Meet the Artist 2026!!
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@mazymaxx
Meet the Artist 2026!!
Allow me
Pairing: Aventurine x fem!reader
Tags: established relationship, fluff, so much fluff, aventurine is a menace like he always is, spoiling (by the reader sike! uno reverse aven), emotional intimacy as foreplay?? in my fic??, slightly steamy
Summary: He gave so much without hesitation. He would give her the galaxy if she pointed to it. And she… she had never given him anything that cost her more than a smile.
Because, what can you give a man who has everything?
masterlist
She used to think luxury sparkled.
Now she knows it hums.
It hums through Aventurine’s world like a quiet, endless current— in the way his penthouse lights bloom at a word, in the way doors glide open before he reaches them, in the way waiters lean in with subtle deference, anticipating him before he speaks. It hums in the scent of crystal glass and expensive cologne, in the soft thud of credit cards placed without hesitation, in the whisper of tailored fabric brushing against her arm as he helps her into her seat.
He had a way of making luxury look effortless, of folding her into it until even the air around them smelled faintly of money and something warmer, rarer. Something that was him.
It used to make her dizzy, that rhythm. The first few times he whisked her away she could barely keep up. One evening she would be in their apartment eating takeout, the next she was halfway across the galaxy at a lounge perched above a sea of starlight. Aventurine always moved as if the universe had already arranged itself around him. She had laughed and followed and let herself be carried by his gravity.
And though she teased him about his extravagance, she never really thought too deeply about it—because he was Aventurine. He lived in a world gilded by excess, and she had simply learned to breathe its air.
But somewhere along the way, something began to ache.
It wasn’t guilt exactly, but an uncomfortable awareness that crept in at odd hours—like when she’d open one of the small jewelry boxes he left on her dresser, knowing the price tag was something she couldn’t comprehend. Or when she’d check her account and notice the generous “allowance” he’d transferred without mentioning it. Or when she’d catch his expression— soft, almost bashful— whenever she lit up at one of his surprises, as though her joy was his own reward.
She couldn’t pinpoint exactly when it started. Maybe it was the night he brought her to the marble restaurant, three galaxies away, the one with glass walls that reflected the city’s neon constellations. The air had shimmered with gold dust, the kind designed to make the chandeliers sparkle. He had looked devastatingly at ease there, suit gleaming faintly under the light, his laughter smooth and rich as the drinks he poured for her. Everything was beautiful, perfect, and impossibly distant.
She remembered looking down at the menu and feeling her stomach twist. There were no prices listed. There never were.
Aventurine never noticed her pause, or maybe he did and pretended not to. He'd asked her what she wanted and ordered for both of them, describing the dishes like a man who’d seen every flavor the universe could offer and still enjoyed the game of pretending to be surprised. She watched him, chin resting in her hand, and thought how effortless it all was for him. How easy it was for him to exist in these places where everything glittered and nothing was real.
And then he’d turned to her with that lopsided grin— one that looked rehearsed until she realized it wasn’t for her— and said, “You always look like you’re seeing something new, sweetheart. Very endearing.”
She had smiled back. But the ache in her chest had deepened.
He always paid.
Always arranged.
Always anticipated.
When she mentioned once, absently, that her datapad was acting up, a new one appeared on her desk before the day ended.
When she told him she was cold, he draped his coat around her shoulders— a ridiculous, fur-trimmed thing that smelled like him, heavier than she was used to, expensive in a way that made her fingers shy away from the fabric.
When she admired a bracelet in a shop window, he didn’t buy it then. He waited a week, pretended to have forgotten, and then placed it in her palm while they were walking through a quiet market on another world. “Just a trinket I found on the way,” he’d murmured, voice warm with teasing satisfaction.
He made it all seem effortless. Natural.
And that was what made it worse.
Because she loved him. Aeons, she loved him — the way he could charm a room and still listen when she spoke, the way he looked at her like she was his luck incarnate. But she started to notice how lopsided their world was. How every memory they shared glittered because he had made it glitter. How her life had quietly shifted to orbit around his.
That night it really sank in, they were returning from another one of his impromptu adventures, a last-minute trip to a floating lounge above the clouds of another distant planet. The windows had been open to the wind, the stars soft through the haze, his laughter brushing her ear.
By the time they returned to their apartment, the city was asleep. He was still glowing from the gamble he’d won that night, eyes bright, words easy. He shrugged off his coat, tossed it carelessly over the back of a chair, loosened his collar. Everything he did had that sharp, lazy grace of a man who never needed to doubt himself.
She watched him from the bed, hair falling over her shoulder, feeling like she was standing at the edge of a universe that belonged entirely to him.
When he came to her, she smiled and let herself be pulled into his arms. He smelled faintly of champagne and ozone. He murmured something against her temple about how she made the night lucky. His voice was softer than silk.
Later, when he finally fell asleep, she lay awake and looked around.
The room was quiet except for his breathing. The city lights outside reflected off every surface— the crystal decanter, the gold watch on his nightstand, the gold stitching on the comforter. Her own reflection flickered faintly in the mirror opposite the bed, haloed by wealth he had earned.
Her chest tightened. Not from resentment, but from something gentler and heavier.
He gave so much without hesitation. He would give her the galaxy if she pointed to it. And she… she had never given him anything that cost her more than a smile.
Because, what can you give a man who has everything?
The thought stayed with her for days.
It followed her when she went to work, when she scrolled through her messages, when she saw his name flash across her screen with another invitation. Dinner tonight? Something shiny caught my eye — you’ll like it. Don’t make plans this weekend.
Each message made her heart flutter. Each one deepened the quiet yearning blooming under her ribs.
She began to notice smaller things— how rarely Aventurine ate properly when he wasn’t entertaining someone, how his eyes shadowed when he thought no one was looking, how he sometimes came home still wound tight with thoughts he never voiced.
He lived in a world where everything was bought and traded, where affection was another form of investment. She wanted to remind him there was still something that couldn’t be priced.
The decision came quietly.
One morning, while brushing her hair, she caught sight of his reflection in the mirror, caught mid-smile, head tilted, sunlight glancing off his earring. Something in her chest twisted. Every gesture of his, every grand indulgence, came from genuine intent— his version of care, his language of affection. And she loved him for it. But still, a quiet part of her wanted to give him something back, something that would make that smile real. Something that wasn’t measured in carats or credits or headlines. Something that came from her.
And she knew it would have to come from her own hands.
If he could move heaven and earth to spoil her, then she could do something, anything, to make him feel seen. Even if she couldn’t match his world in worth, she could still give him a night that was his.
The thought was both terrifying and exhilarating.
At first, it felt silly, like sneaking around in his domain. She’d never really thought about how his life operated beyond what she saw. But the moment she started looking into the kinds of places he took her to— lounges, private restaurants, casinos— the reality of his world hit her squarely in the chest.
She didn’t think it would be this difficult.
Half the venues didn’t even have public booking systems.
The ones that did required weeks of waitlists and sums that made her blink twice.
She’d known Aventurine had expensive taste, of course. Anyone who’d ever seen the way he dressed, the way he ordered, the way he breathed in silk and smoke, would know it. But knowing and experiencing it firsthand were two very different things.
By the third venue rejection, she was starting to feel mildly insane.
Her first attempt was one of his usual haunts. The opulent top-floor lounge in the nearest planetary system, with glass walls that made the city look like molten gold. She’d been there with him couple of times before, and had remembered how his eyes softened a little under the dim lighting, how his voice dropped low as he poured her a drink and told her stories of “friendly rivalries” that were anything but.
But when she called, the receptionist’s tone shifted the second she mentioned wanting a reservation for two at their earliest convenience.
“I’m sorry, miss,” the voice said politely. “That particular lounge is invitation-only. Members of the IPC executive board typically… reserve entire wings.”
She hung up quickly, cheeks burning.
Of course.
So she tried another. A restaurant he’d mentioned once or twice, offhand, in that lazy tone of his: “They do a steak there that could make a grown man weep. Don’t tell anyone I said that.”
The waiting list was three months long.
By the time she reached her fourth and fifth attempts, she realized that Aventurine didn’t merely frequent hangout spots. He occupied places that hovered somewhere between art galleries and temples— private, gleaming, expensive enough that their menus didn’t even list prices.
Her datapad screen filled with polite rejections, waitlist notifications, and reservation fees with numbers she had never even seen. She found herself staring at one particularly steep price tag, mouth dry, whispering under her breath,
“How the hell does he do this every week?”
The answer was obvious, but the absurdity of it hit her anyway. It wasn’t just wealth, it was access. Influence. A lifetime of knowing exactly which doors to knock on, and which people owed him favors.
Her stomach twisted with something between admiration and exasperation.
For the first time, she saw the other side of his easy generosity. She saw how much work must have gone into cultivating that effortless charm, those endless connections, that casual way he made luxury look like breathing.
She’d always teased him for showing off, but now, confronted with the sheer reality of what “Aventurine-level” indulgence looked like, she almost wanted to apologize. She could almost hear Aventurine’s teasing voice in her head—“Expensive taste, sweetheart?”—and she wanted to laugh, except her chest hurt a little.
Because this— this— was what he did for her constantly. Casually. Effortlessly.
No wonder he always seemed to know the right places, the right times, the right names to drop. His entire life was a carefully curated web of access, and he wielded it like instinct. But for her, even getting a seat in one of his favorite lounges was like trying to infiltrate a different world.
Still, she tried.
She started setting aside bits of her pay. Ignored the occasional temptation to splurge. Even tucked away a portion of the “allowance” he’d so generously gifted her, feeling a strange mix of guilt and amusement at using his generosity to fund something for him.
Then each night, she’d go over her notes:
Favorite drinks: He likes that amber liquor from the Kalis system.
Favorite food: Rare steak, seared just past indecent.
Ambience: dim, private, no noise—he hates interruptions.
She made lists, crossed them out, rewrote them. Agonized over what he’d actually enjoy versus what he’d merely approve of.
And all the while, she imagined the look on his face when he walked in—not the calculated grin of the gambler, not the IPC’s glinting mask—but that soft, private smile he only showed when the world wasn’t watching.
The thought made her pulse skip every time.
And maybe, just maybe, she wanted to see what Aventurine looked like when he was the one being spoiled for once.
The idea rooted itself deep, growing into quiet determination.
By the end of the week, the apartment looked like a command center— datapads open, lists of places and costs, and possible alternatives. She’d been at it for days. Cross-checking menus, availability, ambience. She even tried scaling down: smaller lounges and casinos, local restaurants, private terraces with decent views.
She could make something work. It didn’t have to be that extravagant, just thoughtful.
But that’s when he started catching on.
It began subtly. Little messages dropped throughout the day, both casual and calculated, like loose cards on the table.
A passing comment: “You’ve been quiet lately, sweetheart. I was beginning to think I’d lost my charm.”
Or a raised eyebrow, dangerously curious as he studied her, voice dipping low: “You’re so busy lately. Should I be jealous?”
She could hear the smirk behind the words, the velvet slide of amusement in his tone.
He let her off easy each time, smiling like he didn’t really care— though, of course, he always did. Aventurine never didn’t care. He just hid it beautifully.
Still, something about her evasiveness had him pausing between meetings, glancing at his phone a little too often. He’d been in this game long enough to know the scent of secrets—and hers, whatever it was, carried the faint sweetness of something meant for him.
Then, one evening, just as she thought she could get away with it, he called her, sounding suspiciously entertained over the phone. “You know,” he drawled, “I had to check in with security today.”
“Why?” she asked, trying to sound casual.
He could picture her perfectly: the feigned calm, the little pause in her breathing. It all made his grin widen. “Because someone’s been making a lot of inquiries under my clearance level.”
Her heart nearly stopped. “What?”
“Nothing serious, apparently,” he said, chuckling. “Just the system flagging your name attached to a few high-end reservation networks. Care to explain, darling?”
He could almost hear her expression—the quick panic, the mortified inhale of air. His laugh came out low and delighted as she stuttered: “You— you have alerts for that?”
“Of course I do.” She could hear him lean closer into the phone, could almost see him prop his chin lazily on his hand. “Every system in this building lights up when you so much as think about touching an executive reservation line. And you, my dear, are about as subtle as a quasar.”
She groaned, half hiding her face in her hand.
His voice softened, amused and fond. “So... What are you planning, exactly?”
She tried to deflect, mumbling something about it not being his business. He let the silence stretch, just long enough for her to squirm, just short of mercy. He didn’t push, not really, but she could tell he was enjoying every second of her discomfort.
“Alright, I’ll play along,” he said finally, indulgent. “Whatever this is, I’ll pretend I don’t know." Then his voice lowered again, something wickedly amused slipping beneath the teasing. "But do me a favor— if you want something, just ask me. Don't sneak around.”
She rolled her eyes, exasperated. “I don't want anything. And I'm not planning anything.”
“Sweetheart,” he murmured, grin widening, “you couldn’t hide it if you tried.”
He started teasing her more openly after that. Not cruelly, never cruelly, but with the kind of warmth that made her feel exposed. He sent her little gifts during the week—bottles of her favorite drink, a silk scarf, trinkets accompanied by a card with nothing written on it except for: “For motivation. Don’t overthink it.”
He was onto her. Completely.
And yet, he didn’t ruin it. He let her have her secret, let her fumble and plan and pretend he wasn’t watching.
After that, things only got worse.
Every time she found a place within reach, she’d think, Would he actually enjoy this?
And every time, she’d imagine his raised brow, his critical yet affectionate smirk, and she’d spiral again.
One night, scrolling through photos of high-end dining lounges, she realized how absurdly hard he worked to make their outings seamless. The drivers, the reservations, the timing, the privacy— it all required moving invisible strings, things she’d never even thought to notice. He’d made it all look effortless, like the universe rearranged itself for her comfort.
The realization made her chest tighten in a different way now, not guilt, but awe.
It only fueled her determination more.
The search was harrowing, endless, but when she finally confirmed her reservation late one evening— heart pounding, wallet significantly lighter— she exhaled a shaky laugh.
She’d managed to book the private rooftop of a small, hidden lounge overlooking the ocean of a prospering city two systems away. It was not one of his IPC-level exclusive sanctuaries, but it was still absurdly expensive, the sort of place whispered about rather than advertised. It was located conveniently away from prying eyes of work rivals and corporate sharks, intimate, bathed in the glow of paper lanterns and the soft hush of the evening wind. The menu included his favorite drink, and the closest approximation she could find to that rare imported dish he loved. And the owner, an old acquaintance of someone who owed the IPC a favor, had personally assured her that every last detail would be flawless.
It wasn’t the kind of grand gesture that Aventurine would orchestrate— no orchestras, no penthouse terraces, no champagne flown in from another planet. But it was hers. Every decision, every call, every small touch, chosen for him.
That, she thought, was the point.
Suddenly overcome with the urge to hear his voice, her fingers hovered over her phone, a mix of anticipation and nervous jitters coursing through her veins.
It was late. Too late, probably. He was still at the office, she knew that, but the ache of waiting, the thought of him, was unbearable tonight.
So she called him.
The line barely rang twice before he answered, his voice rich with affection and curiosity. "Missing me already, sweetheart?"
Her lips curved despite herself. She could hear the smile, that lazy lilt on his lips that was both an invitation and a challenge. In her mind, she could see him clearly: sitting behind his desk, hair slightly mussed from running a hand through it one too many times, the faintest trace of exhaustion undercut by that dangerous glint of charm.
Her heart pounded, but she squared her shoulders and pushed on. “Do you have plans tomorrow night?” she asked softly, hopefully.
There was a pause— brief, but enough to feel his interest sharpen on the other end. Then that slow, knowing chuckle she could hear even through the static. “Not anymore.”
“Good,” she said after a moment, trying to steady her voice. “Then I need you to promise me something.”
“Anything,” he said instantly, and this time, the teasing cadence had melted, replaced by something quieter, indulgent, almost elated.
Her heart thudded at the sudden sincerity in his voice. “Just... come home after work. Don’t ask questions.”
That earned her a quiet laugh, deep and amused. “You’re giving me orders now?”
“Yes.”
He chuckled again, the sound languid, indulgent— a slow pour of velvet through the line. It wasn’t often that someone told Aventurine what to do, and he actually wanted to listen. “Well, well. The lady of the house finally shows her fangs.”
“Do you promise?” she pressed, her tone barely above a whisper.
“I promise,” he said, without hesitation.
She should have stopped there, but his voice was doing things to her pulse, dragging her in like gravity. “Trust me, okay? And don’t be late.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t dare.” Then, after a beat of charged silence, his tone dropped, teasingly conspiratorial. "Should I dress for the occasion, or should I let you outshine me as always?
Her laugh slipped out before she could help it. “Whatever makes you happy.”
“Then you’ll have to define happy for me,” he teased, and she could feel the velvet lilt of his voice smoothing into something more wicked. "Because I have ideas—"
“Aventurine.”
That earned her another soft laugh, lower now, more intimate. “All right, all right,” he relented, tone dropping to that silky drawl that made her embarrassingly weak. He could have teased her more, drawn it out, yet he didn’t. There was something thrilling about hearing her voice like this: sure, commanding, hiding something beneath it. “You’re in charge. I’ll behave.”
“Thank you.”
“Don’t thank me yet,” he murmured, and she could hear the grin in his voice again. “You have no idea how curious I am about what you've been scheming. And you do know what curiosity does to a man like me.”
Even as the line went quiet, his voice lingered in her mind— that low, honeyed tone, threaded through with curiosity and something else she couldn’t quite name. It left her breathless, half-exhilarated, half-terrified.
Because now, there was no going back.
She spent the next day in a daze of motion, all quiet determination and trembling purpose, walking the line between nerves and exhilaration. Every spare moment in between her own work was consumed by frantic checks and tiny revisions— confirming the rooftop reservation, arranging the table setup, checking the forecast, even fussing over the temperature of the wine she’d requested.
She wanted everything to feel effortless for him. That for once, there wouldn't be a single thing for him to worry about.
And yet, the closer the hour crept, the less effortless she felt.
By the time evening descended, her nerves were a live wire. She’d changed her outfit three times before finally settling on something understated but elegant, touched up her make up just to have something to do with her hands, did her hair extravagantly just to avoid worrying too much.
When her phone chimed, she nearly dropped it in her haste to answer.
On my way, the message read.
No flourish, no teasing. Just that. Which meant he was taking it seriously.
Her breath caught. She stared at the words for a long time before finally replying, heart thudding and fingers trembling slightly. You better not be late.
Her phone dinged immediately. Wouldn’t dream of it.
The corner of her mouth lifted despite herself. Nervous. Excited. Entirely gone for him.
He arrived to the apartment just after dusk, his silhouette framed in the doorway, jacket sharp against the fading skyline. It had been another day of endless calls and smiling through negotiations that felt like razor wire. The kind of day that left his pulse wired, his patience worn thin, and his smile a weapon he couldn’t quite put down, getting lost in the recklessness and adrenaline of casino lights.
But tonight… he had a promise to keep.
The doors slid open to soft light. Warm. Dim. The scent of something faintly floral lingered in the air— her perfume, threaded through the faint hint of candle wax and breeze that drifted through the half-open balcony doors.
And there she was, standing by the window, her reflection haloed by city lights.
For a moment, Aventurine just stood there, silent, drinking her in as his anticipation grew.
The first thing she noticed when she turned towards him was his expectant grin; the second was the unmistakable gleam of excitement and curiosity in his gaze. “You made it,” she said softly. “I wasn’t sure if I’d have to march into Pier Point to drag you out myself."
“Well, I couldn’t risk missing this,” he drawled, undoing the buttons of his jacket with that slow, deliberate precision that always felt downright sinful. “Not when you’ve got that look in your eyes.”
“What look?” she asked, feigning innocence even as her pulse skipped.
“That look that says you’re up to something.” He stepped closer, his voice dropping low as if confiding a secret. “And that I’m going to enjoy finding out what.”
“Good,” she replied, feigning composure even as her pulse skipped. “Then stop standing there and go change.”
One brow arched, slow and amused. “So, the secret plan is not workplace-attire appropriate?”
“Do it,” she said, though her tone softened at the edges. “We’re going out.”
“Out,” he repeated slowly, tilting his head, amusement curling through his voice. “Just out?”
She folded her arms, a small victorious smile threatening to show. “Yes, out. Now, go change.”
He laughed— low and delighted, a sound that draped itself across the room like silk. “And here I thought I was the one who handled surprises in this relationship.” He passed close enough that his cologne brushed against her skin, his voice dipping near her ear. “Should I be worried?”
“Only if we’re late,” she murmured. "I worked really hard for this."
That stopped him mid-step. He flashed her another grin— sharp, intrigued, a little dangerous. “Do you enjoy keeping me in the dark?”
Maybe she did.
But she said nothing, just waved him off toward the bedroom to go change.
By the time he reappeared a few minutes later, he looked effortlessly disarming— collar loose, shirt crisp, hair effortless but just unruly enough to betray haste. The sight of him stole her words clean away.
“Ready,” he said easily, already reaching for his phone. “Where to? I’ll call the driver.”
She shook her head. “You don’t need to.”
That made him pause. “No?”
“I already did.”
A flicker of surprise passed over his face. Then a low, pleased chuckle. “You did?”
She nodded, smug now at catching him off guard.
He hummed, the sound somewhere between approval and temptation. “Interesting.”
They stepped out into the hall together, and before they reached the elevator, he tried again. “At least tell me the name of the place so I can—”
“I already made the reservation.”
“You did?” He blinked, the faintest trace of genuine disbelief painting his tone before it dissolved into laughter. “You’re telling me I don’t even have to make a call?”
“No calls. No favors. No contacts,” she said. “You just show up.”
“My, my,” he murmured, sliding a hand into his pocket, his gaze brushing over her like liquid heat. “You really planned this.”
It was her turn to flash him a mischievous grin. “Obviously.”
He studied her for a long, unreadable moment before his voice returned, velvet-smooth but edged with sincerity. “You’re full of surprises tonight.”
“That’s the idea. Just sit back and let someone else take care of things for once,” she countered.
His smile faltered, not in displeasure, but in quiet surprise. It was so rare for anyone to do anything for him. He turned to her fully then, startled, a little breathless, a little undone, that charming veneer thinning just enough to reveal something deeper— hunger, fascination, something he usually hid behind his teasing. “If you keep this up, I might start thinking you’re trying to steal my job here.”
She gave him an unamused look, though it came off more like a playful glare with her lips fighting back a smile. "Spoiling is not a job. You'll survive."
“I beg to differ,” he hummed, amused, grin returning as he leaned closer. “It’s a full-time occupation. And I happen to be the most dedicated employee.”
She just shook her head, not even deigning that with a reply.
By the time they reached the car, Aventurine was visibly struggling not to smirk. His restraint was cracking at the seams. Every attempt he made to wrest control — to call ahead, to handle the payment, to “help” — met the same calm resistance. Each time she’d already handled it. And each time, that wicked glint in his eyes deepened, his voice lowering with intrigue.
“Tell me at least this,” he said at last, the city lights streaking past the window as he leaned toward her, voice honey-silk. “Did you pay for it yourself?”
“Yes.”
For a moment, his eyes flicked to hers — quiet surprise, followed by something far more dangerous. Then he let out a low whistle. “You’re going to put me to shame, sweetheart.”
She scoffed. “Not possible.”
“Oh, I don’t know.” His gaze settled on her, lazy and deliberate, that rare mix of fondness and hunger simmering beneath the surface. “I'm afraid I'm already feeling severely humbled.”
She laughed under her breath, turning toward the window so he wouldn’t see her blush. “Stop whining. We're almost there.”
His chuckle filled the space between them — quiet, indulgent, and full of promise. “Can’t wait,” he murmured, and from the sound of it, he meant every word.
When they finally arrived, the staff greeted her first. That alone was a novelty. He watched her with quiet fascination— the confidence in her posture, the way her smile softened when she mentioned the reservation, the quiet assurance of someone who had planned this carefully.
He didn’t quite know what to expect as they were led up a narrow staircase to a private rooftop bathed in soft lantern light, overlooking the ocean, and the suspense was exhilarating by itself. The night wind carried the scent of salt and jasmine; the city shimmered below them in gold and violet hues.
At a first glance, the rooftop didn't look like the world Aventurine was used to commanding.
No marble corridors, no crystal chandeliers, no symphony of polished voices and subtle power plays, no clatter of chips on the table or shimmer of wealth vying for attention.
Just candlelight and quiet opulence.
Just her, standing there waiting for him, the lanterns catching in her hair, eyes luminous with something that made his chest feel too tight.
For once, there was no grand entrance for him to make. No audience to perform for. No need to shine, to dazzle, to win.
He simply stood there and let himself look at her.
“Do you like it?” she asked softly, almost shyly, as though afraid to break the moment.
He didn’t answer right away.
He stepped forward slowly, gaze roaming over the details he couldn’t help but notice: the table set for two with fine porcelain, a bottle of his favorite vintage chilling nearby, plates already prepared with precision. The flicker of gold across glass. The rhythmic, distant hush of waves below.
Everything was already done.
Handled. Arranged. Perfect.
And none of it was his doing.
That realization hit him harder than he expected— a strange, quiet ache beneath his ribs.
Aventurine was used to being the architect of his own comfort, of everyone else’s comfort. To be the one who moved the pieces, who planned, paid, executed. It was his way of controlling the world, of controlling himself. To never owe, never depend.
Yet here, now, he was simply being given to, and it was disarming in the most dangerous way.
He let out a low laugh, a sound as unsteady as it was amused— not mocking, but almost in disbelief. “You did all this?”
She nodded, lips curving, nervous but proud. “I told you to trust me.”
He leaned closer, brushing a strand of hair away from her face, fingers lingering just a little too long. “You must’ve gone through hell booking a place like this.”
She laughed breathlessly. “You have no idea.”
When the host approached and lead them to the table, Aventurine instinctively reached for his card, the movement reflexive, an act of habit. "At least let me handle the bill for the food—"
But the host’s polite smile stopped him mid-motion. “It’s already been taken care of, sir. The lady arranged everything in advance.”
Aventurine froze for a heartbeat, his practiced charm faltering just slightly. “Is that so?”
“Yes, sir,” the man replied, bowing lightly before retreating.
He turned to her, amusement flickering— not his usual sharp, effortless self, but something slower, softer, more fragile. “You’ve thought of everything, haven’t you?”
“I tried to,” she said, almost whispering.
He sank into his chair with an exhale, leaning back as though testing the feeling of being still. His fingers drummed against the crystal glass before him, eyes tracing the skyline as if to buy himself a moment. “You know, this is dangerous,” he said finally, voice low and thoughtful. “You’re setting a dangerous precedent, sweetheart.”
Her head tilted, a question in her gaze. “How so?”
He turned to her, smile lazy, but gaze sharp, unreadable. “If I get used to being spoiled like this, I might never want to lift a finger again.”
Her laugh came soft and quick, easing the tension for a moment. But Aventurine didn’t join her. He was too busy watching her, studying her with the same intensity he reserved for a game of chance.
When the waiter returned again, he reached out automatically for the menu. “What would you like—”
“Already ordered,” she interrupted gently, almost apologetically. "For both of us."
Aventurine blinked, thrown again. The waiter set the plates before them with quiet ceremony. He glanced down at the dish— one of his favorites, prepared exactly the way he liked it. He looked back up again, studying her in a way that made her pulse jump. “You’re telling me you knew exactly what I wanted before I did?”
The waiter smiled politely. “The lady was very specific.”
When they were alone again, Aventurine exhaled a laugh, soft and incredulous, his usual grin tempered by something quieter. “Now, I'm really starting to feel pampered.”
“Maybe a little,” she admitted, looking down at her plate to hide her smile.
“Mhm,” he hummed, leaning forward, elbow resting on the table. “I can’t decide if I should be flattered or terrified.”
“I’ll take flattered.” She smiled back, but he could see the nerves in her fingers as they brushed the rim of her glass.
The candles flickered in the glass between them, painting gold across her face. Every detail she’d arranged, from the perfectly chilled drink to the discreet distance of the staff, spoke of effort, of thought. Of how well she knew him.
The precision of it all was unsettling. Not because it was wrong, but because it was perfect in a way he hadn’t planned.
And he’d built his whole life on control.
Even his affection came carefully rationed— gifts, surprises, gestures. He gave so that he wouldn’t have to need. He adorned others in luxury so they’d never glimpse the hollow places inside him.
But this— this quiet, intimate evening, crafted just for him— left no room for the glittering armor he usually wore.
For a long moment, neither of them spoke. He swirled his drink, gaze fixed on the slow, dark whirlpool in the glass, a small storm contained in crystal. The rooftop had fallen quiet, the lounge lights blinking like constellations reflected in the water. The lanterns above them swayed gently in the breeze, their soft glow gilding his profile.
Candlelight caught in his eyes when he looked at her again, sharp and assessing. And then softly, almost to himself, Aventurine said, “Why?”
Her brows knit, uncertain what he was referring to. “What do you mean?”
“Why all this?” He gestured vaguely at the table, the fine porcelain, the bottle chilling in its cradle, the city glittering below. “If you want something from me, sweetheart, all you ever have to do is ask. There’s no need for all this flattery.”
Her eyes widened just a bit, caught off guard. But then she sighed in understanding. “That wasn’t the goal.”
“No?” His grin curved, still edged with that familiar mischief, but gentler now. “Then what was?”
She hesitated, fingers toying with the stem of her glass. When she spoke, her voice was small but steady. “I wanted to repay you.”
There was a long pause.
“Repay me?” he repeated, carefully, the notion itself tasting foreign on his tongue. The words didn’t even compute at first, as though she’d spoken a language he’d forgotten.
“You do so much,” she said, the words spilling out now— quick, fragile, honest. “You plan everything, pay for everything, make everything perfect. And I— I just… wanted you to have a night where you didn’t have to do anything. Even if it’s small. Even if it doesn’t compare.”
The words made him go utterly still. The world seemed to narrow for a moment, night air stirring between them, cool and sweet.
“You think I do those things because I expect something in return?” His tone was soft, but the weight in it was palpable, the kind that came from the depths he rarely let anyone touch.
“I know you don't,” she said, barely above a whisper. “That’s exactly why I wanted to.”
Aventurine’s smile wavered, almost disbelieving. Because the way she said it— not as gratitude, not as debt, but as care— carved through every quiet defense he’d ever built.
He reached out, tracing the rim of his glass again, as if grounding himself. Silence stretched between them, not uncomfortable, but fragile, tender. Below, the city murmured like the world itself was holding its breath. “You really shouldn’t have gone through all this trouble,” he murmured at last.
“But I wanted to.”
He exhaled then, slow and resigned. The charming polish returned full force, his dazzling grin back on his face, but his eyes shone in a rare gesture of wordless affection. “Then I suppose I’ll just have to let you.”
And for the rest of the evening, he didn’t try to take over. He didn’t try to dominate the moment. He didn’t reach for his phone, didn’t ask to see the bill, didn’t turn it into one of his usual games where control was both the currency and the prize, the way he always did when comfort became too intimate to bear.
He just let the evening unfold around him.
He ate. Drank. Laughed.
Simply content to let himself be led.
It felt almost unnatural at first— sitting still while someone else carried the weight of intention. But little by little, the edges of his composure softened. He leaned back in his chair, one hand draped loosely over the backrest as the other traced idle patterns against the tablecloth, his gaze fixed on her with that dangerous, lazy attention that meant she had all of him, every ounce of focus, every quiet thought.
He let her pour his drink, the movement unhurried. He accepted it without a word, their fingers brushing, but he didn’t pull away. A small thing, but it landed like a spark.
When she cut a small piece of steak and held it out across the table, Aventurine almost laughed— a startled sound, half disbelief, half delight. “You’re serious?”
She nodded, eyes glinting. "You said you'd let me."
With an incredulous shake of his head, he leaned forward, eyes never leaving hers as he caught her wrist gently, steadying it before bringing it to his lips. The air between them seemed to still. Her pulse jumped beneath his fingers as he bit down, slow and deliberate, his teeth just grazing the edge of the fork before he pulled away.
She looked down, flustered. But when she met his eyes again, the amusement in them had softened into something deeper, rarer— the quiet awe and reverence, the look of a man unaccustomed to being on the receiving end of care.
He’d spent years building walls out of polished stone and gold. He used charm as defense, generosity as distance. He knew how to make others feel wanted, adored, indebted. But to be cared for without expectation, that stripped something bare inside him. Something he didn’t realize had grown so starved.
So he let her feed him another bite. Let her refill his glass. Let her laughter spill between courses like soft music.
Let himself receive.
And by the time the candles had burned low, and the waiter had finally cleared their plates and left them with the last of the drinks, Aventurine had grown quiet in a way she’d rarely seen— not out of boredom or thought, but out of a fullness he didn’t quite know how to hold. He leaned back in his chair and studied her through the faint shimmer of the lantern light, his posture loose now, utterly relaxed, the edges of his exhaustion softened by something that looked startlingly like peace.
“You know,” he said after a while, voice quieter than she’d ever heard it, “I don’t think anyone’s ever tried to spoil me before.”
"There’s a first time for everything,” she said softly.
He smiled at that— not his gambler’s practiced grin, but something small, tired, and grateful. “If I’d known this was what you were planning, I would’ve let you surprise me sooner.”
"No, you wouldn’t have." She rolled her eyes affectionately. “You would’ve found some way to take control halfway through and pay for everything. Actually, I'm surprised you haven't already.”
A laugh escaped him— a real laugh, low and bright. For a long moment, he just looked at her, his eyes full of light and something almost calculating. “You’re right,” he said, contemplative. “Wouldn’t want to ruin it.”
“You almost did,” she teased. "How was I supposed to know that you would know if I went snooping around?"
Aventurine studied her in silence for a beat, the wind stirring faintly between them, brushing against the last flickering candle. When he finally spoke again, his voice dropped into that low, honeyed tone that always seemed to hold a private meaning. “You win, sweetheart,” he admitted, smirking faintly. “You’ve outplayed me.”
But despite the words, Aventurine didn’t sound like a man who’d lost. There was no defeat in his voice, only something slow and deep and dangerous, the quiet pull of admiration bleeding into want.
And she had a feeling she had just started a game she didn't know if she could win.
When they were finally ready to leave, the rooftop had mostly emptied, the soft hum of the night wind replacing the muted clink of glasses and laughter. The air had cooled, brushing against bare skin and lingering perfume. She smiled at him— satisfied, a little smug— before murmuring, “I’ll go grab our coats.”
He nodded as she walked away toward the hostess stand, and he let his gaze linger just long enough to be intimate— admiring, unhurried, undeniably fond. Her heels clicked softly against the marble, the faintest echo fading as she turned the corner. Then, as soon as her silhouette slipped out of view, the atmosphere shifted almost imperceptibly.
The shift was momentary, not sudden but all-encompassing. The kind of invisible ripple that followed power when it walked through a door, or in Aventurine’s case, when it decided to take the leash off. The staff’s movements sharpened quietly, their tone adjusted— a collective, unspoken awareness of the man still sitting there.
A few whispers between servers.
A hostess smoothed her skirt.
The owner straightened instantly, adjusting his jacket.
Almost as if everyone in unison braced themselves, just then, for the main event of the night.
Still sitting there, Aventurine’s smile curved, slow and knowing. The kind of smile that burned bridges and built fortunes with the same disarming grace that had earned him everything he owned: influence, respect, status.
Finally.
He’d been incredibly well-behaved tonight if he said so himself. Almost painfully patient and nothing but perfectly pliant. All evening, he’d been playing along, leaning back, letting her lead, indulging every little victory with that lazy, devastating smile.
He'd admired the way she'd squared her shoulders when she insisted on spoiling him—head high, eyes alight with quiet determination, as if she were daring him to argue. And oh, how tempting it had been. The instinct to tease, to remind her how absurd it was to challenge him to a game of indulgence, had thrummed beneath his skin.
But then, she looked at him with that achingly sincere gaze.
Not with calculation or strategy, but as though giving came naturally, as though the act of doing something for him was its own reward. There was no angle to it. No expectation. No transaction hiding behind the gesture. Just that infuriating, radiant kind of generosity that asked for nothing back.
It was selfish, in its own way— beautifully, naively selfish. And adorable, really, her stubborn insistence on balance, as if generosity between them could ever be measured in credits or favors.
Not when she had given him more than he'd ever thought possible.
And truth be told, for a single fleeting, reckless moment, he’d wanted to let her win this one. To accept the dinner, the effort, the thought, and let her believe he’d surrendered.
But then, the insistent urge hit him with the force of a tidal wave: the unbearable craving to give back. To match her selflessness with something bigger, louder, more consuming. It was not a want, it was a need.
Yet, he did not want to overstep. And when she turned her head to smile at him—content, triumphant—he’d already decided he would indulge her.
But only for a little while, that is.
He let her enjoy her moment, letting her forget that he was a man built on odds and margins, on the thrill of taking back control just when everyone thought he’d yielded. He let himself bask in her attention, all the while biding his time.
Not letting her notice that he’d caught the owner’s eye between courses.
That he offered a brief, meaningful nod to a passing waiter.
That he had even slipped a murmured request to the host when she’d excused herself for a moment earlier— nothing overt, nothing she’d notice, but just enough to make sure the evening ended his way. Well-intentioned manipulation, elegantly hidden beneath courtesy.
It was, after all, a game, and Aventurine never placed a bet he hadn’t already stacked in his favor.
It was her mistake to bet on his restraint.
And, honestly, did she really think he’d let this slide? That he was that type of man?
He chuckled under his breath, fingers drumming idly against the table. He wanted to give her everything. Every credit, every gamble, every ounce of luck he’d ever hoarded and locked behind charm and greed. That was the problem with gamblers, after all. They never knew when to stop.
The desire rose, sharp and unrelenting, threading through his chest like heat. With her gone for a moment, the table cleaned and his patience paid off, he raised his hand and called for the expectant staff with practiced ease, his charm and subtle mischief sliding into place as easily as breathing. Cloaking him in that effortless, polished confidence he usually reserved for boardrooms and negotiation tables.
Their attention snapped to him, and the owner hurried towards his side, both eager and apprehensive.
“Lovely evening,” Aventurine said, voice warm enough to melt through glass, as he leaned an elbow against the table, chin resting in his palm. “Though I think we’ve had a bit of a mix-up.”
The owner blinked, instantly attentive. “A mix-up, sir? I am terribly sorry, I wasn’t aware—”
“Yes, a mix-up. An awful one,” Aventurine said with a sigh so theatric but persuasive, it nearly passed for sincerity. “You see, my date insisted on paying tonight. Very admirable of her, I know, but just between you and me—” he lowered his voice into a conspiratorial purr “— I wouldn’t be much of a gentleman if I let that happen, now would I?"
The owner’s lips twitched despite himself, polite composure breaking just enough to show deference. “Ah, a misunderstanding, then."
“Exactly.” Aventurine’s grin sharpened, a glint of wicked amusement in his eyes as he slid his card across the polished surface, movement unhurried but deliberate. "So, let's make sure the lady's generosity doesn’t cost her a single credit, shall we?”
The owner nodded immediately. "No need to worry, Mr. Aventurine, everything will be handled. After all, we are honoured to recieve the IPC's patronage.”
Aventurine’s lips curved into a faint, satisfied smile. “Perfect. I knew we’d understand each other.”
A discreet exchange followed— swift reversal of her payment, his own card swiped, signatures done with an elegant flourish, everything arranged in a flash.
"Oh, and while we’re at it..." Without even looking, Aventurine’s pen swept across the bill in a few graceful strokes, scrawling a tip that would make the staff remember his name for months. “A small token of gratitude for being an accomplice.”
The owner glanced down and blinked at the obscene amount. “You’re... very generous, sir.”
“Dangerous habit, I know. Terrible for business.” But even as he spoke, the word generous lingered in his mind like an echo. It wasn’t generosity. It was selfishness in its most primal form. He was just paying tribute to her with the only currency he trusted: money, wit, charm.
The only way he knew how.
With the deal sealed and the balance quietly overturned, Aventurine straightened his shirt as he rose, rolling his shoulders, voice warm with velvet mischief. “The service was flawless, by the way," he said, flashing a final, easy grin to the staff. "I’ll make sure she leaves a glowing review, after she stops being furious at me for what I’m trying to get away with.”
And just as the owner scurried away, he caught sight of her returning figure reflected in the polished glass, expression bright, utterly unaware. And for one private heartbeat, Aventurine let himself linger in the luxury of that moment: her, radiant and pleased with herself; him, quietly maneuvering his countermove beneath her victory.
By the time she reached him, his face had smoothed back into that perfectly innocent serenity— just a lazy, unreadable smile playing at his lips as she handed him his jacket.
“Perfect timing,” he murmured, taking it from her. “Shall we?”
“You didn’t even try to fight me for the bill this time,” she said, glancing up at him through her lashes, suspicion laced through her tone. "Are you sure you're fine?"
“I was too busy being charmed by the company,” he replied smoothly, voice low and amused, slipping into his jacket with effortless grace.
She arched a brow. “You sound far too pleased with yourself for someone who didn't get his way. And you’re still smiling.”
He laughed softly. “You think this is the smile of a man who’s plotting something?”
"Aren't you? Or are you admitting defeat, then?” she teased as they walked toward the elevator, her smile turning sly.
“Defeat is such an ugly word,” he said smoothly, reaching out to rest his hand on her lower back. “Let’s call it… strategic surrender.”
Her eyes narrowed playfully. “Strategic surrender?”
“Mmh.” His smile deepened. “The kind of surrender that wins you more in the long game. Like throwing a hand in poker to raise the stakes.”
She shook her head, but couldn’t help laughing, leaning into him slightly as they walked. “That’s rich coming from you.”
“Rich is sort of my specialty,” he murmured back, offering his arm with exaggerated gallantry.
Inside their apartment, the door had barely clicked shut before the silence settled again— heavier this time, loaded with something that made her heart pound against her ribs. The night had gone incredibly well. Too well. If she were more cynical, she could almost say it was suspicious.
She slipped off her coat, still smiling, still glowing with the satisfaction of having surprised him, trying to break the loaded tension with something normal and safe. “Did you—” Her voice faltered, soft, almost shy, as she turned towards him. “Did you enjoy yourself?”
Aventurine could only chuckle at that. His gaze lifted to her— slow, deliberate, like he was seeing her for the first time all over again, eyes flicking over her face as if trying to read what she was really asking. “Enjoy myself?” he echoed, amused. “Sweetheart, are you seriously asking me that?”
Her lips curved, but she didn’t quite meet his eyes. “I just… I don’t know. You were quiet on the way home. I thought maybe it wasn’t really your thing.”
That earned her a low, startled laugh—warm, rich, and entirely disbelieving. “Not my thing?” he repeated, as if the idea itself were ridiculous.
Her throat tightened, caught between relief and sudden self-consciousness. “I just didn’t want to get it wrong,” she murmured, half laughing, half shrinking under the intensity of his gaze.
The light from the city spilled faintly through the window, casting gold along the edges of his jaw, the line of his cheekbone, the faint curl of his smile that wasn’t really a smile at all, but pure need.
And then he moved.
It wasn’t sudden or rough— it was inevitable.
He crossed the space between them in a few measured steps, every line of his body thrumming with restraint and intent.
“Aventurine?” she breathed, but the word came out as something else, not quite a question but not quite surrender.
He looked down at her, and the mask he always wore, that smooth, polished confidence, had cracked. What shone through wasn’t amusement, or control, or charm. It was hunger. A quiet, desperate, reverent kind of hunger.
All the patient restraint he’d worn through dinner had shattered the moment they were alone. His hands came around her waist, firm but trembling with something volatile as he pulled her against him. “Darling,” he said, his voice a velvet drawl that trembled at the edges, “you could’ve taken me to the cheapest food stall on the lower decks, and I’d still think it was the best night of my week.”
She tried to laugh—nervous, breathless—but the sound barely formed. “You're exaggerating.”
“You think so?” His smile was slow, dangerous. He leaned close, brushing his lips along her jawline, teasing. His eyes glinted darkly, the flicker of his real self shining through. “You’ll have to let me return the favor now.”
Her hands wound around his neck, fingers tangling in the golden strands. “You’re not supposed to repay kindness,” she countered, trying to keep it light.
“Oh, sweetheart,” he said, his voice dropping to a velvet purr. “Everything’s negotiable. And I’m very good at settling debts.”
She swallowed, caught between amusement and a flare of heat that settled low in her stomach. “Is that the thanks I get after everything?”
“Oh, you’re so incredibly smug,” he murmured, though his tone betrayed him—half adoration, half disbelief that she could still surprise him like this.
She tried to laugh, soft and breathless. “I think I earned it.”
He didn't reply, only leaned down, breath ghosting against her lips, and she could feel the way his self-control strained, thread by thread. Every inch of him screamed hunger—need, reverence, disbelief—that she’d done something so thoughtful, so simple, and undone him completely.
He was about to close the distance, to finally give in to that wild impulse burning through him since they first sat at the table that evening, when her phone chimed.
A soft, polite notification tone.
She blinked, dazed, lowering her arms to reach for it. The spell broke, but not completely; the air still hummed between them, charged and waiting. Aventurine didn’t move his hands from her waist. He only leaned back a fraction, eyes fixed on her as she unlocked the screen.
Then—
Her expression changed.
Her brows knit together, mouth falling open in outrage. Her tone sharpened, equal parts disbelief and indignation. “You didn’t!”
“Didn't what?” he asked, barely holding back a self-satisfied smirk, though the corner of his mouth twitched. Ah, so that's all the time he had been given.
She turned the screen toward him.
A message from the restaurant read: We’d like to thank Mr. Aventurine for his continued patronage. Your meal has been fully reimbursed as part of his ongoing VIP account.
“You reimbursed me.” She accused, waving her phone at him like a weapon. “You cheated.”
He tilted his head, feigning innocence far too well, and had the audacity to look almost sincere. “Cheated? I just corrected a clerical error.”
Her jaw dropped. “A clerical—!" she sputtered, incredulous. "Aventurine! When did you even manage to do this?”
He laughed unabashedly, absolutely delighted. “You didn’t really expect me to sit there and let you pay for my dinner, did you?”
“That was the entire point!”
“Mhm,” he hummed, pulling her even closer against him until her protests softened. “And now the point has been elegantly undone.”
She groaned, exasperated. “Unbelievable.”
“Consider it interest,” he murmured, his lips ghosting near her ear, the edge of laughter fading into something more intimate. “For catching me off guard.”
“You couldn’t let me have this one thing?” she demanded, crossing her arms, though her cheeks flushed with more than irritation.
He smiled, slow and utterly shameless, a smile that made it impossible to stay angry at him for long. “On the contrary. I’m letting you have plenty of things.” His gaze flicked down, deliberate, suggestive. “Just not the bill.”
“You’re insufferable,” she shot back, though her voice softened, betraying something warmer beneath her frustration as she wound her arms around his neck again. "It was supposed to be a nice evening. For you."
His laughter was quiet, genuine— and for a moment, she saw the fondness under the mischief, but the hunger beneath it only deepened. “Oh, it was,” he admitted quietly. “And I enjoyed it.”
“Then why—”
“Because I'll admit,” he cut in gently, his tone shifting, no longer just teasing, but low and intense, “I couldn’t stand the idea of you spending a single credit on me. Wouldn't be really gentlemanly of me, now, would it?”
She tilted her chin up, stubborn even as the edges of her defiance blurred. She’d wanted to give him something. And he, fool that he was, couldn’t bear to let her.
He leaned down, lips barely grazing her jaw as he whispered, “And if anyone’s going to spoil anyone here…” His breath was warm against her skin, a ghost of contact that made her knees weaken. “…it’s going to be me.”
He pulled back just enough to meet her eyes, gleaming with that blend of hunger and amusement that always unraveled her composure. His grin widened, wolfish and wicked. “Now, if you really want to make it up to me…” he said, voice soft, lethal. “Let me return the favour properly.”
Koki Redesign go brrr, their lore has changed significantly oop Been oc pilled recently so I haven't been posting.
trying to get ready for arfight and my brain decided to overhaul most of my oc's :/
I’m back with cookies!! (Or I guess cookie in this case)
affirmations for oc artists:
* im allowed to change my ocs design
* nobody will kill me if i change my ocs design
* compliments are not threats
* just because somebody said they like my ocs design that does not mean they will hunt me down and kill me if i change my ocs design
* my ocs are mine and i can design them how i want
* im very brave and i can change my ocs design if i want to
* !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! TRUEEEE TRUEEEEEE
you are allowed to be wrong you are allowed to mess up you are allowed to be embarrassing.
you are also allowed to do this.
Silly little guy :3
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Please keep interacting with this post because when I come to tumblr to procrastinate, this shows up again in my notifications and guilts me into writing again
work work work !!!
Sunflower miku she is a gardener she like flower she just like me fr
This is as finished as this is getting oop, he’s so silly
This is as finished as this is getting oop, he’s so silly
In honor of pulling him have some doodles, more to come
Have a clown for April Fools!!
I'm giving up for the night, wohoo!
Item: A Stunning Frame Rarity: ⏶ Common
What game has the best art style?
Feed your dashboard by answering my question, blogger.
I don't think there's one best artstyle, I like a lot of things for different reasons.
Night in the Woods for it's simplicity, Little Nightmares because its surreal and off putting, Stardew Valley being cute and kinda omnious at times, etc
Item: The Glowing Code Rarity: ✦ Uncommon
What video game can you not complete without cheat codes?
Feed your dashboard by answering my question, blogger.
could not tell you


