Happy (almost) New Year!
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DEAR READER
NASA
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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tannertan36

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RMH

Kiana Khansmith
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
ojovivo

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dirt enthusiast
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Peter Solarz
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

titsay
Misplaced Lens Cap

Product Placement

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@allyouneedisgeorge
Happy (almost) New Year!
šš”š š¢š§š§šØššš§šš¬ (šššš)
A Cinderella Story (2004) + Letterboxd reviews
Garth: Shoot him, he's the clone!
Spock: The real Kirk would never pass up an opportunity to sacrifice himself!
Iāve reblogged this 8,000 times but I still canāt get over Spockās total lack of expression and how casually he shoots. My man is 100% sure which Kirk is real and heās so fed up with him.
Este Ć”rbol se llama āCiprĆ©s de Abarkuhā y se estima que tiene alrededor de 5000 aƱos y es uno de los seres vivos mĆ”s antiguos de Asia ubicado en Yazd IrĆ”n. SegĆŗn las leyendas, fue plantado por el propio Zarathustra.
This tree is called āCypress of Abarkuhā and itās estimated to be around 5000 years old and itās one of the oldest living beings in Asia located in yazd Iran . According to legends it was planted by Zoroaster himself.
i noticed my burnout comic was making rounds but the full comic is no longer available after the collegehumor website went offlineā¦. so here it is!!!
i wrote/drew this back in 2018 when i was struggling w hella burnout and depression. i hope everyone is taking care of themselves :3
āGet a job, sonā āJust not in theatre, weāve seen your oeuvre.ā
if low-rise pants have a million haters i am one of them . if low-rise pants have ten haters i am one of them. if low-rise pants have only one hater and that is me . if low-rise pants have no hater, that means i am no more on the earth . if world against high-waisted pants, i am against the world. i love #highwaistedpants till my last breath hope this helps
I feel this in my soul
šššššššš ā į“į“
ācanon spuhura doesnt make sense because spock and uhura barely ever got any screen time together in the original show! spock barely paid attention to uhura lol!ā. and why do you think that is. i need you to sit down and think long and hard about why exactly uhura was barely given any screentime on that show. why do u think uhuraās friendships were not allowed to be developed like jim, spock, and mccoyās were? hmm. oh yes itās probably the LITERAL racism. i donāt give a shit about whether you like the ship or not but you canāt just act like spuhura came out of nowhere, or like itās ājust another straight shipā, not when we know the reason uhura was robbed of any meaningful relationships with the main trio was because she was played by a black woman. she was OBVIOUSLY meant to have some sort of special relationship with spock at the beginning of the show, but it was suddenly dropped. uhuraās character and her fans (especially black fans) were denied of these relationships/developments back then. now is the chance to rectify that. we have zero idea about how strange new worlds is going to portray the spock/uhura relationship but the way some of you are already being weird about it just makes you look ignorant.
Happy PSH season, everyone
live laugh love? nah. languish lament lay down
feeling this
There gotta be most Greek Myths peeps on Tumblr: what would be the best framing for a modern Hades and Persephone story
Demeterās flower shop has been in her family for years. She trades off with Persephone between the front counter and the back room, just as she did with her mother, long ago. Persephoneās slated to take over the business one day, she just knows it, loves her work, loves the security of it, arranges irises and larkspur among the sprigs of babyās breath and fern. She sings with her mom when Demeter is counting the till or sorting poppies. The same few playlists cycle over and over and Persephone makes Demeter laugh by parodying with her own often lewd verses. Her mom scolds her but canāt hide the mirth crinkling the corners of her eyes. And so this goes and has gone for all the years since college. But thereās a dread finality to all of it that makes Persephone lay awake at night, wasting time on her phone, or staring up through the skylight in her bedroom.
On the other side of town, Hades just received word that the family whose funeral is slated for tomorrow has had a complete cancellation of all their food, flowers, everything. Something about a maxed out credit card⦠At his mortuary. His. He canāt let that stand. Because heās seen too many exhausted, shattered families, too many people who need to mourn, and mundane details of final expenses shouldnāt cloud their minds on a day like that. Any other businessman would politely turn them away. He should turn them away, but he doesnāt.
Cursing, and walking from store to store in the rain, he finally gets Hecate, one of the better caterers in town, to agree on short notice. Heāll pay her backā heās not hurting for money. Heās already walked a mile and a wreath of roses is next. And heās certainly not going to the bastards up the way who made the poor widow cry when they hung up on her this morning.
The bell above the door clangs, and Persephone doesnāt bother to look up from the narcissus she squeezes into the last spring wedding bouquet. Itās her mother, she figures, back from the next door bakery with their lunch. It isnāt until she hears a voice, edged with frustration and seriousness at first, but under the rough skin of it, softness as he describes the bind heās in. He looms large in the doorway and he needs her.
Her help, rather. She swallows, remembering what her mom has always said. Net 30, and even thatās pushing it. Only with prior accounts, only with people from this side of town who we know, Persephone. Itās what Demeterās always warned her about: getting in too deep, going off the books⦠the death of so many other small businesses in this economy. So it surprises her when she offers to create the arrangements for this dark stranger. And shocks her when she blurts out that she will deliver them herself, tomorrow, across the tracks. Her carās overdue for an oil change and the starter that craps out when the weather gets too cold⦠and now sheās flush because sheās been talking out loud like an idiot.
He smiles. Briefly. And then comes his offer to pick her up. He stutters when she asks him to repeat it, and kicks himself. Heās waiting for her to decline and ask him to leave in that scared, polite tone that women use, because most men with an offer like that are dangerous. But she accepts. Itās impulsive, but seems like the most natural thing in the world that heās going to just roll up in his chariot and bear her and her flowers to be arranged at a funeral without any warning. He clears his throat again and is gone, muttering that heāll see her tomorrow, early. 8 oāclock sharp.
Demeter comes back 10 minutes later, unwrapping a sumptuous ham on rye, which they split. No one comes in on a rainy day, Demeter remarks. Persephone merely nods, her mouth full. She canāt tell her mom about how many white roses sheās going to give away. And whatās worse, Persephone realizes, sheāll have to stay late to finish it. More lies sheāll have to fix later. But sheāll tell Demeter when she gets back from the funeral home. After all, this is Persephoneās shop too, and itās time to make an adult decision and sometimes compassion wins over rationality. Or at least thatās what she tells herself. His voice still hangs in the air, as does the scent of rain and cypress on his wool coat.
Sheāll tell the truth when she gets back.
Please continue. š„ŗš„ŗš„ŗššš
@latent-thoughts
The rain lets up just as they finish the wedding bouquets. A few more customers, and another order for next week. Persephone stays to close after her mom walks the deposit to the bank. She dusts the counter half heartedly until Demeter is out of sight of the front window, then sweeps the door and walkway for ten minutes just in case her mother comes back. 5 oāclock and no sign of her.
Helios, the retiree living in the apartment above, waves at her and chews on a cigar. His skin is wrinkled from decades of sunbathing in his youth. Whenever itās not raining, heās sits on his balcony sunrise to sunset, the world coming and going and Helios seeming to know everyone in it. She chats for a bit, then politely reminds him that she has to close the store.
Persephone locks the door and sighs. She pulls a styrofoam ring mold from the top shelf. They usually donāt do funerals. Remembrance planters, yes. Full funerals? Rarely. Her grandmotherās arrangement was the last one sheād done. And that was during college. The fridge is freezing, and her teeth chatter as she gathers a dozen bushels of roses. White, as requested.
And then the phone rings.
The old tape answering machine has been there for 30 years and served them well, weeding out sales and robocalls. And if it aināt broke⦠āYouāve reached Gaiaās Flowers; our hours are 9 to 5 Tuesday through Sunday and our last delivery is at 4 pm. Please leave a message.ā She hears a throat clearing on the line and a low, familiar voice hesitantly starts speaking.
Itās him. Persephone bolts for the phone and picks up. She hears feedback, apologizes, fumbles to turn off the answering machine and finally says her name. He asks if sheās the one he talked to this afternoon. When she affirms, he starts to apologize, saying he hadnāt even introduced himself and had barged in, and put her on the spot. He says donāt bother about the flowers. Worried, she asks if heās found someone else. He sighs and says no, heavily. She insists. Itās a practicality at this point. You canāt have a funeral without flowers. Besides⦠sheās already started. Can she call him back? She needs to keep the store line free just in case. Persephone jots down his number. An Olympia prefix. Odd. Still no name.
She punches it into her cell, turns on the speaker and tucks her phone into the side of her bra so she can work on the arrangement hands free. In her mind Persephone hears her motherās voice clucking about breast cancer from cellphone radiation or whatever as his phone rings.
In his dim office, far from the muted voices and tears of the vigil, Hades hears a buzzing and winces. Shit. He gave her his private phone. Not the business line as he should have, but his mobile. He debates whether or not he should answer it. Her voice blurts as soon as he hits the button, asking for his name. He gives it and launches back into his apology.
Persephone accepts it and said she wanted to help because he looked desperate. He agrees, and thanks her. They carry on, much to his surprise. He usually hates talking on the phone. She tells him more about her shop, and he about how he came to run a mortuary. She brings up the Olympia prefix, and asks if sheāll be driving all the way there. He pinches his nose and offers that he was tired and just defaulted to his cell, and no, his business isnāt 50 miles away. She titters and asks him how he likes their humble town and he tells her that yes, he came from privilege, but ghosted his toxic father years ago and fixed the damage in therapy. Heās unsure why heās offering all these details to a woman he barely knows.
His profession is creepy enough to outsiders as it is, and at this point Hades is fairly certain sheās about to hang up, thinking heās a serial killer. Heās no good on the phone⦠but she stays, chats with him, talks about her great relationship with her mom, her non-existent one with her dad, and each interrupts the call when she needs to dig more flowers out of the back or when he needs to close up after the wake.
Itās past midnight and still they talk. It would have taken her half this time if she wasnāt so⦠pleasantly distracted. The wreath is finished, but she wants to do more. Her grandmotherās casket was covered in the loveliest crescent spray of flowers, with lilies and roses, larkspur and irises. Persephone preempts him, says itās free of charge, that she needs the practice as she rarely does casket sprays.
Hades wants to protest, but knows it wonāt work on her. He laughs. For the first time in a while. He wants to stay on the phone with her but needs to rest before tomorrow. He hopes she gets some sleep at some point as well, thanks her profusely, again, says and heāll meet her at the shop tomorrow.
Persephone drops some ivy into the spray and folds her arms, smiling. Sheāll need to place it of course, but is pleased with how it came out. She hopes he isā they are she corrects herself.
Persephone checks her phone. 5% battery from talking to him all night. Now that the spray is perfect, itās 3 am. This isnāt the first time sheās stayed late. Last June she and Demeter had worked ātil dawn assembling the piecemeal parts of an eight foot tall flower ring arbor the bride saw on Instagram the day before the wedding and just had to have. They charged bridezilla accordingly and pinned a āclosed for the dayā note on the door the next morning. She locks up, stalks down the street with her keys between her fingers and reaches the stairs of her walk up. Persephone closes the door, and peels off her clothes then crashes on the bed, making sure she sets her alarm.
Sleep feels like a blink. Persephone wakes up and showers, throws on a simple black dress and flats, swills yesterdayās room temperature coffee, and walks the block to the store. She smells cigar smoke and bacon, and hears distorted salsa blaring from a cheap battery operated radio. Helios is already on his balcony.
She opens the shop door and gathers up her flowers, the wreath, then just as 7:59 turned to 8:00 a black sedan, sleek and expensive, rolls up to the shop door.
Even though there isnāt any real traffic around for three blocks, and wonāt be until the downtown shops open, Hades throws on the emergency flashers. He pops the trunk and grins at the artful arrangement, yards better than most of the others heās seen, and helps her gently settle the flowers for the ride. She opens the passenger side and he shuts it after her. No sooner has she fastened her seatbelt and heās roaring down the mist covered street.
She remembered to lock the door, right? Of course she did. She always does this and every time she goes back to check itās locked. Besides, theyāre already on the main drag. The tracks are below the bridge. Not much further. Persephone settles back into the heated leather seat and stifles a yawn then jokes about how he kept her up late.
When he picks up speed and thumbs the overdrive button, Hades glances for a moment at her calf and the small flower garland tattoo ringing her ankle, just above her simple flats. He refocuses on the road. Hades thanks her again, that heās grateful to have herā have her hard work. She smiles, drowsy, and he turns on the wipers to clear the fog. They sit in comfortable silence the rest of the way.
Demeter turns her key in the lock at her store and the door opens too easily. Was it unlocked all night? Thatās not like Persephone. She hasnāt forgotten the lock up since she was seventeen, and always double checks it, pushes back on the door to make sure the bolt has caught.
She throws open the door. Scattered flowers lay here and there, emptied buckets where roses once sat, one overturned. She runs over to the till. All the cash is there. She grabs the phone and dials Persephoneās cell. It goes to message. She redials. Straight to voicemail again. She might have fallen asleep in back. Demeter calls out for her. Nothing. She has half an hour before the shop opens. Demeter jogs down the block and turns into the atrium of Persephoneās walk up, then vaults up the stairs. The door is locked and it looks empty. She bangs on the door and calls for Persephone, then pulls out her cellphone and tries her daughterās phone again. Voicemail.
Panic turns to alarm. Flowers scattered everywhere in the shop and no Persephone. Where is her daughter?
š²š„ŗā¦ then what happened?
@thelampades
The phone rings in the empty shop. And rings. And rings. But Demeter isnāt there to pick up. The flowers will be delayed. Or never arriveā a full harvest of them undelivered.
Demeter frantically wanders up and down the street, banging on shop doors. On a cold morning like this, most retailers wonāt open until 11:00, and all that greets her are darkened windows.
Helios barks at her over the balcony, asking what could be wrong this early in the morning. She blurts out around tears that the door to the shop was left unlocked and that she canāt find Persephone, and there were flowers scattered around andā
The old man waves her off and says that he saw Persephone hurry into a black car with the engine still running, that a man shut the door after her and they sped off. At 8 in the morning! 8 oāclock!
And how was she? Well, he didnāt see. Just heard the screech of the car as it pulled away. When he tells her not to worry about it, when he says that the man who took her looked like he had money, she wants to climb the brick faƧade with her bare fucking hands and smash his blaring radio. Instead of arguing with him she huffs off and knocks on the bakeryās glass door.
Metaneiraās day has already started and ended. Every morning she gets up at 3 am to take the proofed loaves out of the fridge. By 4:30 theyāre in the oven and from then until sunrise sheās sweating to get the commercial orders packed for Celeus and their pile of kids to drive to all the fancy brunch places in the county. Which means the front door is always locked so she can attend to deliveries out the back. So when she hears the glass rattle she ignores it and keeps her head down. Making eye contact with the idiot who canāt bother to read the hours or the bright white āClosedā sign right in front of their face will just make it worse. When the rattle doesnāt stop, Metaneira casts a glare at the door, angry fist clutching her bread lame. Her face softens when she sees that itās Demeter and quickens her step to unlock it and let her in.
Across town, the pall bearers are reverently taking the casket from the hearse and up the church steps. Persephone tries to remain somber at Hadesās side but canāt help her giddiness over how well received the surprise arrangement was. The widow had hugged her, had cried against her shoulder and thanked her profusely. She confesses her late husband gave her irises on their second date. How had Persephone known?
Charon sits quietly in the drivers seat of the hearse. He was the only one of the three of them who looked well rested enough to drive today, even though he still has a āclientā back at the parlor waiting to be embalmed. Heād grumbled about it, and Hades had flicked him a penny, snarking about it being a down payment on his impending overtime. When Persephone makes eye contact with Charon, he merely smiles at her, then drifts back to his phone, waiting for the next leg of the journeyā the procession to the final resting place.
They walk into the church and Persephone quickly crosses herselfā wait, did she do it backwards? Was it disrespectful to cross herself if sheās notā she blinks long, stifles another yawn. Hades places a gentle hand on her shoulder and asks if she wants a ride back during mass. She doesnāt want him to have to duck out and if heās late back, who would direct the procession?
Persephone insists she stay until itās over. As they place the manās picture in the wreath of her white roses at the altar, she thinks back to how many haughty clients sheās smiled through, how many demands sheās endured, the thankless nights and days doing what she loves. But here every memory is sung and cared for, every lily is a star piercing the dark, a hope against the inevitable, the inexorable. Hades stands beside her, black wool coat still dewy from the morning air when he directed arrangements inside, doled out printed programs. Her pinky brushes against the back of his hand and sheās surprised itās so warm. Persephone feels him tense in response, and flinches, but his thumb moves to her palm, then long fingers close softly around hers. They listen as the priest speaks about the manās life, and as the first eulogy ends she feels a tear slip down her cheek. Before Persephone has time to wipe it away heās already holding a folded handkerchief for her. She accepts, meets his gaze.
Hades has seen this a thousand times. A thousand funeral rites across a dozen confident faiths, but her compassion for those she hasnāt yet met letās him see it through new eyes.
She accepts the crisp linen square and blots her eyes, then holds it, unsure if she should give it back, or if that would be unsanitary. Her hands are both occupied, one clenching the handkerchief, the other being⦠caressed? by his fingersā a softness that sends a pleasant shiver up her spine. He seems unmoved by the words from the pulpit, probably having heard a variation on them every other day going back who knows how many years. No pockets on her dress. She canāt just hold the square forever. Will he thinks itās gross if she hands it back to him? She waits until he isnāt looking and tucks it discretely into the side of her bra. Her eyes widen when they catch his and she stares forward, biting her lips, cheeks and ears turning red, her other hand still caught in his.
He canāt hide the smile creeping across his face no matter how hard he tries. Heās supposed to be somber. Respectful. But all he can think about is where she just tucked away his handkerchief, the way her black dress rests on her hips, her thorn-pricked rough fingers held in his hand, the flower tattoo on her ankle he tried not to memorize⦠He has to snap out of it. Thereās business to attend, and Hecate and her catering are waiting back at the parlor.
@therkalexander i beg you, continue it!! I need to know what happens next!!!
@librarian-witchling
Kallithoe, one of Metaneiraās daughters, pulls out the commercial standing mixer, then empties gelatin and glycerin into the bowl to form the fondant roses. The weddingās at three, drop off at one, and two hours left to apply the roses and finish the wedding cake.
Demeter sits with Metaneira, holding 18 month old Demophon, the latest addition to her friendās brood. While Demeter cried, Metaneira had put Kleisidike in charge of the oranais aux abricots so she could get the word out about Persephoneās disappearance.
The phone rings. Everyone glances at it expectantly.
When Metaneira picks up, her eyes go wide. Itās Iris, Heraās assistant, and the girlās wedding coordinator boss is⦠upset, to put it mildly. The flowers should have been there an hour ago and Demeter isnāt picking up. Metaneira mouths who it is and Demeter shakes her head. Everything comes spilling out of Metaneiraās mouth into the receiver, interrupting Iris.
They both hear the punctuated āwhat?!ā from across the room on Irisās side of the line, through the receiver, across the table, over the whir of the mixer. Then shuffling for control of the phone in the background, and now Heraās on the line peppering Metaneira with with questions and saying that sheās calling the police if they havenāt already. Or the mayor. Or the head of the chamber of commerce⦠Demeter grabs the phone out of Metaneiraās hand and speaks directly to Hera to calm her down. No, that wonāt be necessary. Do not call the cops. Or anyone else. She will find a way to get the flowers there. Celeus and Triptolemus come back from deliveries just in time to hear Demeterās half of the phone call.
When Hera finally lets her hang up, Triptolemus tells Demeter not to worryā he and his dad have the flowers covered. Theyāll get them there. Kalithoe pipes up and her brother tells her heāll be back for the cake straight away.
The gray clouds part for an instant and Persephone is shaken awake again by the rubber scrape of the windshield wiper against bare glass. She uprights from when she had been leaning against his shoulder and swipes her fingers at the side of her mouth, hoping she wasnāt drooling. Or snoring. Hades insists that he take her back home. Charon scoffs from the front seat. Theyāre in a hearse. At the head of a funeral procession. Thereās a coffinĀ in the back! He laughs that they must have kept each other up very late for him to think that was even an option. Hades tries to avoid eye contact with Persephone and feels his ears turning red.
Houses disappear and theyāre across the river, then uphill past row after row of headstones and crosses, a Victorian statue crumbling from 100 years of neglect, then more recently-placed flat granite markers. The car stops and they exit next to a pile of dirt covered with a velvety fake grass tarp.
The hillside is wind-whipped and the capped sleeves on her dress arenāt going to cut it. But a wool coat drapes over her shoulders immediately. She sinks into its warmth, and nods a silent thank you to Hades. He puts one hand on her back, the other in his pocket and they listen. Car doors shut, people trudge up the hill, pall bearers place the casket. After many tears and the first handful of dirt and falling lilies, the daughter breaks from her grieving mother to thank both Hades and Persephone, that she doesnāt know what they would have done without his help, and his wifeās lovely flowers.
His wife. Suddenly the coat is a furnace. Persephone starts to sputter a protest, but Hades calmly takes the womanās hand and tells her it was the least he could do under the circumstances.
The first time he took her to the mortuary the silence was comfortable. Now it clings to everything. Sheās still wearing his coat, filled with the scent of rain and cypress and earth. With him. Her mind runs away with her, flashes of fancy, of him holding her, of his warm voice in her ear. From above; from over her. She tries to banish that thought, and the accompanying flutter in her stomach that denial can barely explain away as hunger. She had coffee for breakfast, after allā¦Ā
Hades clears his throat when theyāre a block away and speaks quietly. He knows heās in earshot of Charon and will never hear the end of it later, but says it anyway: that he didnāt know what he would have done without her. She glances up, eyes clear, locked with his, soft lips parted. Before he can say anymore or she can form an answer, the car lurches forward with the lock of the parking brake, and Charon throws open the door and stalks off chuckling to himself, the soft ring of the ajar door bell marking the seconds between Hades and Persephone.
He releases his seat belt and leaps out, holding the door for her. Persephone pulls his coat around her shoulders, knowing heās going to take it back any moment. He doesnāt, car doors slam shut behind her, and theyāre inside, then rounding the corner to his darkened office.
Hades doesnāt bother turning on the lamp. Theyāll be gone in a moment. Persephone back to her world and him to his own. Better for her, safer for him, because every leaf and curl of that flower tattoo on her ankle is now emblazoned in his mind, and all the tempting madness that follows: how easily his hands could frame her waist and hips, the petal softness of her lips and throat⦠He curses quietly, looking for the keys to his car then remembers theyāre in his coat pocket. On her. Hades turns to face her, a single rail of light from the hallway beyond meandering up her leg, curving over dress and collarbone from the crack of the door.
She feels the desk against the back of her thighs and heās in front of her, the distance closing, his hand itching at his side. He is close enough that her knees almost bump his as she rests against the desk edge and tilts her head to meet his eyes.
He leans forward, his hand in his coat pocket, fingers brushing against the keys and her quivering leg on the other side of the satin lining. Her hand rests in the crook of his elbow, and she can feel his pulse drumming through his shirt sleeve. Words burn when they leave his throat. He needs to take her home.
His lips are inches from Persephoneās. She whispers back to him. She doesnāt want to leave.
@therkalexander Please write more, what happened next?
@corporeal-terrestrial
The idiot zone.
Thatās what Artemis and Athena called it in collegeā the place every budding love affair briefly occupies before itās requited⦠when fate bears down on two people like evening fog, obscuring what is clear to all but them. Insipid yearning. Timidity that vanishes the moment all is revealed and confessed.
Thatās the split-second thought that quirks Persephoneās lipsā lips now well occupied by his. Hades splays and tenses his fingers against her back and deepens their kiss, burning those contemplations to cinders. The coat slides from her shoulders and lands softly on the desk, muffling the fallen tumbler and scattered ball point pens.
Her body shakes and her skin prickles in its absence. Not because sheās coldā far from itā but because this is new. Different. Dangerous. Persephoneās only known him for 24 hours and now his leg is caught between hers, her fingers snaking up his neck and into his hair, body crushed to his. Her soul feels like itās going to leap from her skin and wrap itself around his with how heās kissing her.
It takes everything for Hades to keep himself from flying apart, to keep his hands in places deemed respectful while his body riots and begs him to trace and learn and love every curve of her, before she rethinks this. Heās a mortician. He disclosed all his emotional baggage to her. There must be lighter, easier, better prospects. But the way she kisses him, draws him in and holds himā¦
Past relationships have been brief. He doesnāt like wasting time or opening his heart to women who withdraw the moment they know what he does, or want him to āfixā it, or in one disastrous case, fetishize his line of work.
With her rough fingers in his hair, her hand on his chest, over his heart, she banishes all that. This moment is only for her and her scent of roses, and admittedly stale coffee, which only endears her to him further. He wants these stolen seconds to last foreverā a thought that renders him giddy and terrified in ways he didnāt think possible. But he needs to know. Hades needs to know that this isnāt a romance of a mere moment, that Persephone hasnāt been dragged into this by circumstance but wants it, needs him, chooses him. That sheāll come back.
Hades breaks off the kiss and meets her heavily lidded gaze in the sparse light and whispers her name as a question. Before he can even ask, she nods and answers, thenĀ pulls him back to her.
And itās not in spite of who he is, or what he does, but because of it. Sheās seen the compassion he has for those heās only just met, guiding them through their darkest hour, and how his sense of what is just and right means more than what lands on a balance sheet. She recalls the mistaken comment made by the widowās daughter and imagines if it came to pass: of her at his side, her arts blossoming to challenge the inexorability of death and celebrate the persistence of memory.
All these thoughts rush through her and itās just a single kiss. Well, at this point a series of kisses. She breaks away and looks up wordlessly, tracing his jawline. Donāt get in too deep, she thinks. But depth and permanence are coiling around her in ways sheās never felt with other people. Why does this feel so natural with him?
He plants a soft peck on her cheekā a promise to speak on this later. Hades stands up, fixing his collar and tie and Persephone smooths the wrinkles out of her dress. She knows sheās flushed and about to leave a darkened private room with him for the reception, but everyone who met them today was already in on it long before they were. The idiot zone. She giggles quietly.
Hades shrugs his coat back on, filled with her scent, which will make it harder to conduct business out there. He returns her soft laughter, then hauls her against him and steals a last kiss. He deftly pulls his borrowed handkerchief out of the left side of her bra andā oh no, he shouldnāt have done that. Because Persephoneās little gasp at his trespass and the way she bites her lip right after are going to haunt Hades forever.
He turns on the lamp so no one suspects anything and she exits first, rounds the corner, and smells cruditĆ©s dips and tiny quiches with bacon in them, empanadas, and salad dressing. Her stomach rumbles. Or lurches. Never mind itās full of butterflies.
She hesitates. This is their food. But Hades reassures her, his hand resting comfortably at the small of her back instead of gingerly touching her shoulder like he did before she made out with him. Sheās still light headed from it, and thereās few other words to describe it.
Hades motions to her, says he shouldāve gotten something for her for breakfast. That she must be starving. Persephone gives him a half smile and says he can make breakfast for her another day, then grins when his eyes go wide for a moment.
She takes in the lay of the land. Red wine. Aranciata. Sparkling water. Thereās the bite sized quiche. Made from scratch with puffy edges. These arenāt the frozen ones from the grocery store. And the green goddess dip for the jicama and carrots, and a lacinato kale salad with pomegranate seeds⦠the menu seems familiar.
She opts for the dark kale, but is too jumbled to eat it all. Persephone picks out and eats six pomegranate seeds to test the waters. If her stomach rebels, she wonāt eat anymore.
Behind the tables is a server who worked for Hecate at a wedding a month ago. Sheās known his boss for yearsā¦
Demeter at the flower shop, Metaneira and her bakery, Hecate with her catering, and Calliope who runs the letterpress printshop with her wife. They call themselves the Wedding Industrial Complex. If a newly-minted fiancĆ©e comes knocking at one of their doors, theyāll refer her along to the others and everyone gets paid.
ā¦Askalaphos; thatās his name. Persephone had gone in to set up flowers, distribute bouquets and pin boutonniĆØres for hungover groomsmen. The screech owl tat on Askalaphosās neck is memorable, because some guest got pissy and he had to cover it up. Which was stupid, but the groomās family was exceptionally stuffy. The kale salad with the lemon juice and sesame oilā¦Ā Hecateās specialty.
And sure enough thereās the olā kitchen witch herself, peering at each dish, silently directing a couple more servers to weave into the crowd and double back past the widowās niece who is getting through today by eating her feelings. Hades waves her over and Hecateās eyes go wide when she sees Persephone with him. She marches toward them.
Hades offers her cash in full with extra for her staff, but Hecate quiets him and stares as Persephone. She says this is the last place she expected to find her and asks if Persephone has any idea how many times Demeter has tried to get a hold of her. That Hecate didnāt even talk to Demeter herself, but to Metaneira, who was calling everyone because Persephoneās mother was beside herself. The upstairs neighbor said that sheād been whisked away in a big black car. That everyone thinks Persephone has gone missing or was abducted! There were flowers scattered everywhere in the shop and the front door left unlocked.
Persephone winces. She just knewĀ she forgot to lock it, thenĀ knits her brow at Hecate. If her mother wanted to know where she was, she could have calledā
Shit. Oh shit; her phone! Sheād spent all night on it with Hades and forgot to plug it in. Persephone runs back to the office and opens her purse. Sure enough, the battery is dead, and has been for a while.
Hades follows behind her and asks if everything is alright. Persephone panics and he springs into action searching the file cabinet for his spare charge cable, as she digs through her purse for hers. Did he just call her sweetie when he told her everything would be okay? Hecate leans against the door frame, bemusedly watching them fumble around.
He slams a drawer shut and plugs in Persephoneās dead cellphone. They watch the charge symbol light up red and she fidgets. No time for this. Hades hands her the office phone receiver. Over the dial tone, she hears Hecate whistle at them from the doorway.
They need to take a moment and calm down. Collect themselves. Because theyāre both going to have a lot to answer for.
Youve already given so so much and this by itself could be a womderful ending but maybe šššš we could have a resolution
@iprefertheterminsane
And now, THE CONCLUSIONā¦
His car stops at the corner of Eleusis and Attica, just out of sight of the flower shop. Hades turns off the engine. Rain taps on the windshield. Otherwise, silence. Sheās faced away from him, toward her home, her work, her worldā¦
They had followed Hecateās advice. Waited for the phone to charge, decided a simple text message would be best followed by their immediate departure. āMy phone was dead. Hecate said you thought I went missing. Sorry I worried you, mom. Iām on my way.ā The message was read. Sheād seen it. There was no response.
It isnāt until Hades says her name that Persephone turns to face him. Before he opens his mouth, she thanks him for returning her, says not to worry. He can leave if he wants; sheāll walk the rest of the way. He shouldnāt have to be put in the middle of this.
But he firmly tells her ānoā. Heās just as responsible for this as she is, that none of it would have happened if he hadnāt taken her. He will face Demeter with her. Besides, it would make for a poor start of things to be on her motherās bad side.
Hades swallows. A start of things. Heās said too much. They havenāt talked about them, about each other and what the last 24 hours all meant since they got in the car. Just a fumble for directions, grabbing an umbrella at the last minute, flooring it through yellow lights⦠Is this the beginning or the end?
Persephone smiles at him. And surprises him when she says that no matter how it goes, sheās glad she she said yes when he came into her shop. And more so that he took her with himā gave her a glimpse of his world, and of him. The car is quiet, steam clouding the edges of the streaked windows. The rain stopped falling, at least. He frames her face with his hand, thumb lightly grazing her cheekbone. She leans forward and kisses him, not in the dark but in the full light of day, one last time before they leave the safety and warmth of his car.
The sun peaks out as he opens her door, and Hades warns her of the puddle filled with yellow leaves, the uplifted slab in front of the ginkgo tree. Persephone thinks is sweet of him, but sheās been running up and down this block since she was a child. She knows every crack in the sidewalk.
She rubs her goose flesh prickled arm, and Hades keeps a respectful pace behind her. He wants nothing more than to hold her, to offer his coat again, and if heās being honest with himself to skip ahead a day, a month, a year, when the start evolves into the middle part, when they are settled in the comfort of each other. Where Persephone is no longer cold in her short sleeved dress, because sheās nestled against his skin under a blanket or two, and the threat of rain is no threat at all as it streaks the glass of his bedroom window with its wide view of the riverā¦
Itās a thought that if voiced right now would be enough to scare either of them. It doesnāt make it any less true. This woman is worth fighting for. But this moment requires contrition, explanation, and enduring whatever Demeter throws at him because heās more than willing to do that for Persephone. Let the blame be laid at his feet. Heās suffered worse.
The closed sign hangs heavy in the window and Persephone turns the key to the flower shop, and suddenly the scent of lilies and roses, freesia and moss replaces concrete and rain.
Demeter rises from her chair. Persephone! Oh, Persephone! The text message heralding her return had flooded her with relief but not half as much as seeing her daughter safe and sound. She holds her close and hours of worry spill out as ugly tears against Persephoneās shoulder. Demeter holds tighter, then wipes her eyes and looks her daughter up and down to make sure sheās alright. Sheās wearing her black dress. Demeter looks beyond to the man looming in the doorway. Her eyes narrow and she asks her daughter who this is.
Before Persephone answers, Hades volunteers that heās the one responsible. That he drove off with her. That if not for him scrambling to cover services for a funeral yesterday, Persephone would not have been swept up in all this. Persephone interjects here and there with details about a wreath of white roses and the casket spray she designed, that she had stayed up late to finish it and blearily forgot to lock the door in the morningā¦
Demeter is bewildered to say the least. Whatā whose funeral? Pieces fit together. This is the mortician from across town that Hecateās mentioned once or twice in passing. Hades. He took Persephone. It was his black sedan Helios saw speeding away to the other side of town. She wags a finger at him wanting to know what he was doing, pressuring her daughterā
Persephone speaks up, gets defensive. It was her choice. Her arrangements, her decision to stick with it even when Hades had given her a way out long before this morning. She enjoyed it and wants more.
How could Persephone ever enjoy something so dismal? Hades brow furrows at Demeterās words while he opens his checkbook and writes out the full amount owed for the wreath. The casket spray he leaves off. She told him to, after all. As heās tearing the check and contemplating leaving, Persephone tells Demeter she wants to work with him again, if heāll have her.
The room feels warmer all of a sudden and he smiles at her and clears his throat. Of course he will. He turns to Demeter and extols Persephoneās work, how touched everyone was by her art, how her compassion is written into every detail, that he wants no one else.
Persephone soothes her mother. This could be a new venture. A whole world opening up to her. And she finds it just as rewarding as everything Persephone loves about working with Demeter. She has no plans to shirk her duties here. But with the days growing shorter and colder, with fewer bouquets and flower girls in the near future, Persephone can be where sheās needed.
Theyāre defending each other, praising each other. Stumbling over the other to do so. And all the while looking longingly at the other, both clearly hoping Demeter doesnāt read between the lines. But she can see just fine. Demeter nods at Hades and softens. Heās clearly not unworthy of Persephone. So far. But she silently swears sheāll have his balls if he hurts her daughter or breaks her heart.
When she asks why Persephoneās phone was dead when sheād had it plugged in under the register all day yesterday, they exchange a glance, quiet and flushed. Demeter chuckles to herself and shakes her head then says she has to go in the back and start making some calls, to Metaneira, Calliope, Iris, and let everyone know all is well. Before she disappears, she reminds Persephone to flip the sign in the window and make sure the doorās open. The sun came out. Customers will surely follow.
Persephone nods and walks to the door, kicking down the stop after she opens it wide. She flips the sign. Open for business. It flies away a bit and taps against the glass. She faces Hades, hands clasped in front of her, fidgeting, knowing their time right now is short.
Hades knows he has to go. Thereās still so much to attend to on his side of town⦠cleaning up after guests, helping Charon catch up on his work, endless forms to fill, certificates to write⦠But he doesnāt want to leave. They exitā briefly, she reminds herselfā and step just clear of the front window of the shop, into the privacy of a brick alcove. They crowd under the eaves and away from droplets glittering in the sunlight as they barely clinging to the turning leaves.
She bites her lip and pulls him down to her by his black tie. He gathers her in his arms, drawing her in, holding her waist, pulling at her lips, her tongue flicking out against his teeth and he tastes a hint of pomegranate.
Hades pulls away and shakes his head, sighing heavily. He should have gotten her something for lunch. Persephone shrugs. She can always nibble on one of Metaneiraās pastries. If sheās lucky thereās one of those French apricot ones waiting for her.
Butā Persephone smiles wryly at him and twirls his tie around her fingerā Hades can make it up to her by buying her dinner tonight.
Against the light press of her lips, Hades whispers his parting words from yesterday, before Persephone deliriously, delightfully upended his entire world.
Heāll pick her up. 8 oāclock sharp.
A big thank you and an even bigger apology to @elfboyeros for hijacking the thread to write this. I didnāt think it would turn into this when I wrote the first part in a fit of insomnia, but here we are. And thank you everyone for reading and commenting. Iāve been editing The Good Counselor, which is available for preorder now and will have a gorgeous cover on it very very soon. I just approved the final version this week. And because that story is very dark, heavy and emotional, with a lot of ancient historical detail, it was nice to write something light, fluffy, and modern. I hope you enjoyed!
uhura's green hoop earrings are glow in the dark. i can feel it
Truth be told, this happened because Iāve always thought that the ring motif in the right circle looked like the rebel alliance insignia. So that was a loose excuse to take a Mucha piece and redo it with a Star Wars theme, which is oh so original but consider it practice I guess.Ā
Even though the right circle - Laurel/Leia drew me to this idea at first, I ended up working with Ivy/Padme first, which just makes me laugh because Iām not really fond of her, lol.
But yay!! Drawing things again!!! Drawing things again but starting new pieces and ignoring all the WIPs on my desktop yayyyy