after. They called him a devil, named him unnatural, said that he could see things no one else could because he was damned. Just like the two little girls that lived in the village, their late motherâs otherness somewhere in the same vein.
He thought nothing of it. He would get rid of the curse, and the village would go back to normal. Yes, they were skeptical and untrusting of anything that could be perceived as even slightly supernatural, but most non-sorcerers were. Sometimes you had to protect people that would never thank youâthat could never comprehend the things youâd given up to offer said protection. Whatever oddities they attributed to other people would fade away once the curse was gone, and the village would go back to normal. Everyone would trust everyone again.
The bodies of the girls had been exhumed during a construction project aiming to bring affordable housing to prefectures outside of Tokyo. The Hasaba twins, Nanako and Mimiko, reported truant by their school over a decade ago. Their mother wasnât alive to receive the report. Their father hadnât been there from the beginning. The town didnât report them missingâthey knew exactly where the girls were. From the remains, bones weak and brittle, authorities determined that they died of malnutrition.
âI couldâve helped them.â Yuâs lip trembles and he bites it so hard that you see the skin around his mouth turn bone-white. âThey might have been alive then. If I paid more attention, I justâhow could they have done that? How can anyone justify that?â
You donât know. How does anyone justify anything? How many times do you have to tell yourself youâre doing the right thing before you believe it? You wonder if the inhabitants of that village let out a breath when the sisters had finally passedâwhether they, too, had a moment of finally.
Yu cries for a little longer and you hold him carefully. Itâs all you can do. Youâd call Kento if you didnât know that Yu would be mortified to cry in front of someone he views as his superior at work, despite their friendship. After a while, he pulls his phone out and opens up a message chain. A groupchat for Jujutsu Tech staff. Ieiriâs text, attached to the official posting from the higher-ups: zenâin clan are holding a service for the girls on sunday. gakuganji wants us there to pay respects so everyone better show up. In the report, there are photos of each of the girls, from Picture Day at their school, judging by the uniformsâand you recognize them.Â
Youâve seen these girls inside a manâs memories. A man that you read for Geto.Â
Your heart beats so hard that youâre sure Yu can feel it through your shirt, through your skin. When youâve reassured him as much as possible that he couldnât possibly be at fault, when he promises you that heâll be able to sleep without the feeling of guilt crushing him under its heavy heel, you head further into the city instead of back towards home.
The apartment building you come to is sleek, flashy, piercing the night sky like a blade. The doorman lets you inâyouâve been here before. On business only, and never of your own volition. You take the elevator to the top floor and slam your fist against the hallwayâs only door, choosing to ignore the shiny golden doorbell and the even shinier knocker. After a few moments of you hitting the wood so hard that it feels like the meat of your palm is going to split, the door opens.Â
A terribly annoying grin greets you. âI wouldâve invited you up if you called me.â
âWhy,â you say, trying your best to be calm, âdo you want me to read him?â
Gojoâs expression flickers. A moment, a fleeting instant of concern. Heâs without glasses or blindfoldâyou must have woken him up. Itâs probably nearing five in the morning. The first trains will start running soon. âHello, business,â he says. âIâve got to admit, Iâd hoped I was talking to pleasure.â
âIt has to do with the girls, doesnât it?â
âI donât ask Suguru about what girls heâs seeingââ
âI saw them, Gojo,â you say.
This shuts him up.
âI read someone who knew them.â Youâre not sure why, but it feels necessary to not tell him that you read the man because Geto asked you to. âHe didnât like them playing with his daughter because they were different.â
He stands, silent and contemplating, eyes pearlescent and glowing in the soft shadow that precedes sunrise.Â
Thereâs a terrible phantom that lurks between your ribs, a sticky feeling that slimes along your bones. You think of Getoâs sudden reappearance in your life, you think of Gojoâs intimidating request, you think finally, finally, finally. âDid he kill them?â
His eyes snap to yours, fluorescent, flaringâyou had forgotten that the hottest part of a flame is blue. âNo.âÂ
Heâs so serious that your heart rate picks up, your body going into fight-or-flight at the coldness of that single word. âGojoââ
âHe wouldnât.âÂ
âOkayâitâs okay. I believe you.â You donât, but youâll say anything to remove the hardness from his eyes, his toneâthe same hardness as when he sat in your office and told you not to sugarcoat things. I killed him. âThen why do you want me to read him?â
âI told you,â he says, and his voice is back to normal but his eyes are nowhere close. âIâm just curious.â
Your hand darts forward on instinct. You want to know whatâs inside his head so bad that you canât control yourselfâuntil you remember exactly who youâre trying to touch and exactly what his power is. Forget being untouchableâhe could physically destroy you. He could snap your arm like a matchstick. He could pull at the broken end until the limb splits completely. You step back, but the movement was too obvious to have been anything else.
He grins again. Holds his hand out. âWanna touch?â
âGood night, Gojo.â
He watches as you get in the elevator, as you press the button for the lobby, as the doors slide shut. All the while, eyes burning.
âž
Youâre at a run-down warehouse in Roppongi with a cursed weapon in your hand when you wonder where your life went wrong. Kento called you half an hour agoâcornered, bleeding, his cleaver knocked out of his grip. âI wouldnât have called you,â he said, âbut no one else is picking up.â
It didnât matter. If he needed you, you would be there. That had been the case for the better part of a decade.Â
The warehouse was a storage facility for flour and corn, most likely. The floor is covered in rancid mold. Your knifeâSound Eater, the cursed tool youâd conveniently forgotten to return to the armory when you left Jujutsu Techâis familiar in your palm. Its handle is worn to the shape of you.Â
You feel comfortable like this. More comfortable than at your job filing accounts, at your apartment reading or watching some awful reality TV show. Itâs because this is how you grew up, you think. Youâre remembering the person you were for twenty years before you became someone else.
At the far end of the warehouse, a stone staircase leads to the basementâwhere Kento is. Where the curse is. You can sense it, the same feeling as being watched. A specterâs ghostly nails tracing the ridge of your spine.Â
The basement smells mustier than the warehouse. A single light blinks ahead, allowing you flashes of the series of hallways that lead deeper into the warehouseâs underground storage. The floor is wet, and the viscous liquid that coats the stone soaks through the soles of your shoes. Your socks stick coldly to your feet. You listen to your weapon to see if you can locate the curse, its energy responding to the curseâs with vibrations and muted shrieks that sing through your bones unpleasantly. The curse seems to be everywhere, spread through the basement like an even layer of butter.Â
You find Kentoâs cleaver before you find him. Itâs deep in the tunnel systemâyouâve already been walking for two or three minutes, and thereâs been no sign that anyone else is down here with you.
Taking his weapon as a sign that youâre close, you even your breathing, measure your stepsâstealth training from long ago functioning like a ghost limb, sending signals through your body despite not having been used for years.
You enter a large antechamberâsome sort of production facilityâand though itâs quiet, you hear breathing from behind a burnt-out piece of machinery. Slowly, you approach, Sound Eater singing against your skin. This is not the cursed toolâs energy responding to a curse. It can only be Kento. Your heart still beats violently against your ribs, bruising bone.
His shoulder is a mess. Dress shirt torn, blood adorning the fabric and the shiny plastic buttons, face haggardâheâs in pain, and the sight sends you back to your youth as quick as a fist to the face. Group missions, Kentoâs injuries, your injuries, the way you started always wearing black because it hid bloodstains most effectively.
Youâre at his side quickly, a hand gingerly against his shoulder, checking for damage. He groans. His shoulder is dislocated, but he already knows this. âHelp me get it back in,â he tells you. His shirt is still intact enough that you wonât have to touch his skin, which is good. You canât risk being weakened right now.
Shoulders always relocate with a sickening crack, as if a bone that had been broken is being rebroken and set. A badly healed bone is a liability, Ieiri has told you. Dislocation is easier to fix. You feel a little less sick when the sight of distended skin and incorrectly puzzled bone is straightened out, set right.Â
âDetails,â you demand.
âA semi-first grade, four-legged,â he says, taking his cleaver from you. âItâs using whateverâs on the floorâsticks you in place. Its left flank is injured.â
The one question that Kento doesnât seem to be able to answer: where is it?
Sound Eater answers that question for you in the span of seconds, buzzing against your palm, shocks working their way down your fingers. You nod your head towards the north entrance to the production facility, where your weapon is attempting to drag you. Once it gets close enough to a curse, its energy begins to magnetize. The stronger the curse, the stronger the magnetization. You try to ignore the way your hands shake with effort to keep Sound Eater in place.
Kento is up, breathing labored. You hate this for himâthat he feels like itâs his duty to deal with this, that his purpose is nothing more than being a jujutsu sorcerer. That knowing what it feels like to exorcise a curse makes it nearly impossible to want to do anything else.
You understand. This is the most alive youâve felt in years.
In the abridged sign that you and he used to employ during group missions, he tells you, Go right. Distract.
You dart into the clearing, the curseâs eyes immediately finding you from across the large room. Theyâre yellow, the familiar color of bile, and they shine out from its gray body, the blob-like consistency of a snail on top of four muscled legs, identical to those of a wolf.Â
Which means itâs fast.
Your shoulder takes the brunt of the pressure as you roll out of the way of the curseâs first strike. It crosses ground more quickly than you can comprehend. When you right yourself, you can see just how grotesque the creature really is. Its mouth is a wide wound stuffed with teeth. Its eyes are scared, childlike. In its twisted voice, it says hello hello hello? hello who's there hello? and Sound Killer wants to taste its skin.
As it readies its weight on its back legs to strike again, Kento comes down from above, his cleaver hitting the back of the curseâs neck with intense forceâalmost 7:3. You hear a crack, a hiss, but the curse backs up, head still attached to its body by a thread.
The floor is suddenly very cold. It radiates up through your feet, spiking into your calves, your thighs. You try to move and fail. Sound Eater begs you to let it get closer to its target.Â
Youâre not sure if the curse can only freeze one person at a time. Kento tries to move forward to strike again and his body jerks and stills, glued to its vulnerable position. The curse readies itself again to strike, its head knitting itself back onto its body. Its wound-mouth opens wide, ready for an offering.Â
Sound Eater whistles as you lift it to shoulder-level, as you aim to throw it into the curseâs open mouth before it consumes Kento.Â
Itâs stupid, Gojo once told you, to lose your weapon on the field if your cursed technique is useless. You got very good at throwing weapons with dead aim, taking out curses with a single slice, Sound Eater a perfect match for you because of its draw to the cores of such curses. Part of you got good at this to spite him. Youâll continue to spite him, even now.
The curse lunges. Sound Eater slices through air. An echoing click fills the chamber as the cursed tool hits tooth, cracking bone but doing no more. The curse halts its attack, scared yellow eyes focused on you now.
And your cursed tool lays beneath its feet, glittering under a layer of pungent slime. You briefly try to appreciate the irony of the situation: if you hadnât left the jujutsu world, you wouldnât be as rusty as you are now, and maybe you would have lived.Â
Your feet are unlocked so suddenly that you fall to your knees, slime coating your pants, your legs, your hands as you push yourself back up. The curse lies inert in between you and Kentoâclearly breathing, but nowhere near conscious. Asleep.
Itâs like you can sense him before he speaks, your blood chilling in its well-traveled arteries.
âIâm glad youâre both okay,â he says. Grins without teeth. The same way Gojo grinsâconfident and so hopelessly self-impressed. Thereâs a curse beside him, one that he controls, its energy definitely potent but not malicious towards you. Itâs familiar, in a wayâeyes that crackle with electricity, sparking skin, long claws. Youâve seen it before, but not personally. Getoâs gaze flits between you and Sound Eater on the ground next to the downed curse. âDid Nanami call you out of retirement? Or were you just having a little fun?â
Kento says Getoâs nameâa warning. Heâs injured, hurting. He doesnât have patience for games.
âIt doesnât matter why Iâm here,â you say, offering Kento help to stand. His body is a heavy weight that pulls at your shoulder, activating muscles you havenât used since right after high school. âIeiri still runs the clinic at school, right?â
âOf course,â Geto responds, all fox teeth. He points at the unconscious curse. âFirst, though.â
Youâve never seen Geto absorb a curse before. You know some details about the process, mostly from Kento and Yu telling you stories about happenings in the field, but youâd never actually witnessed it. It amazes you how the body curls up into such a compact ball of shadow, how it can be contained within the walls of Getoâs cursed energy. The expression he makes while he consumes it is familiar to you. You know that strain, that effort put into controlling every single muscle in your face, veins in the neck straining hard against skin. They must taste awful. You think about the gum he offered you at the vivariumâwonder if he carries it for purposes you hadnât considered until now.Â
He dismisses the other curse with a small movement of his hand, and the energy in the room evens out so quickly that your head feels full of falling sand. Sound Eater goes quiet, and you collect it from beneath a viscous layer of filth. âWe should go,â Geto says, gesturing to one of the entrances to the production facility. Knowing him, he probably has the entire compound mapped out in his head.Â
âDid you call a car?â you ask.
âI already have one waiting. Figured we might need a quick exit.â
You nod. He still unnerves you, but youâre not entirely without manners. âThank you.â
He looks at you for a moment longer than youâre comfortable with. Everything seems calculated in his eyes. He never simply sees thingsâhe analyzes them. âMy pleasure,â he says. You can't read his tone because he always keeps it even, friendly. But youâre sure that thereâs something to read in those words that you canât quite see right now. âShall we?â
Despite the way you feel about him, you allow enough tentative trust for him to lead you out of the darkness and back into the sun.
âž
He insists on escorting you home from the school.
There are company cars you couldâve requested rides fromâthe higher-ups at least owe you a free ride home for everything youâve done todayâbut you donât want to take anything from them that they havenât already offered. They can be tricky about which of their favors require repayment.
This leaves you and Geto on the last train of the night, alone. He stands despite the long rows of empty seats, leaning back against the Do Not Lean On Doors sign, arms crossed. Thereâs not even a hint of him trying to hide that heâs watching you intently.
On any other day, you would stand, unwilling to give him any advantageâbut youâre exhausted. You need a shower so badly. Layers of slime have dried on you and you feel more disgusting than you ever knew was possible. You sit opposite him, leaning back in the uncomfortable plasticky chair. Meeting his eyes feels foolish. Taking your attention off of him feels even more foolish. Staring at his shoes is a happy medium.
The car rolls steady across its tracks, its wheels whistling slightly when the train reaches top speed between stations.Â
âDo you ever see things you donât want to?â he asks after a three-stop stretch of silence.
All the time. It seems youâll always be stuck in this cycle of attempting normalcy only to be tasked with experiencing the unpleasant wants and memories of people you donât know. Youâre not going to tell him that, though. Him asking you questions makes you queasy. Your knees feel weak even though youâre sitting down. âDoesnât everyone?â
âYouâre very good at avoiding my questions.â
âYou donât make it hard.â
The train rolls on, and on, and on.
He hooks his arm around the closest stanchion pole, then leans in your direction. The strand of hair that hangs loose against his face sways alongside the train's ebbs and flows. Blinding brightness from the overhead LEDs paint his face in baroque shadows. He could be a devil, or a killer, or simply a man. âDoes it scare you?â
Many things about this situation scare you. You ask him to clarify.
âWhen you read people. Iâm sure youâve seen some⌠unsavory things.â You think: bodies. You think: blood and muscle and sinew and bone. âIt would make sense if those things scared you.â
âThey donât,â you lie.Â
He considers you for a long moment, seeming to lean even farther forward, and the idea of him getting closer pierces your stomach like a nail. But the train once again sways on its tracks and his body follows, leaning back on his heels and removing himself from what could have almost been your space. âI always wondered what it was you saw.â
âWhat do you mean?â you ask. You know what he means.
He smiles, almost condescendingâan expression that says come now, are we really going to play this game? The way he says your name in response, so pleasant and even-keeled, makes you feel like a cold stone. Prey trapped in a small space with its most vicious predator. You go so still your blood stops flowing.
Until now, youâd never been sure whether he actually knew that youâd read him. Youâre positive he doesnât want anyone to know whatâs inside his head. He paints an image of himself over what he really is, but itâs a faulty veneer. Apply enough pressure and itâll fracture in all the little places that hold the worst rotted of the flesh beneath.
You know he would do anything to keep this image of himself spotless, whole. Youâre sure of it. âKento will know somethingâs wrong if I donât talk to him in the next few days.â
His brows draw low over his dark eyesâfirst in confusion, and then in a sort of amused incredulity. âYou think Iâm going to kill you.â
âI think you want to.â
The lights flash in the car as it passes under a tunnel. âWhat is it that defines a good person?â
â...why are you asking me?â
He grins, and your stomach constricts. âGood and bad are large concepts in a small world. They touch and overlap in more places than any of us could ever anticipate. But weâre supposed to fit neatly into one or the other.â
You donât respond. Youâre too focused on the stretch of his lips.
âSo what defines a good person?â
âThe things theyâve done,â you say, more to get him to stop asking you questions than anything.
âI donât remember doing anything particularly harmful to you,â he saysâand here it is. What he really wants from you. âIt canât be my actions. So is it my desires that define me as a bad person in your eyes, or my memories?â
Your stomach constricts tighter. Painfully. Youâre still four stops away from the one by your apartment. âGeto.â
âIt has to be one or the other. Those are the two categories that you can read, right?â
âIt was a long time ago.â
âTen years,â he says. âAnd you can barely look me in the eye.â
You try, as if you could prove him wrong, but you canât maintain eye contact with him for more than a moment before you feel a terrible coldness in your gut.
âIâd always wondered if you read me that night, but I was never sure.â He wraps his loose strand of hair around a long finger, then unwraps it. Repeats these movements like a question and answer, like a catechism. âNot until I saw you again.â
âThe second time you called me out to the villageâyou were lying to me.â
âWeâve established that.â
âYou put that man in a coma,â you say. "You absorbed the curse that was at the power plant."
He nods, face calm, as if altering someoneâs state of being is a normal thing to do. âBut I woke him up right after you left and he was unharmed. I paid him for his time.â
âWhy?â
âI needed to know what it was that scared you. The situation itselfâŚâ he says, holding out one hand flatâand then the other, his hands mimicking the sides of a scale, the second option heavier than the first. âOr me.â
âIâd have told you that if you asked,â you say, and you would have. No point in keeping it from him. âYou didnât have to lie. That was underhanded.â
âI think reading me without my consent counts as underhanded.â
Bone, muscle, blood, sinew. Bone-white beneath his uniform. And the blood, the blood, the blood, orange-peel thick. âI didnât want to. You donât understand, you wereâI could see your ribs. It wasâwe didnât thinkââ
âI understand,â he says.
âI know you do,â you concede. Because he was there for it all. He experienced it all. He woke up when he was healed and immediately went to search for the body of his best friend, not knowing that Gojo had already woken himself up from the brink of death. âI wish it happened differently.â
âDoesnât everyone?â he asks, parroting your response from earlier.
Maybe they do. Maybe things could have gone much differentlyâworse, even. You could know more than his wants. You could have seen them realized.
âWhat did you see?â he asks, careful. Quiet. There's a weight to his voice you're unfamiliar with. It sounds like more than passing curiosity.
Itâs what makes you answer honestly. âBlood. Bodies.â Finally. âRelief.â
âWhich of those scared you the most?â
You look at him, jaw tight, because he knows which one it was.
âAnd that makes me a bad person?â he asks.
âI never said you were a bad person.â
âYou just thought it.â
You have. Youâve thought it every day since seeing his true desires. Youâre not sure that youâre a good person either, but your hidden wants will never be as gruesome as his. âItâs not that simple.â
âOf course itâs not.â Again, he smilesâbut thereâs something brittle to it. Gojo, in your office when you pushed too hard. A mask beginning to crack.
The train stills, doors opening. You're still a few stops away from home. No one gets on, no one gets off. It's just you and Geto on the car, filling its silence with more than words.
âIf I asked you to read me now,â he asks, âwould you?â
Your head jerks up, and you look past him, at the closing doors, at the windows of the train car. The whistling starts again, the train gaining speed. Youâre between stops. Thereâs no exit. âNo.â
âIt could be different than last time.â
âYou donât know that,â you say, but what you really want to tell him is that it wonât be.
âWhat if it is?â he asks. âMaybe you have the wrong idea of me.â
You donât think thatâs the case. Youâre not going to tell him this.
âI was angry. Hurt. I thought Satoru had just been murdered.â He says these things like easy facts. His tone takes the emotion out of them entirely, as if those factors didnât contribute to what youâre sure is massive unresolved trauma. âI thought I was going to die.â
âYou didnât.â
âNo,â he saysâand here you get a flash of something deeper, again unfamiliar. Because he wonât look at you, even though heâs the kind of person that always makes eye contact. He leans back, distancing himself. âHave you ever experienced that? A moment where you know youâre going to die?â
âI havenât.â
His lips twist into a muted frown. He looks young, the way he used to in high school. He stares out of the darkened window at nothing. At the walls of the underground tunnels. At blackness, pure and complete. The bags under his eyes are more prominent. Because of the lighting, maybe. âYou think a lot of things. You realize a lot of things. And none of it is particularly fair.â
This has to be manipulation. Heâs good at that. He always has been. Butâsomething about this moment feels vulnerable, and youâve never known Geto to be vulnerable. Not with anyone. Even on the brink of death, even just recovered, his chest still terribly scarredâthere was nothing. He smiled at you and Ieiri before he left, that fox-teeth smile you hate so much. Iâll be back shortly, he told the two of you, as if his blood wasnât coating the bottom of your shoes, staining the skin of your knees, clotting underneath your fingernails.
Youâve read people for long enough that youâre sure: this moment is different. âWhy do you want me to read you?â you ask, so quiet that your voice is nearly swallowed by the sound of the train wheels scrolling across their metal track.
âBecause I want to know,â he says, his voice a little hoarse at its core, âwhat you see.â
You shouldnât. Youâre too kind. Kento tells you this often.Â
You shouldnât.
When you put your hand out, palm up, Geto places his fingers atop yours so gentlyâa breeze of a touch. And then: bodies. bodies. bodies.          bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. suguru         should we kill these guys ? bodies. bodies.          bodies. bodies. it couldâve been different i couldâve been different bodies. bodies.                    bodies. bodies. bodies. bodies. we could do it together         no. i could do it alone bodies. bodies. bodiesâ You vomit onto the floor of the train.
Geto is on his knees in front of you, clear of the mess, and your fingers are tangled in his shirt, fists bunching the material at each shoulder. You want to let go so badly but you canâtâyouâre heaving, sobbing, your forehead pressed against your fist, tears running hot onto the back of your hand.Â
Itâs just so bad. Itâs so terrible. He wants this to happen. He feels like people deserve this. You never should have let him convince you to read him. You shouldnât have been drawn in by the vulnerability. Not whenânot when itâs that in his head, still, a decade later.Â
You canât stop heaving, nearly retching. You canât stop pulling in breaths too quickly, not deep enough. Your forehead is flush against his shoulder now, and your tears are staining his shirt, and you canât let go. Youâre paralyzed.
He holds you while you cry. Only touches your back, your arms. Not your hair or face or hands. You couldnât handle it again. You couldnât handle it again but you canât move right now.
As you quiet, as your breaths turn slow, heavier, you realize heâs been speaking to you. Maybe the whole timeâyouâre not sure. Quiet reassurance. Itâs okay, youâre okay. Breathe.
You donât feel okay. You feel more sick than you ever have. âWhy would you want that?â you ask, and your words blend into tears. Into panic.Â
Heâs quiet, one large hand smoothing down your back over and over, as if reassuring you that youâre safe. Safe in the arms of someone with that many bodies in his head. He sighs, tired, and his breath makes your hair flutter, caresses the curve of your ear.
The shock of fear to your system from realizing just how close he is gives you the strength to pull awayâto sit back in the seat again, untwine your fingers from his shirt. Itâs creased on each shoulder from your vice grip. Thereâs vomit on the floor of the train to the right of him. Heâs on both knees in front of you, hands in his lap now that youâve freed yourself from his grasp.
Was it real? The vulnerability? The hoarseness to his voice when he told you that he wanted to know what you would see?
âIâm sorry,â he says.
âWhy would you want that?â you repeat.
He sighs again. Sits back on his heels, begins running his hand through his hair before remembering itâs tied up. He just leaves his hand on the top of his head, fingers curling inwards until heâs gripping his hair, and you wonder if it feels the same as it did on the night you read him for the first time. âI donât know,â he tells you.
The train stops again. The voice says something you don't hear. You can't get up. âThatâs not true.â
The doors close and there's the whistling once again, the darkness that surrounds the both of you, the speed you can just hardly feel. âWhy did you decide to quit being a sorcerer?â he asks.
You donât want to tell him. âThere were a lot of reasons.â
âHow is it fair?â He drops his hand. His hair is disheveled, just like his shirt. He looks so un-put together that he hardly resembles the Geto youâve always had an image of in your head. âSo many of us die. So many of us have injuries that take years to really heal. And itâs their fault. Humans.â
âYouâre human.â
âIâm a sorcerer.â
âTheyâre not mutually exclusive.â
âIâm the one that has to deal with the consequences of their actions,â he says, as if that means something. As if that puts him in a different group from them entirely.
âSo you want to kill them?â
âNo,â he says, quickâbecause thatâs what heâs supposed to say, you think. Then he quiets for a moment and seems to actually consider your question. âNo. ButâI do think about it.â
You both sit with the admission. Though the train car is empty, you feel cloistered, walls too tight around you.
âIt makes me worry that Iâm not a good person anymore,â he tells you.
âDid you want me to read you so you could decide whether youâre good or not?â
âI wanted you to read me because when I heard about those little girls that died, Satoru had to talk me down from going to that village and killing everyone.â
The conductor comes on the speakers, announcing the last few stops. It's both shocking and reassuring to have another person so close. You can't believe this conversation is happening in such close proximity to a person that couldn't even begin to understand the nature of its contents. Strangely enough, the admission quiets some of the fear inside you. Because you can understand it, on some level. Those girls were sorcerers. They were also nine.
âI had to see if there was anything inside me that didnât want to do it,â he says. âBecauseâif thereâs notââ
âI donât see everything,â you tell him. There's more you could say, but you've never been comfortable revealing the true extent of what you can do. You've been a tool for long enough that you know being more effective begets more use. âI donât think you should use me as a metric.â
âItâs obvious that what you saw wasnât very good.â
âThey starved to death,â you say. âIâd be angry too.â
And you're not angry, you realize. Not in the way that he is. Two little girls were starved to death for being somewhat different, and you can't get yourself to feel more than disgust. More than frustration. Parts of you have been quelled over timeâbeing a jujutsu sorcerer necessitates this. You can't get angry over everything because everything is unjust, and everything is unfair, and eventually it'll all build up. Maybe into what Geto is experiencing now. If you hadn't desensitized yourself like this, maybe you would have bodies in your head.
It's unlikely. Not to the extent he does. But it's not like you're a stranger to violence.
âMaybe Iâm not a good person because Iâm not angry the way that you are,â you say.
âI don't think that's true,â he says, smiling, a little slight and a little sad.
It's the only time since you'd read him at the edge of death that you don't see fox teethâbut the smile is still not entirely kind. His words don't speak of reassurance. Perhaps a sort of envy. You're familiar with want. Uncomfortably so. You recognize it even when you try not to. Maybe he wants to feel the way you do. Less angry. Or maybe he does truly see you as good, in a certain context, and he wants to be there on that level with you.
âThe first time I ingested a curse," he tells you, âI was so sick I couldnât stand. I didnât realize how awful it would taste. Thereâs nothing I could compare it to. After it was done, I threw up until my stomach was empty, and then kept going. The stomach acid burned my throat so badly that I had to go to the hospital. I was still young.â
You stay still and quiet. You don't want to relate to him so you try not to.
âAnd sometimes I wonderâwould any non-sorcerer ever understand that? Could they?â
You try not to, and you fail at it. âWill you show me?â
He looks at you in askance. You don't tell people that you can do this. Only Kento knows. It's not something you should allow Geto. Not when he scares you the way he does.
âThe first time,â you say, because despite knowing you shouldn't do this, it's that sick curiosity again that pushes you forward. And maybe something elseâa want. A need to relate. To be sure that someone else has known what you've felt your entire life. âIf you really concentrate on the memoryâI want to see it.â
To show you, he touches your face: itâs so dark and iâm scared. and mom said to come home soon. but i saw this thing and i want to see if i can beat it                    no. iâm lying to you. there is a way i want this memory to go. i am a good child and i want to go home to my mother but i am so curious.          i am so curious i am so curious. i want to see what that thing looks like when i kill it. i know i can. i know i am different. i scare my mother and father and they still love me very much because it is so dark and i am so scared and i am just a child.          but i am not scared. i follow the thing into dense trees that shadow the park. i play here with my friends. i kill it.          i donât know how i know what to do but i do and                    !!! oh                              !!! god                    !!! oh god                                                  please.                                                  please.                                                  please. donât make me do it again donât make me do it again donât make me do it again i want to go home i want to see my mother i do iâm sorry it hurts it hurts oh god          oh i want to be good. iâm sorry. i want to be good. iâm sorry. i want to be sorry. iâm          god.Â
The way you come out of a reading is usually like a free-fall without a parachute. One second youâre tumbling through the air, and the next youâve been abruptly stopped. Being shown something is different. Kento would show you his childhood when you asked, moments with his family, bad parts of missions that he didn't want to voice but still wanted to share. Itâs a little easier to stomach.
Usually.Â
His hand lingers near your face, resting on your shoulder. Heâs so close to you and he smells like very expensive cologne and you suddenly see how tired he is. His smile hides more than you thought it did. Maybe more than you had been looking for.
âDo you have a final verdict?â he asks. âOr should I decide for myself?â
Thereâs a predilection in him, you think. Heâs predisposed to anger, the self-righteous kind. So is every other sorcerer youâve ever met. And yet itâs different with himâmore complex. Something else is very wrong with him. Deeply.
âI donât like it when people touch my face.â
âI can keep that in mind.â
âI want you to apologize.â
âOf course,â he says, gentle. Was his voice always this gentle? Or is it because of all heâs shared with you on this train? âIâm sorry.â
The doors of the train open and a tinny voice announces that youâve reached the last stop of the night. You missed your station a long time ago. Youâll have to pay for a cab. âI donât think youâre a bad person,â you tell him. âBut I'm afraid of you.â
He nods. Sits back on his heels again. âWill you be okay getting home?â
âYes,â you say. âThank you.â
You make it home just after one in the morning and lay in your bed with your clothes on and you donât sleep. You donât sleep at all.
i will link part two here when it is posted!
#geto x reader#suguru geto x reader#fics#this took me forever to write that's why im posting part one im like this will actually make me finish part two#geto is just SOOOOO hard to write#like incredibly. i am like. hope i did. at least a little justice lmao#if there is anything I forgot that I should put in the tw or the info pls lmk!!!
150 notes
¡
View notes
Text
I LOVE HELLO FROM THE HALLOWOODS!!!!!!!!!
#THIS TOOK ME FOREVER#I HOPE YOU ENJOY!!!!!#it actually took so long that#character designs changed halfway through#so thats why some of them might look Strange#this was also actually originally just a s1 animatic but i redid it to have s2 while i was Listening#i think theres like. one frame from s3??#but ROARR IM VERY PROUD OF THIS :D#hfth#hfth fanart#hello from the hallowoods#eskiart#now on 137 VERY AFRAID#GETTING MORE AFRAID BY THE MINUTE
395 notes
¡
View notes
Text
What Dan and Phil Text Each Other 4 + Familect (article)
#dan and phil#amazingphil#daniel howell#danisnotonfire#phil lester#this idea has been cooking in my brain for literally MONTHS but this weekend was literally the first day off i've had since JANUARY#which is so cruel and unusual don't get me started but anyways#and also the first time they haven't dropped something unhinged that i felt compelled to run through photoshop#also it took forever because originally i was going to do all the WDAPTEOs so like i pulled clips from 2 3 and 4#and didn't end up using any of the ones i pulled from 2 and 3 so guess i just wasted some time there#so it didn't take me actually as long to put together the actual set but like i spent a solid 5 hours working on the general project#tbf though the videos are 20 minutes long so like an hour was just watching to get the time stamps#and i didnt want to miss one by putting it on higher playback speed bc some of them are really quick#well congrats if you made it this far in my fucking tags essay about this post#this is like a 'stick around after the episode for a look behind the scenes' segment#hexagifs
292 notes
¡
View notes
Note
Happy 10th birthday to Cercerion!
OUGHHH UR RIGHT CERCIE IS 10 YEARS OLD NOW !!!!!!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY BABY BOY BELOVEDEST DID NOTHING WRONG EVER IN HIS WHOLE LIFE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
#ALSO IM RLY HAPPY HIS OLD DESIGN IS NOW MUCH OLDER THAN HIS FIRST DESIGN WOAH!!!!!!#since i drew the old one SO MUCH back in 2014 i remembered it as being so super prevalent. that when i changed his head shape a couple year#it took a while to get used to the not boxy head but god it was so much more fun to draw the beak. and now its the standard#and it makes me rly happy fr fr. i actually thought i changed his design like only 2 years ago but it was SIX YEARS WHAT!! HOW TIME FLIES..#ask#cercerion#SORRY I JJST WANTED TO REPOST ALL OF THESE#omg dude this also means u and i have known each other for 10 years thats CRAZY#this photoset is so funny its like he went from being :D to being >:U over the years but i assure you now hes more chill than before#HIS COLORS HAVE NOT CHANGED FOR EIGHT YEARS ALSO WHATTTTT i just chose the perfect hues forever#sobbing and crying i love this guy so much#i dont show him online a lot or at least i didnt as muhc until recently but hes always in my brain#cercerion may as well be a part of my soul at this point#HAPPYU TENTH BIRTHDAY CERCIE I LOVE YOU SOOOO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BLOWING KISSES INTO A HURRICANE FOR U#windyart#sure ill put it in my tag. this is literally my art
199 notes
¡
View notes
Text
WHY DID NO ONE TELL ME THERE WAS BUG CATCHING IN SKYRIM
oh no oh no oh no itâs sinking itâs claws into me
#looks like iâm going to be obsessed with this one forever#iâll actually never be more ashamed over anything more than the fact it took me THIS DAMN LONG to play Skyrim#like what the actual fuck is wrong with me#in my defense#i just thought it was a meme game and not genuinely this lovely#skyrim#skyrim special edition#gameposting#bug#bugs#bugposting#bugblr#video games
74 notes
¡
View notes
Text
CYBERTRON
AHHH I FINISHED IT!!! ta daaa redraw of my fav TF:One concept art pieces :D
#zeph just stfu#zeph's art#tf one#tranformers#transformers one#d 16#orion pax#megatron#optimus prime#elita one#bumblebee#b 127#okay yes this took forever but it was actually super fun to do !!!
143 notes
¡
View notes