Rewatched Sing 1 & 2 and was reminded once again why I'm so ridiculous about those movies 😭 Figured I'd share some human designs from a while ago that I'm still fairly proud of
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline
KIROKAZE
NASA
Misplaced Lens Cap

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tumblr dot com
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

titsay
Keni
Peter Solarz

Andulka

Kiana Khansmith

izzy's playlists!
YOU ARE THE REASON
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
One Nice Bug Per Day

Product Placement
will byers stan first human second

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Chile
seen from Argentina
seen from Australia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Norway

seen from United States
seen from Nepal

seen from Sweden
seen from Ukraine

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Indonesia

seen from Algeria
@beetle-spooks
Rewatched Sing 1 & 2 and was reminded once again why I'm so ridiculous about those movies 😭 Figured I'd share some human designs from a while ago that I'm still fairly proud of
Introducing …. P Jaye! My TADC oc! :D I’ve loved seeing everyone’s own characters, I had to make my own! They’ve all been so so creative and nostalgic and whimsical. :) P. Jaye’s inspired by Eeyore and Bedtime Bear 😴
Read the book. Loved the book. Watched the movie. Loved the movie. Uhhhhhhhh. Obsessed! Amaze amaze amaze.
I like to think that all the little Eridians at the end of the movie are all just Adrien and Rocky’s baby pebbles lol. Free babysitter in a terrarium. 🪨
Anyways, this exists in a world where they’re not four hundred pounds and everyone can breathe the same air.
Two Days Later
Bernard x Winter Spirit Reader
Synopsis: Existence is difficult. Especially when said existence is limited to three months out of the year, and the first few days are spent amidst heavy hibernation. Luckily for the Spirit of Winter, they have a helpful little elf who strives to make existence marginally easier.
Word Count: 2.3K
Pronouns Used: You/Your
A/N: This is technically a Part 2 to 'Five Minutes', and written more in the Reader's POV. Enjoy!
(^Pinterest)
There was nothing.
The void is quiet. It is full of a harrowing, aching silence. Nothing remains. Nothing resides. There is nothing to know, and there was never anything to learn. To venture into that colossal darkness would be to submit oneself to that of a spec of dust; an existance so meager you cease to exist at all.
You remembered. Every year, you remembered. You remembered how it felt to be swept into that void. To have the air ripped from your lungs, to have your body torn from your soul. To be extracted from the cold and placed into the silence. To eventually lose all sense of self. To become that spec of dust, and then to become nothing. Just as well, you remembered how it felt when your reanimation would erupt from that dark place. You felt the winter air reaching into the abyss; raking you from the opaque flames of damnation and blowing you cool. When thoughts would stream back, steadily at first, and then crashing and violent like the waves of the ocean. When memories would rip through you, when your body was wrapped back around the vague shape of your soul and your duty would be rekindled.
And despite the chaos, one name would ring like church bells through the crisp morning air. One name would drag your consciousness back from the clutches of derealization and breathe purpose back into your lungs.
Bernard.
You chased that name. You scaled cathedreals, whispered through forests, brushed between mountains. Even when his face was not yet fully formed in the confines of your memory, you ran to him. Because you recalled his warmth. His safety. You recalled what it felt like to wrap your tongue around his language.
Every year, you returned to him.
Every year, you collapsed into the warmth he omitted.
And you became alive once more.
Your eyes fluttered open. It felt like something heavy was resting on your chest, and your limbs were tense. Still not quite used to existing. To resting. A fine layer of frost had crept down the blankets and pillows you'd taken refuge in, and despite having just woken up, you had half the mind to feel guilty. Attempting to move, you quickly realized how sapped of energy your body truly was. Your arms felt like logs, your legs that of boulders. Your vision seemed to stray a few seconds behind the movement of your eyes; everything was so heavy.
Which did not make sense to you, because Bernard's head—which last you remembered had been resting atop your chest—was no longer cushioned upon you. Bernard, it seemed, was not in bed at all. Had it gotten too cold? The poor thing had probably woken up in the middle of the night freezing because of you. Even still, the notion of waking up without him by your side was making that wire that tethered your souls start to strain. Spirits were fragile creatures when they first arrived to this plane of existance; so easily malleable. How you arrived determined the forecast of an entire season, which was why Bernard always sought to provide you with a lofty landing and tender ministrations upon your return.
A small sound left the back of your throat, and you fought once more to pull yourself up by your elbows. The frost, it seemed, had traveled down the bedframe and painted the floorboards beneath you. It spiderwebbed against the grain, reaching to the middle of Bernard's massive quarters and ending in little spirals. You felt the hollowness of the void trying to claw against the cage of your chest, and a tiny, irrational part of you feared you'd be dragged back into that nothingness. That had never happened, and it never would happen, but that despair still found its way to the back of your mind year after year.
The door to Bernard's quarters suddenly cracked open, and in stepped the Head Elf carrying a small plate and a steaming mug. Relief crashed down on you, and you shifted to try and remove the frostbitten blankets. You wanted—needed—to stand. You needed to reach him.
"Hey, hey, no." Bernard's voice suddenly broke through the fog of your mind, and only a moment later you heard the sound of soft clanking before there was a hand on your shoulder. Bernard was so warm it shocked you, and once more a tiny whimper tore itself from your throat.
"Y…You… mm'bed…" Your voice felt so heavy, and the ancient language in which you spoke felt horribly overcomplicated on your strained psyche.
"Huh?"
"B..ed…" You tried again. "S'rry… 'bout bed…"
Bernard shook his head, a fond smile tugging at the corners of his lips. He looked… better, actually, from the last time you'd seen him. He seemed well-rested, and the dark circles beneath his eyes certainly weren't as oppressive as they had been. Some of the color had returned to his cheeks, and he seemed to be in overall better spirits. That was good, at the very least. All was well with your elf.
"Don't worry about it," he reassured you, and you nearly melted when his hand moved up to cup your cheek. "I expect it."
You hummed, swallowing the lump in your throat and allowing your heavy eyelids to fall shut once more. The mattress dipped slightly beside you as Bernard took a seat, and a moment later you felt the telltale brush of his curls curtaining your face before his lips sealed a gentle kiss against your forehead.
"Are you hungry?" he asked, and the patience in which he spoke nearly broke your heart. Because Bernard was not patient, not by a long shot. But with you? With you, he'd stop time entirely.
You shook your head.
"Sp..irits… don't-"
"Need to eat?" Bernard finished for you. "Mhm. Right. Well, we both know that's not true, and I've already brought you something."
You turned your head and opened your eyes enough to take in what he'd brought. A small mug with what smelled like tea sat on the nightstand, and next to it there was a plate topped with a croissant and a handful of strawberries. That did look appetizing…
Before you could provide Bernard with an answer, the elf was already scooting closer to you and slipping an arm beneath your shoulders. Carefully, he hefted you into a slouched position, half sitting against him. You felt the slight shiver that raced through his body at the contact, though you knew better than to pull away. He'd just be offended if you did. Bernard grabbed the tea first (peppermint) and brought it up to your lips.
"Slowly," he urged, his voice so achingly gentle. "Take your time."
You did take your time. You brought your hands up to steady the mug as it was tilted subtly for your sipping pleasure. The bittersweet liquid offered a heat to the cold shell of your soul that you seldom ever felt. Bernard always made the best teas. You pulled away with a quiet sigh, feeling a little more put-together the longer you forced your eyes open.
"Here," Bernard said, switching the mug for the plate and holding it out in front of you. "Just a little bit."
You offered your elf a small smile as you reached for the croissant. "I am not ill, you know."
"No," Bernard agreed. "But you are tired. And you need your strength."
You tore a piece from the soft pastry and placed it in your mouth. It was perfectly toasted, small flakes crumbling off and melting on your tongue. "How long have I slept?" Mercifully, words were quickly becoming manageable again.
"Two days," Bernard answered, one hand holding the plate while the other reached around to rub in between your shoulderblades. You really were pleased with how much better he looked. He'd pulled his curls back into a loose bun, a few dark strands framing his face. He wasn't clad in his typical uniform, but was instead sporting a deep burgundy sweater tucked into a pair of brown slacks. He was wearing a nice pair of brown boots with shining golden buckles around the ankles. He seemed more like himself than he did when you'd first arrived. The image of him breaking down in your arms had killed you when you first witnessed it. Bernard was not one to surrender himself to despair so readily, so it had crushed you to see him in such a state of disrepair.
"How are you?" you asked, giving his arm a slight nudge as you bit off another piece of the croissant. "You're… okay?"
Bernard seemed confused at first, seemingly more focused on your wellbeing than his own. His expression softened a moment later, however, and he nodded. "I'm well," he said. "Much better now that you're home." He plucked a strawberry from the plate and popped it into his mouth. "We've got everything planned for the next three months. Lists are already coming in with a whole new slew of toys to manufacture."
"Never a dull moment," you observed thoughtfully. Your appetite was steadily returning to you, and you began indulging in the strawberries, as well.
The Head Elf shook his head. "Not around here, no."
"How are the others?"
"Good," Bernard responded. "They're happy you're back. Curtis is asking about you. Incessantly."
That news elicited a chuckle from deep within your chest. "I'm sure that poses no grievances to you."
"None," came the elf's sarcastic reply. He shot you a grin, leaning closer to place a kiss against your shoulder. "I've just been telling them you're resting. And will continue to rest until I see fit."
"Hmm, until you see fit, is it?"
Bernard seemed to register how that must have sounded, and his ears flitted back apologetically. He dipped his head, eyes gazing up at you as if you might reprimand him. "I… only mean I wish to see you well. Before you go about… spreading winter to all of the world."
"Only the Northern Hemisphere," you corrected him, though not unkindly. Your expression was one of gentle teasing, but Bernard's cheeks flushed a bright red despite this.
"I worry," he said (as if you weren't already well aware of that fact). "Last year, you were so out of it you tried to speak to a snowman someone built by the skate rink downtown."
You smiled fondly at the memory; now a fuzzy blur, barely recognizeable. "He was very wise."
"I'm serious." Bernard huddled closer to you despite the cold you emitted, resting the plate back on the nightstand when it became clear neither of you were eating what was left. "I just want you to rest. And I want you well. And I… I mean no offense when I'm showing concern, but you have a tendancy to-"
"Beloved."
Bernard's words slowed to a halt the moment that title left your mouth, and if it were possible his blush deepened to a warm crimson. You tilted your head to better read his expression, eyes crinkling with the draw of your smile.
"I take no offense. And I intend to rest." You patted his arm. "Until you see fit."
Your elf exhaled, relief shining clear on his features. "Thank you," he murmured, taking one of your hands in his own and bringing it up to his lips. His kisses felt like the sun. Like a summer day you would never get to experience. A warm breeze you'd never get to feel. Bernard was every bit a warm ray of sun streaming through the curtains, and it was all you could do to bask in it. "Do you need anything else? Anything at all?"
You shook your head, feeling the inevitable tug of sleep dragging you back down into bed. "No," you assured him. "Thank you."
Bernard gave you a once-over, trying to assess if you were being truthful. After deducing you'd be alright on your own for a bit, he eventually slipped out of bed and eased you back onto the chilled mattress.
"I'll do my best not to sleep all of January," you muttered, giving his hand a subtle squeeze as yor head landed blissfully against the soft pillows that waited for you. Bernard laughed, pulling the blankets back up to your chest before smoothing out the fabric.
"See to it that you don't," he added. "I would like to spend time with you, after all."
"I'm sure you would."
Bernard smiled down at you before leaning down to press a slow, deliberate kiss to your chilled lips. He tasted like heaven. Like warmth and love and light. Everything that the void was not. Everything that you were not. He pulled away too soon, leaving you staring up at him with a sleepy, adoring expression. Bernard caressed the cool skin of your cheek, and you could have sobbed from how delicately he beheld you.
"I'll be back later to check on you," he said, and you nodded. "Call if you need anything, okay? Anything."
"Of course. Send my best to the others."
Bernard chuckled as he turned to take his leave. "I'll assure Curtis you're fairing just fine." He reached the door and opened it, stepping just past the threshold before he turned to give you one last parting glance. "I love you."
"Mhm," you hummed, raising your hand slightly to wave him off. "I love you, too."
Seemingly pleased with your response, Bernard turned to leave, closing the door in his wake. Sleep was ruthlessly quick to claim you once more, hardly giving you a chance to settle before it was dragging you beneath its consistently lapping waves. The void was not so quick to haunt your slumber, however. The reassurance of your existence and the light Bernard provided to your darkness seemed to calm your mind enough to grace you with peaceful dormancy. Outside, the essence of winter was blooming tranquilly. Snow was drifting in slow, vertical trails that seemed to dust the air with their presence. Here, in the safety of Bernard's quarters, you were free to rest. The shackles of nonexistence could not reach you. You existed in this space—the steady pulse of winter—and the false beating of a heart within the cavity of your chest was enough to lull you into a dreamless recess, where you were warm despite yourself and you remained so, deeply loved.
His ass would NOT get any paperwork done with me around ✌️
Drew myself as a Winter Spirit smoochin' on Bernard because that is truly the end goal anyways
I'm a day late but Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays y'all 🙌🎄
Some indulgent art of Bernard and the anonymous Winter Spirit lol. They are so very in love and Bernard is horrendously down bad
Five Minutes
Bernard x Winter Spirit Reader
Synopsis: Bernard is not good at waiting. He is not patient, nor is he open-minded regarding the persistently sluggish passage of time. He misses you, and it is torturous to wait for your yearly arrival.
Word Count: 3.2K
Pronouns Used: You/Your
A/N: Computer, play 'Easy' by Commodores
(^Pinterest)
Five minutes and forty-seven seconds. Bernard only had to wait for five minutes and forty-seven seconds.
Forty-six seconds.
Forty-five seconds.
Patience did not come easily to the North Pole's Head Elf. It never had, truly. To so thoughtlessly relinquish what little control he had over time seemed wholly unpalatable, and Bernard would much rather spend his waking hours pretending that his efforts to command chronology were effective. What else could he do but delude the reality of his situation? What else could he do but assume the role of 'willing participant' to the anemic stretch of an entire year? An entire year without comfort? Without familiarity? Without you? The powers that be sought to mask this perpetual occurrence as mere happenstance as opposed to unrequited dogma, but Bernard knew better. How could it be that you were doomed to non-existence nine months out of the year? He had begged countless times—groveled like some helpless begger—that you be allowed to remain all three hundred sixty-five days. That if you were not meant to exist in a warmer climate, you might seek refuge at the Pole. The epicenter of magic.
He had no such luck, and Bernard had no choice but to otherwise accept the narrowness of his situation. To fashion a relationship with the Winter Solstice seemed rather ill-advised in hindsight, and he recognized that. The northern hemisphere couldn't remain balanced without your absence, just as it could not remain balanced without your ubiquity. You needed to come and go as the season itself. That was the correct thing. That was only fair.
Fair to all but Bernard, but he tried not to dwell on that fact too often.
You had existed since the beginning of time. You were born from the first northern winter; frost threaded your existence together like a mother's touch and left an ancient burning in its wake. Bernard had known you for as long as he'd been alive—two-thousand-something years and counting—and even back then he recognized your eldritch disposition. You resided in the same realm as the elves had, and Bernard had grown to know you well. At first, you did not have a residence. Similarly, you did not speak his tongue. You spoke nothing at all. A mere presence of cold with the underlying promise of life everlasting; you had been a specter.
You returned to this earth on the first day of winter, and left midway through March… vanishing into the wind as if you'd never stood by him at all. There were many spirits of winter—there were many spirits nevertheless—but Bernard had taken a particular liking to you. The cold might have clung to your ethereal body, but your presence was shrouded in warmth. He could sometimes imagine the feel of your furs against his cheek… the way your large arms would envelope him and the heavy, weather-worn fabric of your cloak would swallow him whole. He'd feel the rough padding of thick winter gloves cupping his face. His ears would play tricks on him some days, and he'd hear the familiar 'thump, thump' of your hefty boots against the Workshop floors.
Bernard did not enjoy waiting. He did not find it poetic, nor did he romanticize his tragedy like many of his elven counterparts. There was nothing beautiful about waiting nine months to see your beloved. There was only hurt.
Year after year… there was only hurt.
He sat slumped over his desk, head resting in the subpar cushioning his arms created. There was a stack of unorganized paperwork spanning from blueprints to sign-offs to redlines, and he'd barely managed to make a dent in any of it. The days always seemed to get longer leading up to your return, but Bernard knew it was just his mind playing a cruel trick on him. His eyes flitted up to the clock that hung above his office door.
Four minutes and thirty-seven seconds.
Bernard sighed and buried his face into the crook of his elbow. Usually, he'd be in much better spirits. He was anxious to see you, make no mistake. But he was also exhausted. This year had taken more out of him than he'd been prepared to give, and the Head Elf found himself horribly burnt-out before the Christmas rush had even neared. Long days and nights maintaining the Workshop became torturous, and Bernard had started neglecting himself on a level never before concieved. His magic couldn't even keep him energized at this point, and he'd been struggling to save face in front of his fellow elves.
Gods, he needed you…
He prided himself on his independence. His ability to hold fast in the face of adversary. His innate sensibility to always—always—plan for any and all outcomes. He'd never needed anybody before he met you, and he still wrestled with that notion. Part of him disliked how much your absence truly affected him. How his moods would shift dramatically when you were no longer by his side. How his mental health practically deteriorated behind a pile of barely-touched paperwork.
The other part of him continued to check the clock.
Bernard knew it would be pointless to try and get any work done. He halfheartedly considered prepping his office… maybe organizing his things a bit? Would you care? He already knew the answer was no, but that didn't stop his mind from wandering. Typically, he'd have the Workshop in much better shape in preparation for your arrival. As much as it was Bernard's own enthusiasm, you were also a hit with the elves. They found your gentle disposition and venerable comforts rather soothing, and many of the younger lot loved to hassle you about your powers. It was truly a precious sight; the elves at the North Pole appreciated you just as much as Bernard did. They admired the season you brought forth, and with it the exultation of an entire year coming to a close. And despite their obvious excitement upon your arrival, the elves remained gentle. Patient. You had a tendancy to space out the hours after your reanimation, and Bernard could only imagine the spiritual pressure that put on your psyche.
To not exist one moment—to be without body or mind or soul or thoughts—only to be plucked out of the void the very next moment with the force of an eternity of winters.
And that thought alone made you all the more beautiful. Because the very first thing you did after being birthed into this world once more was go to Bernard. Your very souls had been bound together a long time ago; tethered by wire and unrelenting in the face of nine months of vacancy. You followed that wire year after year, and you always ended up back at the Pole. At the Workshop. Standing in front of Bernard.
He had not realized there were tears burning in the corners of his eyes until one of them slid down his nose. He hated to be this way. He hated feeling this exhausted. He wanted to greet you as he usually did; composed and abetting with open arms, ready to lather you in greetings and kisses and an embrace so warm it omitted your time spent apart. You'd need it. Because as hospitable as your tender heart was, Bernard knew you'd be exhausted. That you'd grin and plant a kiss against his forehead, chiding him for worrying. That you'd assure him spirits didn't need to sleep, and then proceed to hibernate in his bed for two to three days until you got your bearings once more. You needed him to be there for you. To be present enough to greet you. To kiss you. To hold you.
And he was weeping silently at his desk because… because what? Because he was tired? Lonely? Because he missed you? He felt that negative concoction of emotions all year long, so he could not understand for the life of him why they seemed content on tormenting him, now. When you were mere minutes away from arriving.
"Stop this," he muttered to himself, rubbing the tears from his eyes. "You're alright…"
There was a sudden knock on his office door, and Bernard sank furhter into his chair. He sighed and permitted whoever was on the other side entry. Curtis practically threw the door open, handbook in hand, and Bernard found himself wincing at the energy the younger elf exuded.
"Curtis, can this wait until tomor-"
"They're here!"
Bernard blinked. Straightened. Looked at the clock.
Five minutes had passed.
"What?"
"They're here! C'mon!"
Curtis was already turning and speeding out of Bernard's office before the Head Elf could even stand up. He checked the clock once more to ensure his mind was not merely playing tricks on him. Bernard had been so caught up in his thoughts that he hadn't even registered the subtle passage of time.
Oh, gods. You were here.
Bernard exited his office with more momentum he believed himself to possess, following briskly behind Curtis as his second-in-command made haste down to the main floor of the Workshop. The elves down below were already gathering in massive droves, chattering excitedly and calling your name in delighted greetings. Bernard could feel the air shift the moment he made it downstairs; a cold blanket had settled over the ground floor and was steadily creeping up the walls and into the cracks beneath their feet.
You.
When Bernard lifted his gaze and found you amongst the loquacious crowd of thoroughly-distracted elves, something in his chest seized. He felt unable to move, allowing his eyes a moment to drink you in. Nothing had changed about you. Nothing ever had. Your irises still shone magnificently beneath hooded eyelids, an affable grin tugging at the corners of your lips. Your cloaks and furs draped around you in a familiar silhouette, dusted with frost and powdering the floorboards you stepped upon. You towered over the concourse—towered over Bernard—your timeworn presence a substantial framework of security. Of repose.
Bernard let out a shuddering breath, dragging himself towards you. He found, in that moment, that he still did long to kiss you. To hold you. To wrap you in the warmest of comforts and allow you to sleep for however long you deemed necessary because as long as you were here, he would be happy.
But he also felt himself crumbling.
Nine months without you. Nine months of overexertion. Nine months of cursing every Legendary Figure there was for tormenting him so. For keeping you away. For condemning you to nihility. He had missed you so deeply, as he did year after blasphemous year. He had grown so exhausted. He just wanted to collapse into you and let you breathe life back into him… the same way you always did.
Noticing his approach, the elves that swarmed you started to split, backing away and hording together into smaller cliques. Bernard knew they were watching him—watching both of you—but he couldn't bring himself to care. He hadn't exactly been acting like the Head Elf he was supposed to be these last few months, anyway. As much as he'd attempted to bury his internal strife and keep it out of his team's sight, Bernard knew better. Elves were perceptive creatures, especially when it was their leader in dire straits. He no longer cared if they saw him like this.
He only cared about reaching you.
Bernard's blood turned to ice the moment you lifted your head. The moment your eyes met his, all hazy and burnished with a light so unlike the fatigue currently weighing you down. Your movements slowed, your attention drawn away from the last few stragglers still rushing up to say hello. Bernard stiffened, willing his heart to stop thundering against his ribs. Slowly, he reached up to tug the hat from his head. Dark curls shifted at the movement, shrouding his eyes as his arms hung limp at his sides. Bernard swallowed, trying to find the right words to say.
You spoke instead.
Your expression softened impossibly, and your mouth pulled into a genuine smile. A show of relief. Of devotion. Of love.
"Beloved," you exhaled, the ancient timbre of you voice sending a jolt straight down Bernard's spine.
And that was all it took.
The Head Elf's expression crumbled, his eyebrows knitting together in a last-ditch effort to control the anguish on his face. He took a heavy step forward, then another… dropping his hat on the floor as an exhausted sob bubbled up the back of his throat. Tears welled up in the corners of his eyes, his ears twitching in distress, as he shakily brought his hands up to reach for you.
You closed the gap between you in three strides, large arms coming out to encircle Bernard's smaller frame before pulling him against your chest. His hands clutched desperately at the fabric of your cloak, and instead of greeting you with a warm smile and bountiful kisses…
Bernard greeted you with a mess of violent weeping.
One of your gloved hands came up to cradle the base of his skull, threading carefully through his curls as the other rested around his back, keeping him upright. The elves around you had started to quiet down, a sympathetic hush falling over the Workshop at the apparent weight behind this reunion.
And despite the heavy anguish emitting from Bernard's trembling form, you remained patient. And you smiled down at him. And you ran you hand through his hair.
Your lips brushed against the crown of his head, breath warm despite the cold that clung to your spirit:
"I have missed you so deeply."
Bernard's breath hitched, his grip around you only growing tighter. He rutted his head against your lips, seeking the kisses he knew you were bound to give, and attempted to get a better handle on his emotional state.
"I'm so sorry…" he croaked, because what else could he say? This was not an especially wonderful reunion, and it certainly wasn't a spectacular start to the next three months he'd have with you.
Only three months… He really was meant to suffer, wasn't he?
"I'm so s-sorry," he repeated. "I'm just… I'm so tired… I'm so tired, and I've missed you…"
"Shhh…" you interjected kindly before planting your lips against Bernard's forehead. A broken sound left him at the feel of your very first kiss of the year, the tips of his ears growing red hot. "No tears, beautiful. Let me see your face."
Bernard's chest swelled when he felt your hand slip away from his hair and instead towards his face. You cupped his jaw tenderly, tilting his head upward so you could better witness him. Your elf's face was a cascade of tears, and the bags beneath his eyes were so dark you mistook them for shadows. His pupils were dark pools, dilated and shimmering with a profound mixture of relief and long-withheld-agony.
"There you are," you breathed, leaning down to kiss the very tears that painted his cheeks. You could taste the salt on your tongue, could feel the heat of his skin against your lips. "Bernard."
To hear you speak his name was nothing short of a blessing. He relished in your accent; you'd learned elvish thousands of years ago for him, and Bernard never tired of the heavy way in which you spoke. Like every syllable meant something. Like every word you uttered in reference to him was the most important sound on earth.
He brought his hand up to clutch weakly at your wrist, willing his heart to stop beating so loud. You were here, now. You were present, and you were speaking to him, and you were kissing him, and in an instant the last nine months of waiting didn't seem to matter much at all.
"Forgive me…" he began, but you were already shaking your head.
"There is nothing to forgive."
And then you craned his head up even further, leaning in and pressing a slow, deliberate kiss against his lips. They parted beautifully, allowing you entry as you breathed him in with everything inside of you. You could feel his body melting against yours the deeper the kiss became, his hiccuping breaths steadying the longer you embraced him. His arms slid easily around your neck before the two of you eventually parted, elliciting a few hushed gasps and knowing chuckles from the elves surrounding you. Your eyes pressed into his face, and despite the weariness that hewed to his very spirit, you decided then and there that he had never looked more beautiful.
"You are tired," you said. Bernard knew it was not a question, and his shoulders slumped even further. He gave a feeble nod of his head, ears drooping shamefully.
"Yes…" he whispered, closing his eyes and resting his face against the crook of your neck.
Your hand began rubbing soothing circles against his back, and you gave the elves around you a deliberate look. "I am, too."
They understood your unspoken request instantly, and began diverging further to create a small path for you to pass through. You walked Bernard towards the stairs that led to the elf barracks, granting a nod of thanks to your small friends for their cooperation. With a subtle twitch of your index finger, a gust of cool wind lifted Bernard's hat from the floor and placed it into your waiting grasp. You kept one arm hooked over his shoulders, shrouding his little body in the hefty fabric of your cloak. The walk to Bernard's quarters was made in silence. The wire that attached your very souls together was cumbersone, straining against the smallest shift. You could tell Bernard needed the quietude, and by the time you made it to his quarters, the Head Elf was practically dragging you towards his bed.
There was a ritualistic aspect to your reunion. A pleasant aura that filled your heads with smoke and kept you chained to the present. You placed Bernard's hat on the nightstand. You tugged his boots off, and as you knelt before him he cradled your head in his hands and pressed a kiss to your hair. He helped you unbutton your cloaks, allowing the sacred garments to fall to the floor. You two were reduced to nothing but the careful brushing of fabric and skin, and soon enough you were cacooned in the impossible warmth that Bernard's bed offered.
And it was like you had never left at all.
Your elf was huddled close, arms wrapped around your middle as he rested his head of dark curls against your chest. His emotional state had calmed drastically ever since secluding the two of you in his quarters, and you could feel the strain on that invisible wire start to loosen. You wrapped your arms around Bernard's body, the last remnants of that insurmountable void relinquishing its grip on your psyche. The Winter Solstice had arrived, and with it an abundance of affection. A promise of hope. Of continuation. The harshest front of winter quelled by the promise of life persisting. Of love persisting.
Bernard gave your body a slight squeeze as his eyelids fluttered closed. He nestled closer to the sanctuary of your neck as you pulled the blankets tighter around both of your nesting bodies. His lips pressed a chaste kiss against your pulse, and he muttered a sleepy, "I love you."
You smiled, resting your head back against the mound of fluffy pillows before closing your eyes, as well. And with all the certainty in the world, you whispered back, "I love you, too."
YO <3