#yup this is my design for him
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Got to do a bit of drawing today! I’m not sick as a dog anymore. Wooo!!! I’ll get these hands down one day….
#ed edd n eddy#eene reunion#yup this is my design for him#eene#ed edd and eddy#eene fanart#fanart#cartoon network#ed edd eddy fanart#my fanart#eene eddy#eene as adults#bro eene#eene big bro#eene bro
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"Oh he didn' tell you ?"
He did in fact tell no one except the least responsible which also happens to be the headmage. But he wouldn't have told Divus anyway since they barely get along, so yeah... communication issues :)))
Went for Azar as a name in the end. I did hesitate with Nemo but this name's vibe has been kinda killed by the goddamn clownfish (and it's my favorite nightwish song too eeee)
#twisted wonderland#twst oc#used one of my favorite ace attorney sprites ever for the uhhh phase pose and expression#but it's a big spoiler so I won't elaborate further so if ykyk#general design was inspired by caterpillar yup but also Dee Vasquez from AA 1 you can look her up and you'll see the inspo right away#I love her design she's a cool npc#anyway let him vape your honor
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Sunstar.exe REF for my Brainrot AU (still needs a new name. good gosh.) 2024 design update.
#I'll add a mask version later but i got exams soon so im not super worried about that right now tbf#sunstar.exe#sunstar#stardroid sunstar#stardroids#brainrotau#megaman#my art#mmbnau#brau#doodle#mmbn#i hope tumblr doesnt bake the quality like a burnt pastry#ra moon.exe#ra moon#eh#if i see any oopsies i'll update him later#edit: yup fixed a design oopsie within 5 minutes
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not happy with this but i am so done ive been mulling over it for days
scene is chapter 12 of i am weary with contending! by @ari--anon it is a beautiful emotional heartbreaking rollercoaster of a fic. shipping warning but go read it now go go go go go
#grian#yup. doesnt really look like him huh. couldnt really do anything about that wo changing the design though#my art#i was trying to go for like a claustrophobic but vast and lonely feeling. i think i did?? alright???#i like my color choices but something just bothers me. i dont know
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Concept Art for a potential Phthalo redesign
#my art#traditional art#gouache#watercolour#watercolor#oc art#phthalo#i don't like his current design#i'm going to fix it#he's honestly the only one out of the cymk party that i've been struggling to settle on a design for#i haven't made the one that makes me point at it and go “yup that's him”#so that's why i'm trying to give him a redesign
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I finally finished Dungeon Meshi!!! Very fun read and amazing charaters!! The hype i have for the anime now is unreal!
#dungeon meshi#im talking#i have so much to say...but idek where to start#delicious in dungeon#Im gonna put spoilers in the tags so :) warning ig#delicious in dugeon spoilers#EVERYTHING With Laios tbh he is a Himbo through and through#like kind of heart dumb of ass and strong as hell🥰🥰🥰🥰🤤#he was cute at the end with a bit of a tummy#Ryoko Kui just played D&D with herself for 97 chapters but damn what an phenomenal story she told#All the characters felt so fleshed (lol) out and had goals and fears of their own#Senshi was another favorite of mine🤤🤤🤤🤤 need that man ASAP#I want Senshi so bad-----oop who said that :O#Marcille was also very cute and i liked her motived#her final boss dress was v cute i liked it a lot and i wanna draw it#Chilchuck🥺🥺🥺🥺 hes my dad now actually. the dad who left for milk but got a new family ig#AND IZUTSUMI!!!!! MY GIRLIE!!!!😍😍😍 shes so adorable ugh i love her.#OVERALL: this was one of the best series ive read in a while!!!#10/10 i recommended!!! amazing art. amazing story. fantastic charater designs!!! yup!#I also forgot to mention Laios curse being that monsters wouldnt get near him too😭💔💔 im sorry king
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Yandere Therapy (Patreon)
#Doodles#Original#Yanderapy if you will#Lol#Yanderapy#Sup I made my own brainrot#They both turned out perfect on their first doodles (featured here) and got names super quick so like#Why fight it lol#So! Who I ended up with: The blonde megane is Ishida Ichiro and the roots-showing pierced is Maeda Mitsuru#Yes I'm going through my weeb arc again what of it lol#Hhhh it makes me feel like a kid again <3#Honestly I was surprised how quickly their names came to me - Mitsuru's was basically immediate I gave him two total passes and then yup#And like I mentioned - their designs? On the fly and gosh I am so happy with them haha especially Ishida#His face reveal was my first attempt and like!! How does that happen sometimes!! Look at him!#You can kinda see me settle into Mitsu's design a bit more slowly - his eyelashes solidified four or five doodles in and now I love them#I actually wrote down this concept - gosh looks like a year and a half ago?? At least the initial concept#I accidentally combined two yandere ideas I wrote down separately - by it looks like almost a year exactly lol it's the Yandere time of year#But I ended up with these two so I'm happy even if they didn't stay separate! :D#It does still make me want to take another crack at the individual ideas tho lol#Anyway ♪ Mostly just setup introduction character feeling-out for the initials :3#Mitsu recognized himself as having a somewhat unhealthy interest in his crush so decided to just go ahead and put himself in therapy haha#After getting to a point where he and his therapist thought he was in a good headspace for possible rejection he went to shoot his shot and-#Turns out his crush likes him back! And their boundaries align Surprisingly well ♪#Probably not a surprise but Ishida could tell that Mitsuru liked him lol he was just waiting for him to ask first - Mitsu had no idea tho#Oh yeah and I also use the first name-last name/last name-first name structure interchangeably soz lol#I'm trying to go more for last name-first name more! But don't be surprised if you see its inverse sometimes
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heyy could i request marvel bingo with Natasha x fem!reader with “it was all a bet” but with a twist? so it’s like tony bets that the r and natasha can’t pose as a married couple for a mission without their feelings becoming real? If you don’t like that idea feel free to do whatever you want! Thank youu
NO PRETENDING NOW
⤷ NATASHA A. ROMANOFF



ᯓ★ Pairing: Natasha A. Romanoff x fem!reader
ᯓ★ Genre: fluff, romance
ᯓ★ Word count: 7.4k
ᯓ★ Summary: Assigned to pose as Natasha’s wife on a mission, you never expect the lines between act and reality to blur. What starts as undercover roles turns into real feelings neither of you can deny. After one night changes everything, you return to the compound knowing your life will never be the same.
ᯓ★MARVEL Love is in the air - Valentine's Day special game
ᯓ★ TW(s): Internalized sexuality denial, small spicy scene (consensual, first-time with a woman)
ᯓ★ My Masterlist
ᯓ★ MARVEL Multiverse - choose an AU, pair it with your favorite character and make a request!
ᯓ★ Songs & Superheroes tales - The Game (to make a request, follow the rules on the link!)
ᯓ★ MARVEL Bingo
ᯓ★ English isn’t my first language
The conference room smells faintly of burnt coffee and Stark’s cologne, sharp and expensive, the kind that sticks to the back of your throat. You sit with your arms folded, trying to look more awake than you feel, and you’re half-listening as Steve flips through the mission brief on the screen. Words like "infiltration," "secure intel," and "deep cover" float past you, all routine until Natasha’s name shows up next to yours on the projected file.
"—which is why the two of you will be the primary operatives," Steve says, glancing your way, then to Natasha, who sits with her legs casually crossed like this is just another Tuesday. For her, maybe it is.
You blink, straightening in your seat. "Wait. Us?"
"That’s right," he confirms, like it’s no big deal, like this isn’t the first time the two of you have ever been paired up for something like this. "You’ll be posing as a married couple."
The room goes quiet. For a moment, the only sound is Tony sipping loudly from his coffee mug, the obnoxious slurp designed to fill the silence.
Married.
The word sits there in the air, heavy and foreign, settling against your chest in a way that makes your pulse skip. You glance at Natasha, but her expression doesn’t flicker — she’s the picture of unbothered, maybe even slightly amused, as if the idea of pretending to be your wife for God knows how long is nothing more than a line item on her to-do list.
"Married," you repeat, just to be sure your brain isn’t short-circuiting.
"Yup," Tony chimes in, leaning back so his chair creaks, that shit-eating grin of his growing wider. "New identities, new rings, matching couple tattoos if you really want to sell it. I hear Vegas has some nice ones."
You open your mouth to protest, to ask why the hell it has to be you and Natasha, but Steve cuts in before you can build a sentence. "The targets only deal with other couples. They’ve got an entire social network of 'perfectly ordinary' married business partners. We’ve tried approaching them as buyers, suppliers, even security consultants. The only people who get close to the inner circle are the ones who look like they’ve got their personal lives wrapped up in a nice, boring, domestic bow."
"And you think we look domestic," you say, dry.
Natasha tilts her head, glancing sideways at you. "You clean up well."
The heat rises uninvited to your cheeks, and you quickly glance away, pretending to reread the mission summary on the tablet in front of you, but the words blur together. Married. To Natasha. For weeks, maybe months, depending on how long this mission drags.
Tony leans forward, elbows on the table. "I’ll do you one better," he says, voice practically dripping with mischief. "I bet you two can’t last the whole op without one of you catching real feelings."
Your head snaps up, and you glare at him. "That’s not how this works."
"Sure it is," he counters, all easy charm. "I’ve seen enough movies. Undercover couples, confined spaces, emotional vulnerability, a few candlelit stakeouts... hearts start doing stupid things. Science."
You scoff. "That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard."
Natasha doesn’t answer immediately, just picks up her coffee and takes a slow sip, watching you over the rim of her mug. There’s a glint in her eye — that same playful, knowing look she gets when she’s already figured out how a fight is going to end before it even starts. She sets the mug down, smooth and deliberate.
"Maybe Tony’s right," she murmurs.
You whip your head toward her, fully prepared to tell her where she can shove Tony’s bet, but she’s not even looking at you now, fingers absently twisting the thin bracelet on her wrist, like she’s just making conversation.
Steve clears his throat, pulling the room back to the task at hand. "This isn’t about your feelings. It’s about getting inside the target's compound, staying invisible, and gathering intel. Keep your personal lives out of it."
"Not a problem," you mutter, leaning back in your chair.
But the thing is — your chest is still tight. Your palms still feel clammy. Because somewhere deep down, under the layers of self-control and well-practiced denial, you know Tony isn’t making that bet for his own entertainment. He’s making it because everyone else sees it. Maybe even Natasha. Everyone but you.
And maybe the most dangerous part isn’t the mission at all. Maybe it’s the fact that you’re starting to wonder if Tony’s right.
The briefing ends, but your thoughts don’t.
You’re the last to leave the room, lingering by the table, fingers tapping against the cool metal surface like the rhythm might steady your head. Natasha stays, too, but she doesn’t say anything, doesn’t move to leave. You feel her eyes on you before you hear her voice.
"Cold feet already?" she asks, soft, a little teasing.
You glance at her. She’s standing with her arms folded, leaning against the wall, relaxed in a way that makes it obvious she isn’t worried. Not about the mission. Not about pretending to be your wife. Probably not about the bet, either.
"I don’t get cold feet," you reply, a little sharper than you mean to.
"Sure," she says, pushing off the wall, closing the distance between you in slow, measured steps. "You’re just thinking about the wedding dress."
The corner of her mouth quirks up, and your stomach flips — that same damn reaction you’ve been trying to ignore since the first time she smiled at you like that, months ago. Maybe longer.
"I didn’t realize the mission came with vows," you shoot back, trying to sound unaffected.
She stops close enough that you catch the faint scent of her perfume — clean, sharp, with a hint of something darker underneath. "We’ll improvise."
You should walk away. You should say something smart and sarcastic and get the hell out of the room before your thoughts spiral any further. But you don’t move. You don’t say anything. You just stand there, letting the silence stretch between you, letting her look at you like she knows. Like she’s always known.
"See you at the fitting," she murmurs, brushing past you, and you’re left standing there, pulse hammering in your throat.
The next morning is a blur of fake IDs, forged marriage licenses, and wardrobe fittings. Stark’s tech team spares no detail — new credit histories, social security numbers, medical records. Matching bands that sit heavy on your left hand even though the metal is light, and it feels strange, wrong, like you’re wearing someone else’s life.
Natasha doesn’t flinch once.
She slides the ring onto her finger like it belongs there, like this is all just another role in her long list of identities, and maybe for her it is. But every time you catch the glint of gold on her hand, it sends your brain into another loop, because pretending to be married is one thing. Being close to her every second of the day, sharing a bed, a house, little intimate domestic details you’ve never shared with anyone — that’s something else entirely.
You tell yourself you can handle it.
You’ve lied to yourself about worse.
That night, the team gathers in the common room. The mission clock starts tomorrow, and Tony’s already got the scotch out, pouring generous glasses for anyone who wants them. You sip slowly, the burn of it a welcome distraction, until his voice cuts through the low buzz of conversation.
"Still taking bets, by the way," he announces, swirling his glass lazily. "Anyone else think our happy couple won’t make it out without falling head over heels?"
Rhodey groans. "Jesus, Tony."
But the seed’s been planted, and the others aren’t immune to curiosity. Even Steve looks faintly amused, though he tries to mask it behind a long sip of water.
"I’m serious," Tony insists, turning toward you now, eyes sharp under the humor. "You think you’ve got nerves of steel, but even the best cracks under the right conditions. I’ve seen it happen."
"I’m not the one you should be worried about," you mutter, trying to sound confident.
Natasha, lounging on the other end of the couch, lifts an eyebrow. "No?"
Her voice is light, but there’s something behind it — something that makes your chest ache and your throat go dry all at once.
"No," you repeat, steadier now, because admitting the truth — even to yourself — isn’t an option. "I know how to keep my feelings in check."
Tony lifts his glass in a mock toast. "Famous last words."
The conversation drifts, but the bet lingers, unspoken and heavy. You know Tony well enough to realize he’s not going to let it go — not until he’s proven right. And some part of you, deep down, is terrified that he will be.
Because if you’re honest with yourself, the feelings have been there all along.
You’ve just been too scared to name them.
You don’t sleep the night before the mission.
The ring digs into your finger every time you turn over, an alien weight, like your skin hasn’t accepted the lie yet. The apartment’s quiet except for the occasional hum of New York traffic bleeding through the windows, but your mind is too loud for the silence to soothe you. Images of the mission cycle on repeat — false smiles, fake dinners, pretending to be Natasha Romanoff’s wife in public and, worse, behind closed doors.
You tell yourself you’re just being thorough, that the mental rehearsals will help you slip into character once you land. But you know better. The unease isn’t about the mission.
It’s about her.
When the morning comes, you meet her at the airstrip.
Natasha’s already there when you arrive, leaning against the sleek black SUV that’s going to carry you both away from the world you know. Her hair’s pulled back, her casual clothes pressed and perfect, and her duffel slung over one shoulder. She looks like she’s done this a thousand times. She probably has.
When her eyes flick over to you, her mouth curves slightly at the corners, but there’s no teasing in it this time. Just quiet acknowledgment.
"Ready, Mrs. Romanoff?" she says, voice low, only for you.
The name knocks the air from your lungs for a second, sharp and unexpected, even though you knew it was coming. You recover fast, but not fast enough to miss the glint of something amused — or maybe something softer — in her gaze.
You clear your throat. "As I’ll ever be."
The jet’s engines hum to life as you climb aboard, and the reality of it finally locks into place. Once you land, there’s no out. No ‘just kidding.’ No walking it back. You’re her wife until the mission says otherwise.
The flight is quiet, comfortable in the way only practiced professionals can be, but the silence between you isn’t empty. It’s full of unsaid things, unacknowledged tension, the unspoken history you’ve both worked so hard to sidestep until now. You don’t talk about Tony’s bet. You don’t talk about the way her shoulder brushes against yours as you sit side by side, or how your pulse jumps every time it happens.
You focus on the mission.
You have to.
The house is tucked away in a wealthy, suburban neighborhood just outside D.C. White picket fences, manicured lawns, two-car garages — the kind of place where the neighbors are nosy and the barbecues are mandatory.
It’s picture-perfect. So perfect it makes your skin crawl.
SHIELD set up the paperwork weeks ago. The house is "yours" now. New names. New jobs. A fake history built brick by brick. You’re supposed to be recent transplants from Chicago, moving here for a fresh start. Married three years. No kids. "Madly in love" — the profile says so, clear as day.
The moment you step inside the house, the air shifts.
You drop your bags in the entryway, glancing around. It’s fully furnished, every room dressed for the part. Two toothbrushes already waiting in the bathroom. A coffee maker with two matching mugs. The bed, large enough to be convincing, sits in the master bedroom with crisp, untouched sheets.
This is where the real mission begins.
Natasha moves through the space like she’s already lived here for years, checking windows, doors, security feeds. You stand by the staircase, hands still gripping your bag like it’s the only real thing left in the world.
She glances over her shoulder at you.
"You can breathe, you know," she says lightly.
You exhale, slow and unsteady, and let the bag slip from your fingers.
"I’m fine," you lie.
Her lips tilt up, not calling you on it. She doesn’t have to. She walks past you, close enough that her shoulder brushes yours again, and you wonder how long it’ll take before you stop noticing every time she touches you.
The first few days are the easy part.
Neighborhood introductions, casual smiles, hand-holding when the eyes are on you. You learn the script — where "you met," the inside jokes "you share," the story of "your honeymoon" that Natasha tells with such perfect ease it almost convinces even you.
She’s good at this. You expected that. What you didn’t expect was how natural it feels when her hand slips into yours on cue, how your body starts to memorize the rhythm of it, how your heart doesn’t seem to understand the difference between the role and reality.
The nights are the hardest.
The bedroom is too quiet. The bed is too big. And she’s there, so close you can feel the warmth radiating off her, but not close enough to touch. You lay awake, night after night, the ceiling fan whirring overhead, your mind circling the same impossible thought:
What if Tony’s right?
A week in, the first phase of the mission finally begins.
The targets — the Callahans — host their monthly couples’ mixer, an event designed to vet potential new members of their inner circle. Suburban espionage at its finest. You dress the part: tasteful jewelry, a sleek cocktail dress, heels just tall enough to make you feel unsteady even though you’ve been through worse.
Natasha helps you zip the back of your dress. Her fingers graze the bare skin of your spine, light and unhurried, and you feel the contact like a matchstrike down your nerves.
"You’re tense," she observes.
"Thanks for the update," you reply, dry.
Her hands pause at the small of your back. The air between you stills, heavy, before she leans in just slightly, her lips brushing your ear.
"You’ll be fine," she says. "I’ve got you."
The words settle in your chest, soft and dangerous.
You wonder if she means them for the mission or for something else entirely.
The Callahans are exactly the type of people who wear fake smiles like armor. They host in their sprawling backyard, wine glasses in hand, laughter that’s a little too loud, compliments that sound rehearsed. You and Natasha fall into step effortlessly, her hand on your waist, your laugh just the right amount of affectionate when you introduce yourselves as "Nat and Y/N Romanoff."
Every time you glance at her, she’s already looking at you.
Every time your hand brushes hers, your skin buzzes like a live wire.
You start to forget the lines between the role and the truth.
It’s Natasha who anchors you through it, steady as always. She whispers little observations against the shell of your ear, her fingers idly tracing along the curve of your waist, playing the part of a lovesick wife so perfectly that, for a moment, you let yourself believe it.
And that’s the problem. You believe it too easily.
The car ride home is silent, but not empty.
Her hand rests on your thigh, casual, but her thumb moves in slow circles against the fabric of your dress, absent-minded or intentional — you can’t tell anymore. You don’t move away. You just sit there, staring out the window, pretending the flush in your cheeks is from the wine and not from her.
The days bleed together after that.
Breakfasts in a sunlit kitchen, brushing shoulders while you pretend to fight over who gets the last cup of coffee. Grocery trips, hands entwined. Laughing at something on the TV you’re not really watching because she’s lying too close, her head tipped back against your shoulder.
It’s so easy to fall into the fiction.
But every time you let your guard down, it feels less like fiction.
And that’s when the real danger starts.
It’s two weeks in when the mission takes its first sharp turn.
The Callahans extend an invitation — dinner at their private estate. Intimate, exclusive. A sign you’ve earned their trust. It’s everything you’ve been waiting for, the real start of the operation, and yet the thought of another night playing house with Natasha feels more dangerous than any weapon you’ve ever faced.
You dress carefully. So does she.
The drive is quiet, both of you braced for the night ahead. But as you pull up to the wrought-iron gates, Natasha’s hand slips into yours — not for show this time, not because anyone’s watching.
Just because.
Your fingers tighten around hers, and for once, you don’t let go.
The night is a blur of wine and veiled threats. The Callahans’ smiles stretch thinner the longer the evening drags on, and the more questions they ask about your marriage, the more you feel the walls closing in. Natasha, as always, answers effortlessly. Her hand rests on yours on the dinner table, thumb stroking slow, grounding you through every half-lie, every false story.
And the scariest part isn’t how convincing she is.
It’s how convincing you feel.
When you finally get home, the air between you is taut and heavy, stretched thin from the night’s performance. You kick off your heels, moving to the kitchen, fingers fumbling for a glass of water, but she doesn’t let you slip back into distance.
Her voice is quiet behind you.
"You were perfect tonight."
You turn, leaning against the counter, heart still thudding too hard against your ribs. "I’m just doing my job."
She steps closer, the space between you shrinking until her hand comes to rest against your jaw, her thumb brushing your cheekbone, the gesture soft and deliberate.
"Sure," she says, voice low. "If you say so."
The moment lingers, unspoken but undeniable, before she finally steps back and leaves you standing there, throat dry, the glass still empty in your hands.
You lie awake that night, staring at the ceiling, and for the first time you wonder if the lie’s already won.
Time does strange things on this mission.
The days stretch long, soaked in the kind of domestic quiet you’ve spent your life avoiding, and the nights feel shorter, heavier, loaded with unspoken tension that hums beneath every shared glance and every brush of fingers. The house you’ve been planted in feels less like a safe house and more like a cage the longer you’re in it, but the strangest part is — you don’t want to escape.
Or maybe you just don’t want to escape her.
The Callahans invite you over more often now. Casual drinks on their patio, afternoon barbecues, double dates with other couples from the neighborhood, the kind of social life designed to dig its hooks into your cover until the fiction starts feeling real. Natasha makes it look easy. You tell yourself you’re just following her lead.
But each day makes the act harder to separate from the truth.
You’re sitting on the Callahans’ back porch one warm Saturday afternoon, sunglasses perched on your nose, glass of wine balanced loosely between your fingers. The conversation hums around you, harmless on the surface — vacation plans, new furniture, which country club is worth the membership fee — but the subtext is always there, coiled beneath every perfectly polite smile.
You feel Natasha shift beside you before you see her move.
Her hand drapes lazily over your knee, thumb grazing the inside of your thigh in a way that looks casual to anyone else, but sets your pulse hammering behind your ribs. You tilt your head just slightly toward her, enough to catch her mouth tugging into the faintest smile.
One of the Callahans — Evelyn — leans forward, resting her chin on her hand, studying you both over the rim of her glass.
"You two are sickening, you know that?" she says, voice light but sharp at the edges. "Still looking at each other like it’s the honeymoon phase."
You force a smile, your throat dry, but Natasha’s voice slides in before yours can.
"Guess we’re just lucky," she says, turning her head toward you, her eyes holding yours, steady and unblinking.
And then she kisses you.
It’s soft, easy, the kind of practiced affection couples build over years, but it steals the air from your lungs all the same. Her lips move against yours with the barest hint of pressure, long enough to convince the audience, short enough to leave you wondering if it meant something more.
When she pulls back, her thumb brushes your cheek, lingering for a heartbeat too long.
You laugh, the sound brittle in your own ears, and glance back at Evelyn, who looks vaguely amused, swirling her wine.
"Disgusting," she teases.
"Can’t help it," Natasha murmurs, her voice low enough that only you can hear. "It’s the company I keep."
The conversation drifts on, but you don’t hear much of it after that. Not with your pulse still roaring in your ears, not with the ghost of her lips still lingering on yours.
It doesn’t stop there.
After that afternoon, the casual affection becomes part of the routine. Little things at first. Her hand finding yours on the armrest during dinner parties. Her fingers brushing against your jaw when you laugh at something, tucking a strand of hair behind your ear. Lingering glances. Private smiles. Lips pressed to your temple when the others aren’t looking — and sometimes when they are.
The strange part is how natural it starts to feel.
Like your body is learning a new language, one you’ve never let yourself speak before. One that feels terrifying and safe all at once when it’s her.
At night, the space between you shrinks.
You still lie on opposite sides of the bed, but the gap isn’t what it used to be. Some nights your hands brush in the dark, knuckles grazing, and neither of you moves away. Sometimes her breath is close enough to stir the fine hairs on your cheek. Sometimes you fall asleep wondering what it would feel like if you closed the distance.
Sometimes you wake up wondering if you already did.
Another week passes.
The mission threads itself deeper into your bones. The Callahans grow more comfortable around you. Their conversations become more relaxed, less guarded, but the danger sharpens in the spaces where they lower their smiles. You catch little fragments of the real reason you’re here: encrypted shipments, payments routed through shell companies, names that don’t appear on any official record.
You and Natasha are close. So close you can taste the finish line. But the closer you get, the harder it is to ignore the fact that the mission isn’t the only thing changing.
It’s a Thursday evening when Evelyn invites the two of you for drinks, just the four of you, no other couples, no pretense of neighborhood charm. The conversation is sharp, deliberate, the subtext clear — this is the final vetting. The last test before you’re allowed fully inside.
Halfway through the night, Evelyn leans back on the plush sofa, swirling her whiskey, eyes trained on you both.
"You know," she muses, "I’ve always been good at spotting fake couples."
Your spine stiffens, but Natasha doesn’t even blink.
"Is that so?" she asks, tilting her head slightly.
Evelyn’s lips curve into a knowing smile. "Mhm. Most people don’t even realize when the act slips. There’s always a tell. A moment when you forget to hold hands. Or your gaze doesn’t follow when they leave the room. The body knows, even when the mind’s trying to lie."
Her gaze flicks to you, sharp and assessing.
"So tell me," she purrs, "what’s your tell?"
You don’t get a chance to answer, because Natasha leans in and kisses you.
There’s nothing casual about it this time. It’s deliberate. Slow. Her hand cups your jaw, guiding your face toward hers, and her mouth moves against yours with the kind of quiet certainty that makes your head spin.
When she pulls back, her voice is soft but steady.
"We don’t have one," she says simply.
Evelyn hums, swirling her drink, and after a long moment, she leans back with a satisfied smile, like she’s found what she was looking for.
"Good answer."
The conversation moves on. You’re not sure how. You’re not sure when you start breathing again. But the whole drive home, Natasha doesn’t speak. And neither do you.
When you get back to the house, you stand in the dark of the entryway, the front door clicking shut behind you, your heart still racing.
"That was risky," you say finally.
Natasha’s standing by the staircase, her expression unreadable. "It worked."
"Yeah," you murmur. "It did."
She starts up the stairs, but her voice floats back to you before she disappears from sight.
"You kissed me back."
And you can’t argue with that.
The next day is quiet.
You go through the motions. Morning coffee, light conversation, casual touches. The routine you’ve spent weeks perfecting. But the air between you feels different, stretched thin and humming with something you’re not ready to name.
By the time night falls, the silence is suffocating.
You stand in the bathroom, brushing your teeth, staring at your own reflection like you might find answers there. You don’t. You never do.
When you step into the bedroom, Natasha’s already lying on her side of the bed, one arm tucked beneath her head, eyes half-lidded but awake. Watching you.
The space feels smaller than usual.
You slide under the covers, lying flat on your back, staring at the ceiling.
"Nat," you say, barely above a whisper.
She hums, a soft acknowledgment, waiting.
"You didn’t have to kiss me like that."
A pause. Long. Heavy.
Her voice is quiet when it finally comes.
"I know."
You swallow, your throat dry, heart pounding in your chest. "So why did you?"
You feel her shift beside you. Closer. Close enough that her hand finds yours beneath the covers, her fingers sliding between yours, warm and steady.
"Because I wanted to," she says.
And for the first time in weeks, you stop pretending.
The mission doesn’t slow down, but the lies do.
Every day you spend in that house, every smile you fake for the Callahans, every staged moment of affection you put on for the world outside — it all starts to blend into something you can’t separate from the real thing. The glances aren’t rehearsed anymore. The touches linger longer. The kisses, when they happen, aren’t always part of the job.
And the scariest part is you don’t care.
You’re not sure when it happens, exactly. Maybe it’s the night you fall asleep tangled together, her breath warm against your neck, her hand resting low on your waist. Maybe it’s the morning you wake up and her lips press against your bare shoulder before you’ve even opened your eyes. Maybe it’s every moment in between.
But at some point, the mission stops feeling like the dangerous part.
And your feelings start to do the rest.
You know the mission is almost over.
You can feel it in the way the Callahans act around you now — the easy smiles that no longer hold suspicion, the conversations that slip from surface-level charm into quiet confessions. You’ve done your job. You’ve won their trust. Any day now, the op will reach its end, and the files you’re after will be in your hands.
But the thought of the mission ending doesn’t feel like victory.
It feels like loss.
Because when the mission ends, the world snaps back into place — and this, whatever this is between you and Natasha, will disappear with it.
That night, the air inside the house is heavy. Too quiet. The kind of stillness that presses against your chest and makes you restless.
You’re curled on the living room sofa, barefoot, wearing one of her old T-shirts — part of the cover, you told yourself at first, but the comfort is real, the way it smells like her is real. Natasha sits on the other end, one leg tucked under herself, thumbing through her phone without really looking at it.
It’s late, but neither of you moves to go upstairs. The TV plays some muted documentary you stopped paying attention to twenty minutes ago. You sip your wine slowly, trying to drown the nerves coiled tight in your stomach.
She notices.
"Talk to me," she says softly.
You glance over at her, meeting her eyes, the glow of the TV catching the warm flecks of green in them. The words stick in your throat, the weight of everything you’ve spent weeks burying pressing too hard for you to swallow.
"You keep looking at me like that," you say, your voice low and a little shaky, "and I’m going to start thinking you mean it."
Her lips twitch, just slightly, but her gaze doesn’t waver.
"What if I do?" she murmurs.
The room tilts. Or maybe it’s just your heart, tripping over itself. You set your glass down, your fingers unsteady, and force yourself to breathe. The silence stretches, the space between you shrinking without either of you moving.
"You’ve done this before," you say. It’s not a question.
"Done what?"
"This," you gesture, your voice softer now. "Falling for someone during a mission. Blurring lines. Pretending until it stops feeling like a lie."
Her head tips to the side, studying you like she’s seeing through every deflection, every wall you’ve ever built.
"I’ve had my share of mistakes," she admits. "But this isn’t one of them."
The words settle deep, heavier than you expect. Because you’ve never let yourself think about it in those terms — not the mission, not her, not yourself.
But here you are. And here she is. And there’s nothing left between you but the truth.
You stand, legs unsteady, crossing the space to her, your heart thudding so hard you’re sure she can hear it. When you stop in front of her, her hands reach for your hips, guiding you gently into her lap. You straddle her, your hands curling against her shoulders, your forehead resting against hers.
"This is different for me," you whisper. "You know that, right?"
Her hands slide along your waist, steady and slow, her touch grounding you.
"I know," she says quietly. "I’ve known since the beginning."
And then her lips find yours.
It’s soft at first — a question, not a demand. Her mouth moves against yours with unhurried care, coaxing you to relax into the moment. You kiss her back, tasting the unspoken promises in the way her lips part for you, the way her hand slides to the back of your neck, fingers threading through your hair.
When she deepens the kiss, your heart stutters, and a soft sound escapes you before you can stop it. Her other hand traces the curve of your back, anchoring you against her, your bodies fitting together like the final piece of a puzzle you’ve spent your whole life pretending didn’t exist.
When she finally pulls back, her breath is warm against your cheek.
"We don’t have to do anything you don’t want to," she says softly.
You shake your head, your voice a whisper. "I want to."
Her thumb strokes along your jaw, slow and patient. "Are you sure?"
And you are. Even if your chest feels too tight, even if your hands shake a little. Because it’s her. Because it’s always been her.
You nod.
She kisses you again, slower this time, deeper, her hands guiding you gently. She doesn’t rush — she never does. Everything about her is patient, steady, like she understands the way your mind is spinning and knows exactly how to quiet it. Her lips trail from your mouth to your neck, soft and lingering, and your body arches toward her without conscious thought.
When she stands, lifting you easily in her arms, you let out a breathless laugh, your hands clinging to her shoulders.
She carries you upstairs, the house silent except for the soft sounds of your breathing, the pulse pounding in your ears. The bedroom feels different when you step inside, like the walls themselves are holding their breath.
She lays you down on the bed, hovering over you, her hand brushing your hair back from your face.
"You okay?" she murmurs.
You nod, your voice barely steady. "Yeah."
Her lips curve into a soft smile, one you’ve never seen from her on a mission before. It’s real. All of it is real.
Her hands map your body slowly, tracing the lines of your figure like she’s memorizing every inch. Clothes slip away, layer by layer, and every brush of her skin against yours sends sparks through your veins. She takes her time, coaxing every sound from your lips, reading your body like a language you never knew you could speak.
It’s overwhelming. But it’s perfect.
And when she finally makes you fall apart beneath her hands, beneath her mouth, you don’t feel scared. You don’t feel unsure. You feel safe.
You feel wanted.
When it’s over, you lie tangled together in the soft dark, your head resting against her chest, her fingers idly tracing patterns on your back.
"I’ve never..." you start, your voice soft, unsteady. "With anyone. I’ve never done this. Not like that. Not with—"
"A woman," she finishes for you, voice gentle. "I know."
You tilt your head, looking up at her. Her expression is open, unguarded, and there’s no judgment in her eyes. Just quiet understanding.
"I didn’t think it’d ever happen," you admit. "I didn’t think I’d ever want it to."
Her hand brushes along your cheek, thumb stroking the corner of your mouth.
"You just didn’t meet the right person yet."
And you think, maybe, that she’s right.
The next morning, the mission ends.
It happens quietly. Efficiently. The intel drops into your hands on a flash drive, the Callahans none the wiser, and SHIELD pulls the plug before the sun even sets. There’s no fight, no fireworks, no dramatic farewell.
Just a text.
Extraction in 2 hours. Pack light.
You sit on the edge of the bed, staring at the message, your chest heavy. Natasha’s quiet as she folds the last of her things into her duffel, her movements precise, practiced. But when she glances over at you, her eyes soften.
"You okay?" she asks.
You nod, even though you’re not sure. "Yeah."
But you both know the truth. The mission ending isn’t what’s making your hands tremble. It’s the question you’ve been avoiding since the moment you let her touch you.
What happens now?
She crosses the room, standing between your knees, her hands resting on your shoulders. You tip your head back, meeting her gaze, searching for something — reassurance, an answer, anything.
"This doesn’t have to be the end," she says softly.
Your throat tightens. "You don’t have to say that."
"I’m not saying it because I have to." She leans in, brushing her lips against your forehead. "I’m saying it because I want to."
And for the first time, you let yourself believe it.
The compound feels like another life when you step back through its doors.
No more matching coffee mugs. No more sunlit kitchen mornings. No more pretending to be Natasha Romanoff’s wife.
But the space between you doesn’t snap back the way you expected.
She still stands close. Her hand still brushes yours when you pass each other in the hallway. Her glances still linger, heavy and unspoken, and yours do too.
And when Tony greets you both in the briefing room, all smug and self-satisfied, you know he can see it written all over your face.
"Well, well," he drawls, folding his arms over his chest. "Look at you two. Almost makes me wonder who owes who money."
Natasha’s mouth curves into a knowing smile, her gaze flicking to yours for a split second before she answers.
"Let’s just say," she says, voice smooth, "the mission was a success."
And as her hand brushes yours under the table, fingers curling lightly around your own, you know it wasn’t the mission she meant.
It was everything else.
The days after the mission feel like waking up from a long, strange dream.
Everything’s back to normal on the surface: briefing rooms, morning runs, mission debriefs, shared dinners with the team that taste like old habits. But underneath it all, something lingers. Something warm and unfamiliar.
She lingers.
Natasha doesn’t push. She never does. She just waits, steady as gravity, her presence as easy and quiet as it was back in the safe house — only now there’s no act to lean on, no neighborhood barbecues or suburban smiles. Just you, her, and the weight of everything unsaid.
You find yourself looking for her more than usual. Not because you need to. Because you want to.
And every time your eyes meet hers, you feel it all over again. That night. Her hands, her mouth, the way her voice had wrapped around your name like it was something precious.
You’re sitting on the compound’s rooftop three nights later when she finds you. The air is cool, the city stretching quiet and endless beyond the edge of the building. You hear her before you see her — the soft scuff of boots on concrete, the familiar weight of her presence sliding in beside you.
Neither of you speaks for a long moment. The silence isn’t awkward, though. It’s comfortable, the kind that sits between two people who already know the conversation is coming, but neither wants to force it.
Finally, she breaks it, voice low and careful.
"You’ve been avoiding me."
You glance at her, meeting those sharp green eyes, and even now — even with everything that’s already passed between you — she still makes your heart trip over itself.
"Not avoiding," you say softly. "Just… thinking."
Her lips twitch at the corner, but there’s no judgment in her expression.
"About us?"
The word sits heavy between you. Us.
You nod, looking back out at the skyline.
"I don’t know how to do this," you admit, your voice barely more than a whisper. "I’ve never done this. Not like this."
Her hand moves, slow and unhurried, resting on top of yours. Her thumb strokes the back of your hand, steady and warm, grounding you the way she always does.
"You don’t have to know," she murmurs. "You just have to want to."
You let out a quiet breath, one you hadn’t realized you’d been holding.
"I do."
And just like that, the tension slips from your shoulders.
She shifts closer, her knee brushing against yours, her fingers sliding between your own.
"So do I."
The simplicity of it knocks the air out of your chest. Because for all the nights you spent lying awake, trying to make sense of your feelings, trying to pretend they weren’t real — she’s known. She’s always known. And she’s never once rushed you.
You tilt your head, studying her in the soft moonlight, and the question tumbles out before you can stop it.
"What happens now?"
Her smile is slow and easy, but her gaze is steady, unwavering.
"Now we stop pretending."
She leans in, her hand cupping your jaw, thumb brushing along your cheek. The kiss is soft, unhurried, tasting of unspoken promises. When she pulls back, her forehead rests lightly against yours.
"Now I get to take you out on a real date," she says, her voice low and teasing, "and kiss you like I’ve been wanting to since day one."
Your breath catches, heat curling in your stomach, your body leaning into hers before you even realize it.
"And here I thought you were already doing a pretty good job at that."
Her fingers trail down your neck, her touch featherlight but loaded with intent.
"That was just the warm-up, sweetheart."
The flush rises hot on your skin, but you don’t pull away. Not this time. You tip your head slightly, giving her the silent invitation you’ve been too scared to voice for days.
She takes it.
Her lips find yours again, deeper this time, slow but certain. The kind of kiss that’s meant to undo you, and it does. Your hands tangle in her hair, pulling her closer, your body arching into hers as the kiss turns hungrier, the space between you dissolving.
When she finally pulls back, both of you breathless, her voice dips lower, her thumb tracing lazy circles on your thigh.
"I want this to be real," she says. "Not just a mission. Not just one night. You. Me."
Your chest tightens, but this time it’s not fear. It’s hope.
"Okay," you whisper, voice soft but steady. "I want that too."
And just like that, it’s decided.
She leans in again, pressing a kiss to your neck, slow and lingering, making your stomach twist and your breath hitch. Her hand slips beneath the hem of your shirt, palm splayed against your skin, and the warmth of her touch sends sparks through you.
"Then let me take you inside," she murmurs against your skin. "Let me remind you exactly how real this is."
Your heart stumbles, your body answering before your voice does, your fingers tightening in her hair, pulling her mouth back to yours.
The kiss is all heat and wanting, all slow teasing and quiet desperation, the rooftop air cool against your flushed skin. When she finally pulls away, her breath is ragged, her eyes dark and hungry.
She stands, offering her hand, and you take it without hesitation.
The walk back to her room is quiet, your hands laced together, the air between you humming with unspoken promises.
The moment the door clicks shut, her mouth is back on yours, her hands framing your face, holding you steady as your world tilts around her. Your fingers fumble at the hem of her shirt, and she lets you take your time, guiding your hands, her patience making your heart ache.
When her shirt slips away, you step back for just a second, your gaze roaming over her, equal parts nerves and awe. She watches you, her lips curving into the softest smile.
"You’re allowed to look," she teases, her voice low, sultry, but tender underneath. "I’m not going anywhere."
You close the space between you, pressing your lips to her shoulder, tasting her skin, your hands finding their way along the curve of her waist. She shivers beneath your touch, and the quiet, breathy sound she lets out sends heat pooling deep in your stomach.
She takes her time with you, undressing you like it’s an art, like every piece of clothing is a boundary falling away. When you’re finally bare beneath her, stretched out on her bed, her body covering yours, her lips brushing along your throat, the nerves melt away — leaving only want.
Her hands map the shape of you, relearning you, coaxing every soft sound from your lips with each lingering kiss, each slow slide of her fingers. And when her mouth trails lower, her lips and tongue replacing her hands, your body arches into her without shame.
It’s different this time. Not rushed. Not born from the mission’s pressure.
It’s real.
And when you fall apart beneath her, breathless and shaking, her name the only thing you can manage, you realize you’ve never felt more wanted, more known, more safe.
After, you lie tangled together in the quiet, her fingers brushing lazily along your bare arm, your cheek resting on her shoulder, your heart still racing.
"So," you murmur, your voice low and sleep-heavy. "Does this make you my girlfriend?"
You feel her laugh more than you hear it, soft and warm against your skin.
"If you’ll have me," she says, pressing a kiss to the top of your head.
You tilt your face up, meeting her eyes, your smile soft and unguarded.
"I already do."
She kisses you, slow and sweet, her fingers threading through yours under the sheets.
And for the first time, there’s no pretending. Just you, her, and the beginning of something real.
help I hope this Makes sense...
#amethyst arachnid#marvel#marvel fanfiction#comics#marvel x reader#gaming#movies#x reader#natasha romanoff x reader#natasha romanoff#natasha romanov#natasha x reader#natasha romanoff x you#natalia romanova#black widow#the black widow#natasha romanoff imagine#natasha romanoff fanfic#black widow x reader#black widow x female reader#black widow x you#black widow x y/n#natasha romanoff x fem reader#x fem reader
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team furries twoooo. And scalies. And whatever birds are.
please share and donate to this family of four, the youngest being only 2 1/2 years old. They need funds to safely cross to Egypt. If you donate something, send me a message with proof and I’ll draw you something nice as a thank you :)
Species and concept art under cut!
Sniper: so for some reason I was under the impression that Crocs were native to new zealand. They are not. Uh. Well. yup. 👍 it fits his personality. snappy n dangerous but real easy to get around if you just zig-zag. Why the long fa
Spy: Grey Fox. I was gonna go with a wolf because of his fursona but fox fits better wahhhh. Also means that scout is half fox! I’ll show that in more detail one day. Probably.
Medic: just like his Doves! The tail coat is actual his real tail. Featherrrrrs. Why are his nasty claws out? I don’t know he’s kinda weird like that.
Demo: TIGER!!!!! He’s always kinda reminded me of Hobbes from Calvin and Hobbes :) why did I draw him so cute. Somebody stop me before I draw them all adorable ough.
Engineer: the bulllllerrrrrrrrr. Sorry. He’s a bull, with a nose ring. Epic. Hooves for hands, gunslinger would look like a hoof too, gotta design that later.
Heavy: big badass brown bear. Love him. Instead of bullet he has honey sticks. It costs four hundred thousand dollars to harvest honey… for 12 seconds.
Pyro: fucking dragon. hell yeah. In pyroland they see themselves as a unicorn. Baller.
Scout: Bunny scout truther over here. You can thank @/teamfurtress for that. Please check them out, commissions are open! In my version he’s a hare but that is significantly less fun to say lol. Jackrabbit kinda guy.
Soldier: regular ole dog. ouppy to da max. He’s the most dog of the alol time and I’m tired of pretending he’s not. THE STRAPS ON HIS HELEMT ARE HIS EARS. HIS BIG TEETH AND OPEN MOUTHED SMILE. THE WAY HE MOVES. DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME?!???!??????! That’s a grown man with dick n balls what am I doing
Some designs for the side characters that I couldn’t be arsed to finish. Saxton is kangaroo because of corse he is. Admin is a bat because she never leaves her room, Pauling is mouse because is cute, Zhanna is bear like big brother, Merasmus is praying mantis, and Gray Mann + Olivia Mann are vultures! She’s so fluffy oh my god
Concept time. I fell in love with wrinkly floppy dog sniper. Adorable. Unfortunately I already had a dog so he had to go </3 kangaroo sniper was also axed. rip girl. Lots of diff designs for admin! Curtesy of @stangeranfanficion (thank u for the ideass) eagle soldier because it’s funny. Also zebra Pauling! I really like this one. If I make a horse au she’s going to be a zebra.
#tf2#tf2 fanart#furry#furry art#tf2 medic#tf2 scout#tf2 spy#tf2 soldier#tf2 sniper#tf2 pyro#tf2 demoman#tf2 engineer#tf2 heavy#tf2 whole team#furrification#lol#tf2 saxton hale#tf2 administrator#miss pauling#zhanna tf2#merasmus#gray mann#olivia mann#ruths doodles#Holy crap that’s a lot of tags
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𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐧𝐟𝐢𝐫𝐞 [𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐥𝐨𝐠𝐮𝐞]
pairing. kinich x fem!reader
word count. 700
genre/warnings. childhood friends to lovers, slow burn, fluff and angst, drabble collection
summary.
in which kinich learns the value of all things: lives, friendship, and, of course, you. or, in which kinich realizes that you are the only priceless thing in this world.
author's note. this is just a short prologue to show how things end (yay happy endings!), but the two have a lot of trauma to go through before they reach endgame. i love kinich's character and design so i'm excited for this! interaction is highly appreciated :)
𝐦𝐚𝐬𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭 | 𝐧𝐞𝐱𝐭 ↣
Kinich thinks he’s loved you since forever.
He has no way of proving that, of course; those years are long gone, and even if he had the opportunity to ask, he’s not sure his younger self would have a comprehensible answer. He can only see now that he’s come so far, when the memories are too murky to make sense of but the warmth remains—when he thinks of your smile and feels something akin to the weightlessness of grappling and flying through the trees.
He says “forever” because he really has no idea when it started—the realization came far after the feeling. He’d been before school age when he met you for the first time, and it’s been over a decade since then.
“Kinich!”
Your call interrupts his thoughts, and his gaze is drawn skyward—you’re standing somewhere far above him, on one of the walkways lining the cliffs of the Scions of the Canopy. You’re waving so wildly and ridiculously that it almost makes him smile.
“Are you coming down?��� he calls through cupped hands, well-acquainted with this kind of long-distance communication. Sound tends to echo well between the cliffs here, and he’s sure you heard him when you offer an enthusiastic thumbs-up in return.
“Yup! I bought a few things, so I was hoping you could help me carry them home!”
Kinich rolls his eyes teasingly. “Somehow I doubt that you have enough Mora left to afford my services.”
You pout in reply. Ajaw decides to appear then, a malicious puff of smoke over Kinich’s shoulder. “Of course not! You better not be making fun of me, letting some mortal treat you like a servant! The Almighty Dragonlord, K’uhul Ajaw, won’t take this kind of disrespect—”
Ignoring his wordy introduction, you call down to Kinich again. “I’m coming down! Think fast!”
“—Don’t make me lau—wait, what?!”
Even Ajaw yelps in surprise as you take a running leap off the walkway, freefalling fast down the plane of the cliff. If he were any younger, Kinich might’ve had a heart attack. But you’ve been pushing your luck with him for years, and it comes as instinct when Kinich grapples up, deftly catching you in his arms with a light ‘oof’.
You’re holding a few boxes in your arms, he notices, and you smile.
“I bought some Puff Pops for us to share later. I was thinking we can do some climbing, or there’s this cave I’ve been meaning to explore.”
His heart does a sort of flip that cannot be attributed to the way you fly through the sky. It’s all so much: the sensation of your warmth pressed against him, the scent of the wind rushing past, and the laughter of his tribe members below. Their eyes shine as they watch the two of you pass above them, chuckling at the familiar sight.
And really, he can’t remember ever being this happy. When he thinks of how much it took to reach this point, the heartbreak and trauma aren’t the first things to come to mind. Instead, it’s you. The way you held him, the way you cried for him, the way you chased him. Always laughing, always in love.
Too lost in his thoughts, he doesn’t notice your curious stare for a moment. You poke at his cheek, and he startles, nearly dropping you both.
“Is something wrong?” you ask shyly, suddenly self-conscious of the box in your hands. “We don’t have to do any of that. Really, if you have a high-value job or something, I understand.”
Ajaw decides to butt-in again, reddened with rage. “Yes, all of that sucks! I mean, seriously, don’t you have anything better to do—”
“No, it’s great,” Kinich murmurs in reply, flicking Ajaw away with a strong hand—the Saurian’s roar dissipates with the wind. He holds you tighter against his chest. There’s nothing worth more to him than you. “That all sounds really, really amazing.”
As the two of you burst through the trees, laughing the whole way, he thinks that it doesn’t really matter when he started to love you. All that matters is that he doesn’t stop.
Kinich thinks he’ll love you forever.
#kinich x reader#genshin impact x reader#genshin x reader#kinich x you#kinich#genshin impact fluff#genshin impact imagines#adeptus ink
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word of the day ☆ kageyama tobio x reader
synopsis: due to a conflict in schedule, yachi asks first-year reader to cover for her english tutoring session with a certain volleyball prodigy. details: fluff | mutual friends to lovers | first meeting | ~2.2k words | gn! reader | requested by @wordsofelie as part of my karasuno writing event
From your seat by the window, you catch snippets of Yachi’s anxious voice from the hallway.
“You’re only available this afternoon? Oh dear. Um, okay, I think I can go, but I need to double-check first!”
Leaning forward on your desk, you spot Yachi speaking with a student you don’t recognize. Judging by the neatly labeled folders the student hands her, they’re probably from the first-year project design committee.
You feel a small wave of pride. You convinced Yachi to sign up after seeing her beautiful volleyball posters.
Moments later, Yachi skitters into the classroom, her steps quick and slightly frantic as she collapses into the seat in front of you. She turns around, clasping her hands together nervously.
“Um…can I ask you for a favor?”
You raise an eyebrow, taken aback by her unusual boldness. “A favor? What happened? I could hear you worrying from all the way here.”
Yachi winces, the tips of her ears turning pink. “Uh, you see…the design committee wants to hold a meeting this afternoon after school. I’ll be excused from club activities, but that’s not the issue.” She sighs, brushing her bangs aside.
“What is it, then?”
“I promised to tutor Kageyama-kun in English,” she explains, voice softening with guilt. “He’s got a test this Friday, and I agreed to help him study for an hour today before practice starts.”
Kageyama? Oh, right.
You vaguely remember him—one of the two volleyball players who occasionally show up in your classroom to study with Yachi during lunch breaks.
“I see,” you say slowly. “So, you want me to cover for you?”
“If it’s not too much trouble?” Yachi’s hands clasp together as she leans forward slightly. “And…if you have questions about volleyball, this might be a good chance to ask?”
Her hopeful tone makes you pause. You suppose it wouldn’t hurt.
“But if not, I don’t want to bother you!” She shakes her head vigorously. “I can just double my other session with him later this week-”
“Alright. I’ll do it,” you say with a small shrug.
“I- wait, really?!” Her eyes widen in surprise.
“Yup. What time and place?”
Bracing yourself, you knock gently on what you hope is the correct clubroom door.
“Uh, hello? Is this the volleyball club?”
A voice from the other side calls out, “Yeah, come in!”
Taking a deep breath, you slide the door open, stepping into a room filled with what can only be described as chaos. A group of boys—clearly the team—turns to stare at you in unison, their expressions ranging from curious to outright surprised.
“Um, hello!” You clear your throat, suddenly aware of the weight of their attention. “Is Kageyama-san here?”
Technically, you’ve seen him before, but you’d rather not embarrass yourself by scanning every face in the room.
“That’s me,” a deep voice responds.
You follow the sound to a dark-haired boy seated a few feet away. When you meet his gaze, you’re taken aback by the sheer intensity of his stare.
His eyes look like blueberries…why haven’t I noticed that before?
You chuckle softly at the absurd thought before regaining your composure.
“Hi! Yachi couldn’t make it today because of a meeting, so she asked me to fill in for her.”
“Oh. Okay,” he says simply, blinking in confusion.
“Wait a second!” A boy with bright orange hair practically bounces up from his seat. “You’re Yachi-san’s classmate, right? You sit behind her during lunch sometimes!”
“That’s me,” you reply with a small smile.
You introduce yourself to the team formally before settling on the ground beside Kageyama.
“So, your vocabulary test is this Friday, right?”
“Yes,” he replies curtly, handing you a stack of papers and worksheets.
As you skim through the materials, the reason for his struggles becomes glaringly obvious. You suppress a small sigh.
“Hmmm. Okay, let’s start by marking the words you’re completely unfamiliar with. Could you underline them with a pencil?”
Kageyama nods and sets to work, though it doesn’t take long for him to underline more than half the list.
The orange-haired boy—Hinata, you later learn—leans over to peek at the paper. He immediately snorts. “Man, you really suck at this, Kageyama.”
Kageyama whirls to face him, glaring. “As if you’re doing any better!”
“Hinata, could you shut up and work on your proverbs? I don’t have all day.”
“Tsukishima!”
Well, isn’t this interesting…
“This is so hard.” Kageyama huffs in frustration. “I won’t even need this stuff in the future.”
“Yeah, but you need it to go to the next training camp,” Hinata chimes in.
“Also, don’t be rude, King,” Tsukishima adds. “They weren't even supposed to tutor you at all.”
At that, Kageyama immediately straightens and bows his head toward you. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to be rude.”
“It’s fine, I get it.” You wave your hand dismissively. “I’m not too fond of science because I don’t see how chemistry will help me be a better sports journalist.”
Kageyama stops writing before shooting his head up. “Sports journalist?”
The rest of the members scattered around the room pause too, almost like you’ve dropped the most shocking revelation of the century.
“You like sports?” Kageyama questions.
“Yep! I don’t have a particular favorite at the moment.” You tap your chin thoughtfully. “I’m still trying to explore everything, but-”
“What about volleyball?” Kageyama’s full attention is on you now. He’s leaning forward and the pencil that was once in his hand is now rolling on the floor.
You hear an amused huff from somewhere in the room.
“Uh, volleyball?” You fumble for a response, caught off guard by the sudden shift in focus. “Well, it’s the sport I enjoyed playing the most in physical education.”
“What did you like about it?” He presses, moving a little closer.
“Uh-”
Yachi wasn’t kidding when she said volleyball was his life.
“Relax, Kageyama. They're not going anywhere, give them some space,” a gray-haired senior advises him.
“Oh, sorry,” Kageyama mumbles, leaning back a bit.
“It’s fine.” You smile, finding his passion quite endearing.
“I guess I like that I don’t have to handle the ball for a long time. Plus, your entire team just stays on one side of the court. When it comes to basketball or soccer, I look like a fool because I can’t dribble the ball well. It always gets away from me, and the other teams snatch it before I know what’s going on.”
You pause mid-ramble, momentarily embarrassed, but Kageyama doesn’t seem to mind. In fact, he looks even more engaged.
“Also, I find volleyball unpredictable and thrilling. The rallies always keep me on the edge of my seat. I’m sure you understand what I mean?”
“Yes. I do.” Something in his eyes shifts. “Thrilling…”
“Yeah-”
“Thrilling. Causing a feeling of great excitement or happiness,” Kageyama recites from memory.
The atmosphere in the room lightens instantly. Everyone attempts to hold back a laugh, including you. A few of his team members fail to do so, but he pays them no mind.
“That’s right, Kageyama-san. Volleyball is thrilling,” you nod at him with a shaky smile.
“Yes!” He cheers to himself silently, pumping his fists in genuine excitement.
Cute.
An idea suddenly pops into your head.
“Speaking of volleyball, do you have plans to play professionally?”
“Of course!” He answers with absolute confidence. “I don’t plan on doing anything else.”
“Ah, I see. And you plan on playing on international teams one day?”
“Definitely,” he responds without missing a beat.
“Great. You know what I think, Kageyama-san?”
“What?” He looks at you expectantly.
“Maybe learning some basic English could help you play better with foreign teammates.”
Kageyama tilts his head. “English can…help?”
“You don’t need to be a fluent speaker, but teamwork improves when you can understand each other more, right?”
“That’s…” He stops to think about it carefully. You wait, hoping that it motivates him to study a bit more.
“But, wouldn’t there be translators and everything?” Hinata pipes up.
“That’s true, but they won’t always be there,” you respond in a steady tone. “I believe it’s always better to be prepared. It helps to have a common language at times.”
“A common language…” Hinata repeats.
“Well, for instance, I plan on being a sports journalist here,” you continue, “but there’s a chance I’ll need to interview foreign players. It could help to know a bit of what they’re saying so that it doesn’t get very awkward. But, that’s just my perspective.”
Kageyama looks up, and to your surprise, he speaks before anyone else can.
“You’re right.”
The room goes silent. For a moment, you’re sure you didn’t hear him correctly.
“You’re right,” he repeats, more firmly this time. “How good should I be?”
“I—huh?” You blink again, confused by the sudden shift.
“How good should I be?” he asks, clearly serious, his intense gaze fixed on you.
“Oh, I heard you the first time,” you clarify, still trying to make sense of the situation. “I just don’t understand what you mean.”
“What should my goal be? How many words should I start memorizing?”
“Your goal?” You blink at him. “Your goal now for high school is to pass your English classes.”
Kageyama pouts. “I know, but you said it was important for volleyball. I need to be good enough at it then.”
You scramble your brain for a possible answer. “So…we’re talking about many years from now?”
He nods, patiently waiting for your verdict.
“Okay, fine,” you sigh. “If I get the chance to interview you in the future, we’ll do it in basic English. How does that sound?”
“I’ll do it,” he replies immediately, eyes lighting up.
Did he even process what I said?
“Please continue to teach me.” Kageyama bows before you, causing everyone to startle.
“Look at that! The King’s actually asking?”
“Shut up!” Kageyama grumbles at his teammate before turning back to you.
You’re flustered by his unexpected gesture, but can’t help the tiny smile tugging at the corner of your lips.
“Alright. Now come on, we’ve got thirty more minutes before you guys start practice.”
Yachi calls you later that evening in total disbelief. “Kageyama-kun just told me you guys went through his entire vocabulary list today.”
“Yes.”
“I couldn’t believe it at first!” Yachi exclaims, her tone rising in excitement. “Sometimes we barely get through half the list after an hour.”
You think back to his progress before you found a way to motivate him. “Well, it seemed that way at first-”
“Then he says that learning English is important for his future after all! He even wants to dedicate extra time to study for it. He never would have done that before!”
“Ah-”
“And here’s the thing,” she continues, “he asked if you could tutor him again on other days! What exactly did you do?”
“Well, I-”
“Or is it something that I didn’t do? Did he say anything about me being a bad teacher or-”
“Yachi-san!” You cut her off before she spirals any further. “Don’t worry, he didn’t say anything about you. I think this is all because I may have challenged him to do a basic English interview with me in the future.”
Yachi blows a fuse. “You challenged- wait, what? In the future? What do you-”
“Wait, is that a bad thing?”
“No! I mean, it’s good, I suppose?” Yachi’s voice softens as she carefully chooses her words. “Um, it actually explains something he asked me for help with earlier.”
“What is it?”
“You told him to write down one word every day and use it in a meaningful sentence, right?”
“Yes. Why?”
“Well, you see, his sentence, um…”
“What’s wrong?”
“He asked me how to write, ‘Meeting Yachi-san’s friend was thrilling.’”
You freeze for a moment, the weight of her words sinking in.
“Wait- what?”
“He said meeting you was thrilling.”
“Oh...”
The silence on the line stretches, your mind racing. Something electric runs through your veins, and you can almost feel your heart thumping faster.
“What about you?” Yachi asks, her voice hesitant but curious.
“Me?”
“Was meeting Kageyama-kun thrilling too?”
You think back to that afternoon and it’s easy to respond with certainty.
“Yes.”
A week later, Kageyama walks into your classroom during lunch. He shows you a test paper with what he says is the highest score he’s ever gotten on an English test.
You can hear Hinata grumbling to Yachi about how unfair it is that Kageyama got extra help, but all you can focus on is Kageyama’s smile. It’s the most genuine, beautiful one you’ve ever seen.
I want to see it more.
I want to be around him more.
I want to achieve our goals together.
“Dream.”
Kageyama’s voice snaps you out of your thoughts.
“What?”
He points to the bottom of his test paper, where he was asked to write a sentence in English using any of the provided vocabulary words. You attempt to read his messy handwriting, but he reads it out for you anyway.
“Her dream is to be a sports journalist.”
You feel the heat rise to your cheeks.
He wrote about me?
Hinata squawks, reaching for the test paper and reviewing it with Yachi.
“Oh my gosh, he actually got all the grammar right,” she gasps in awe. “Good job, Kageyama-kun!”
He thanks her briefly before fixing his gaze on you once more.
“Dream. That was the word of the day.”
masterlist
#haikyuu#haikyuu!!#stellarwrites#hq#kageyama tobio#haikyuu x reader#haikyuu!! x reader#hq x reader#haikyuu kageyama#hq kageyama#kageyama x reader#haikyuu imagines#hq oneshot#haikyuu oneshot#haikyuu scenarios#haikyuu fluff#fluff#haikyuu fic#karasuno#karasuno fic#first meeting#friends to lovers#mutual friends#kageyama fic#kageyama tobio fic
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More screen time for this homeless dude, I need to see him moving. As animation should be!
I'm happy with the result, probably could do a bit better. Still, I'd love to hear ya'll opinion on this.
(I'm aware this may not be the best way to actually show a design. I initially did this for myself, trying to find an easy way to animate him faster on my own. I'm still mourning)
Just asking for a brighter future.
Also the pipe being upside down is just a gag between me and my friend, cause you know, PROTECT THE CHILDREN! They might start smoking too, but at least we'd get him to be the most canon possible
Here a gif just because
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you’ve got me hooked onto your series girl 😖 i will take any crumbs you have available
The crumbs that are invading my brain rn is the relationship between the Batfam and reader
So like reader is on a full ride scholarship to Gotham University for costume design, on a special program for the arts created by Bruce Wayne
I like to think he gets to meet all the scholarship winners in person either before they get to University to ask about their degree plan or during the first few weeks to see how they're settling in.
Reader isn't from Gotham, so Bruce meets them at the Gotham airport (does Gotham have an airport?? I just looked it up and the fandom wiki says its called the Archie Goodwin international airport so that's what you're getting.)
and obviously this gains a lot of press attention because its not often that Bruce Wayne picks up someone from the airport. like sure he meets most, if not all, his scholarship students but up until this point he's never picked them up in person.
His security people are making sure you get to his limo safe and during the ride over to whatever restaurant he reserved for your first day at Gotham, he asks about your major and the decision to apply to his scholarship out there in Gotham and it's a little awkward because how're you supposed to act sitting in a limo with a billionaire asking you about theatre??
Anyways you get to some high end restaurant and end up meeting a few of his kids: Dick, Tim, and Damian. so you're not just alone with a grown ass man.
Dick and Tim are civil, polite, but Damian isn't holding anything back. Making snide remarks and just generally judging your ability to even survive in Gotham as a theatre major of all things
but honestly you're not hurt because dude you're like 11 years old, shouldn't you be reading Warrior Cats (because you don't know he's literally trained by assassins)
but you don't actually say that to him because you're not gonna mouth off the kid of the man that gave you a free ride to college, so you just humor him with semi serious answers
"Theatre major... really?"
"yup"
"How do you expect to survive in Gotham as a Theatre Major"
"Spite, obviously you've never experienced tech week while in the middle of finals"
"...hmm"
silly guy
dinner ends and they drop you off at your pre arranged apartment you managed to rent
Jason watches from afar as Red Hood to check out the new student Bruce met during dinner. Dropping in back at the manor to talk to his brothers about their impressions
They obviously don't think much about you because Bruce's met so many students over the years so they kinda forget about you until your proposal of interviewing villains in Arkham reaches their ears and now suddenly they're on high alert because what kinda plan is that are you stupid??
thats about all i got, hope you enjoyed!!
#costume designer!reader#dc x reader#batman x reader#jason todd x reader#red hood x reader#batfamily x reader#bruce wayne x reader#dick grayson x reader#damain wayne#damain al ghul#bruce wayne imagine#bruce wayne#dick grayson#jason todd#tim drake#tim drake x reader#damian wayne x reader
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pain reliever.

⋯⁂ summary. migraines. migraines never end.
⋯⁂ a/n. oh my god im so sick of being in pain someone just make it end-
⋯⁂ characters. aventurine. gn reader.
⋯⁂ cw. reader in physical pain (migraines, light sensitive eyes). comfort. all lowercase. aventurine is now designated weighted blankie.
"another migraine, huh?"
aventurine chimes in, his voice soft as a feather – without its typical sassy and teasing edge, too. he stands behind you as you rest on the sofa in his penthouse, your sluggish body flush against the puffy back cushions. his hands rest on the tops of the cushions, caging either side of your head as he stares down at you, your head tilted back to look up at him.
of course, the seating is about as lavish and comfortable as it comes – you wouldn't expect anything less from your eccentric boyfriend.
"yup." you don't even nod, and your words are barely louder than a pained whisper.
"you poor thing," he coos, "here. take it." he offers his rose-tinted sunglasses to you, to help subdue some of the bright lighting coming from the ceiling.
you stare for a long, hard (and painful) moment at the sunglasses offered to you. without another moment thinking about if the rose-tinted lens will actually help with negating some pain, you take the accessory by its temples and slide them on. you then look up at him through the rosy glass, your eyes half-lidded and your expression droopy.
"adorable." he grins, a genuine one he reserves for you – only for you. "now, how about i look for some meds, huh? i bought some recently for times like these." he reaches out a gloved hand, intending on gently petting your head, but ends up holding himself back. his hand awkwardly hovers above your face before it rests back down on the sofa back.
"...you did that? for me?" you blink, eyes widening momentarily with knitted brows.
"i sure did. i can't have my favorite person being in debilitating pain every time i see them, yeah? it's no fun that way." he chuckles breathily before leaning down to press a chaste, feather-light kiss to your exposed forehead.
"i wouldn't call it debilitating, per se..." you drawl, but smile from his tender ministrations.
"well, we'll have to agree to disagree, then," he shakes his head. "i'll be right back. you try to rest some." he walks away, dimming the lights in the living room as he leaves to look for the medication he mentioned.
"thank you, vasha..." you mumble, watching him walk away – his stride holds significantly less bravado to it when it's just the two of you. it's...relaxed.
when he returns with two pills and a cup of cool water in hand, he finds you laying down on the sofa – curled up in a tight, little ball of..., well, pain. he hates seeing you in pain, much less so this frequently. but he masks his concern just enough to not make you worry about him being worried. it's almost ironic.
"hey," he whispers, voice even softer than earlier, "c'mon, time to take your meds~." he teases a little as he bends over enough to meet your scrunched up face, hoping to lighten your mood.
"alright, alright..." you grumble, "thank you, nurse." you tiredly grin at him before pulling yourself up into a seated but slouched position.
"aww, i bet you'd like to see me all dressed up like a cute little nurse, huh?" he jokes while handing you the pills and cup.
"...i will neither confirm nor deny that allegation." you scoff playfully, and then you take the medication as instructed – of course, you down all the water too. or else a certain gambler will get on your case.
"pfft, figures." he snickers, taking a seat beside you on the sofa, slinging an arm on the top of the back cushions.
after setting the empty cup down on the accessory table next to the armrest, you glance at him with weary eyes. but to him, it looks like you're about to beg for something–
"be my blanket."
perhaps "beg" was a poor word choice. that sounded far more like a demand.
"...your blanket...?" he blinks on repeat, looking somewhat bewildered.
"yes. lay on top of me." you blink back, but your expression lacks any sort of discernible emotion. "it's...comforting."
"well," he starts with an awkward, stiff chuckle, "if you insist. i'll gladly be your blanket, then." he smiles and shakes his head.
you lay on your back, opening your arms to him before he settles on top of you – he's the best height and weight to be a nice, warm weighted blanket. he rests his head on your chest as his body sits between your legs. you sigh in contentment, and you swear this is what real perfection feels like.
warm, safe, quiet.
#🌠— my works#💕— aventurine#aventurine fluff#aventurine x reader#🌠— fluff#🌠— hurt/comfort#hsr x reader#honkai star rail x reader
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does your au have an ourple mikol, if so can i see the design? :>
Yup! Although he doesn't stay ourple forever in my au, he is ourple for a couple years before he finds out he can posses new bodies

This first pic is my faverite drawing Ive made of him lol ^




I should honestly draw him more tbh
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𝐁𝐄𝐃𝐓𝐈𝐌𝐄: 𝐃𝐑𝐀𝐆𝐎𝐍 𝐄𝐃𝐈𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍˚◞♡ ⃗ dad!satoru gojo
𝙧𝙚𝙫𝙞𝙚𝙬 ┊ instead of sleeping, satoru and your daughter argue over what to name her stuffed dragon.
𝙘𝙤𝙣𝙩𝙚𝙣𝙩 ┊1.9k words. established relationship (#married). the toddler dialogue is purposefully not structured correctly since it’s words from a toddler. fem!reader. intended lowercase. warning: you will wish you had a kid with gojo after reading this.
𝙖𝙪𝙩𝙝𝙤𝙧𝙨 𝙣𝙤𝙩𝙚.┊this was gonna be a basic thought post, but i got more and more interested in the concept and was like “y’know what? fuck it, ima just make this into a full fic.” so here we are with a more full look at dad!gojo <3.
satoru mumbles, "but i think he likes being called spike,” and it's obvious that he's sulking. you don't even have to look up from your book to confirm it.
“well, you don't know him like i do!” your daughter replies, tucking herself into your side.
you flip through the picture book's pages fast, just getting brief glances of its colorful illustrations. unicorns, dragons, knights, and princesses decorated the pages. after turning the last page, you sigh and put the book down on the nightstand. despite the fact that the book was designed for toddlers, it actually looked interesting. you just know you would love to read it to your toddler. you can imagine yourself reading it to her, seeing the excitement on her face as she explores the world of fantasy—her absolute favorite genre.
but unfortunately, that image in your head will have to wait for another day, because her attention? is completely taken by the debate between her and her father.
how the argument started is beyond you. just ten minutes ago, you and satoru were snuggled up on your daughter’s bed, trying to read her to sleep. and now? satoru and her are in a heated debate over what to name her stuffed dragon. it's tough not to be amazed at how something so easy can become so complicated with him.
"i bought him, drove him around in my car, and wrapped him up in a cute little box for you. i think we know each other pretty well.” satoru smiles and reaches across the bed for the dragon.
“nuh-uh! he not even like you!” your toddler, with her tiny hands and puffed cheeks, clutches her stuffed dragon tightly against her chest. the plushie, its vibrant green scales and friendly eyes, seemed to come alive in her hold.
he retreats back to his seat on the edge of your daughter's bed, his lips curled into a frown as he asks, "how come?"
her mouth opens, then closes again. you look away for a moment to give satoru a look of disapproval, and by the time you return your attention to her, her brows are already starting to furrow. she mumbles under her breath, "because," running her small fingers around the plush dragon’s ear. she looks to be at a loss for words, as if she hasn't come up with an answer to satoru's question.
but that's okay, since you—happily, do.
"because you’re taking his time away from storytime. and satoru, in case you didn't know? when it's time to go to bed, we have storytime.”
your daughter looks up, her face beaming as she screams, "yup! and mommy picks the super-duper bestest stories ever!"
satoru gasps, his eyes never leaving yours as he rises from his bed and holds his chest. "baby, who's side are you on?"
you roll your eyes, "i'm just sa—"
"oh, sweetheart," he mumbles as he rushes around the corner of the bed, his movements quick to reach your side. without wasting a second, he rests a palm on your forehead, checking your temperature with a clear look of false concern. concerned people don’t have to hold back the urge to smile. actually, they don't have a smile at all—but for some reason, satoru does, and he's terrible at hiding it. "are you sick? having some hallucinations? is that why you've decided to side with enemy?”
your daughter giggles, and it only feeds satoru's act.
he turns his head towards the source of the giggles. a playful pout forms on his lips as he teasingly asks, "or did this little munchkin of ours use her princess magic to change your mind? she has a way of doing that to me sometimes, y’know."
his free hand reaches towards your toddler, fingers wiggling in anticipation. as his fingers make contact with your little one's soft, ticklish skin, even more giggles slip past her lips.
she tries to squirm away from his touch, but that's when he adds another hand to the tickle fest, and all chance of escape is gone. at that point, she visibly gives up, curling into herself to try to halt her dad’s tickling.
“i-i don’t have powers, daddy!” you daughter manages to stifle out through her laughs. you smile at the sound—it’s one you'll never get tired of hearing.
"you can't be a princess without powers! every princess has powers!"
“i-i'm n-not a princess though!“
satoru's fingers pause in their spot, his eyes widening in disbelief. "not a princess? how on earth can that even be?"
you’re sure if she needed him to, he could easily write an entire book about how she’s a princess.
he scoops her up from her place next to you, careful not to let her dangling legs hit you in the process. she lands on his hip, her eyes fixated on him as he lovingly whispers, "you're daddy's little princess!" he pauses, then adds, "and mommy is the queen, so that makes me—"
“the king?”
“you’re just so smart, huh? see, a perfect quality of a princess.”
“but princesses have dragons! big ones with so many pretty colors and names! they go—“ she cuts herself off and raises her tiny arms high. with a wide smile on her face, she takes a deep breath and lets out a loud roar.
satoru nods and smiles warmly at her, "oh, i see...well, y’know what? not all princesses have dragons.”
she tilts her head, and you awe at the sight. “they don’t?”
"nope," he says, taking her tiny hand in his, wrapping it securely around his finger. he lightly massages the back of her hand, and it’s soothing—scratch that, reassuring. you can tell from the way your daughter leans her head on his shoulder, tucking herself in the crook of his neck. "you don't need a dragon to be a princess. you're my princess ‘cause you're kind, smart, and full of love. i'd say that's all you need to be one."
"really?" she asks, waiting for his nod before continuing. "okay…but i still want a dragon."
"i get it, munchkin," he hums as he takes the dragon plushie from the bed. "we still haven't figured out a name for this guy, hm?"
“nuh-uh!”
“he looks like his power is being super cuddly. he's so cuddly that he puts you right to sleep…how ‘bout…fluffy?"
“ew.”
“fluffy sounds cute, no?”
"but dragons aren't cute. daddy, they breathe fire."
"wel—" satoru begins, but your daughter interrupts.
“his name should be fireball!”
“satoru, she does have a point,” you assert.
she really did. it was a dragon, not something adorable, but something that’s usually thought of as a villain—or a protector. athough deep down, a part of you just wanted this little debate to finally wrap up so you could finally catch some much-needed sleep.
“i thought i took away all of her princess magic?” satoru frowns, "stop siding with the enemy!"
you can't help but snort at his comment. mostly because, for whatever reason, he’s taking this dispute very seriously. so seriously that he doesn't seem to notice you're trying to do anything to finally get to bedtime. "baby i was just sa—"
"who says this dragon had to breathe fire anyways?" he interrupts.
when your toddler goes to respond, it hits you. "what about fluffy fireball?" you mention. it's a perfect combination of the two. well, okay, maybe not a “perfect” combination, but it's good enough to finish this debate.
if you weren't so tired, you’d stop and ogle the way they ask "huh?" in sync.
you shrug, "well, why not? he is pretty fluffy and spits out fire. there can’t be a better name than that."
your daughter holds out the dragon, looks at it for a while, then brings it up to her ear.
she gives the impression that he’s nodding his head before hushedly saying, "got it." she then turns back to face you and yells confidently, "fluffy fireball agrees!”
"well, i don't agree," satoru huffs. "the name is way too long an—"
“satoru.”
“but—“
"satoru," you say more firmly, and his shoulders sink as he mumbles "okay" beneath his breath.
your daughter lets out a yawn, and your eyes are immediately drawn to her. you signal for satoru to come over to the bed, and he does, bending down to your level.
“is my girl sleepy?”
"um," she pauses and looks at her dragon. "just a little bit."
"i can tell," you say, gently rubbing her back. you sneak a quick glance at your husband, and he looks the other way because he knows it's way past her bedtime. you sit up next to her ear and murmur, "i think fluffy fireball is ready to go to sleepy-time."
she gives the dinosaur a look before asking him, "y’wanna sleep with me?” then, she shakes the dinosaur's head up and down before exclaiming, "okay!"
you watch as she leaps out of satoru’s arms, and plops down on the bed. the room fills with giggles and the creaking of the bed as she scampers towards the middle. once she's next to you, she settles in and gets comfortable.
you can't help but smile as you see her tiny hands reaching out, playfully fluffing the pillows around her. then finally, with a satisfied sigh, she snuggles under the covers, cocooning herself in warmth.
she sets her dragon on her left side, making sure her loyal companion is there to do his job and look after her (the princess). it’s cute really. however, if that dragon becomes even a little bit too comfortable with the job, you know satoru will undoubtedly compete for the position. he'd say, "it can't just show up one day and take my job," or something along those lines. knowing him, he might even contemplate throwing it away—who knows.
you’re jolted out of your trance when your daughter asserts to her dinosaur, "you can sleep on daddies side, he snores."
satoru gasps, “i do not—“
“yes you do!”
“when have i eve—“
"guys," you sigh, feeling the weight of exhaustion in your voice. you cast a glance at both of them, making sure you have their undivided attention before pressing on. "c'mon, let's all take a breather and save the debate about your dad's snoring for tomorrow, okay?"
"but mommy, tell him he snores!" she whines. "he goes—" she cuts herself off to mimic satoru's snoring, and his face is priceless.
"now that’s just rude. how can you speak to me so coldly?” satoru scurries underneath the covers on the side of the dragon. and just like that, your daughter and her dragon are nestled between the two of you.
“this’ll be settled in a family meeting tomorrow. you two have already had one debate today. so right now? lets all go to bed.” you declare, then nestle deeper beneath the covers, closing your eyes.
as the voices of saddened "okays" and "alrights" blend together, a collective sigh fills the room. the sound of a click follows, and even with your eyes closed, the absence of light is unmistakable. it makes you feel even more exhausted than before.
you feel satoru’s arm slide around your shoulder, pulling you closer to him. meanwhile, your daughter stirs slightly, searching for a more comfortable position in the cozy space between the two of you. you can feel her movements, her small body nestled snugly against yours.
you snuggle impossibly closer to your pillow, and take a deep breath.
silence, that’s what follows—and it’s nothing but peaceful. that is, until satoru bursts out laughing. "i don't snore," he blurts out into the darkness, his voice filled with mischief. "i just provide a little background music for the night."
it's at this point that you decide to be extremely biased at the family meeting tomorrow. he’s not winning a damn thing.
#(っˆ ³(ˊ ᵕ ˋก ) ⇢ ˗ˏˋ 𝐏𝐄𝐀𝐊𝐓𝐎𝐑𝐀 𝐖𝐑𝐈𝐓𝐄𝐒 ࿐ྂ#i think this is the cutest scenario i’ve came up with#and the best part is that it’s 100% cannon (bc i said so)#gojo x reader#gojo x reader fluff#gojo angst#gojo x you#gojo headcanons#gojo scenarios#satoru gojo#satoru gojo x reader#jjk x reader#jjk gojo#jjk x you#jjk fluff#jujustu kaisen#jujustu kaisen x reader#jujustu kaisen headcanons
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