seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Philippines
seen from China

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from Japan
seen from Netherlands
seen from South Korea
seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Norway
Folded, faded, hidden
Simon “Ghost” Riley x You
He carries your picture. Carries you in silence.
You’d never seen it.
Not once.
Not taped to the wall of his bunk, not tucked inside his wallet, not swiped through on his phone. You used to wonder – just briefly – if he even kept something of you when he left for missions.
But you never asked. Not because you didn’t want to know. But because he didn’t want to say.
So when he tells you – months later, after coming home with bruised ribs and a stitched-up shoulder – it’s not during a moment of vulnerability.
It’s when you’re folding laundry. Quiet, routine, domestic. That’s when he says it.
“I carry your photo,” he murmurs, like it’s an afterthought.
You pause, hands still on the fabric.
“What?”
“Printed. Small. Folded. Sewn into the inside of my vest, right over my heart.”
A beat. Then, “So no one could find it. No one could use it against me.”
There’s no softness in his voice. Just steel.
You realize then – he’s kept you close, closer than you ever imagined.
Not as a comfort token, but as something sacred.
Something worth hiding. Something worth surviving for.
────⊱♡⊰────
Then another night, somewhere miles away —
The mission goes bad.
Extraction late.
Too fast. Too many. Blood seeps down his side, thick and hot. Leaking through the tactical fabric like black water. He’s behind cover, vision graying at the edges. No one’s answering comms. He knows he’s alone.
He doesn’t panic.
Simon Riley doesn’t panic.
But he does press one trembling hand against his chest – right over the hidden seam, the tiny flap of cloth hand-stitched shut by his own needle and thread.
And beneath it: a small picture.
Crinkled from wear. The ink faded. Folded into fourths until your face is barely visible, but it’s you all the same.
You, smiling. Head tilted. Unaware he ever took the shot.
He presses his palm harder. Breathes deep.
“Still with me.”
That’s what he thinks, right before the darkness takes him.
────⊱♡⊰────
When he wakes in the med bay, broken but alive, the first thing he checks is that vest. That hidden seam.
It’s still there.
You’re still there.
Always. First and last.
────⊱♡⊰────
Later on, you find the vest. He doesn’t let anyone else patch it.
You stumble upon the pocket by accident – fingers brushing a seam that feels thicker than the others.
And when you tug the thread free and unfold the tiny square, the photo slips into your hand. Your face. Smudged. The colors faded to warm sepia. Corners worn nearly to tissue.
It’s been kissed. Or clutched. Maybe both.
Simon doesn’t say anything when he sees you holding it.
But he watches you like you’re the only anchor in a storm-ripped sea. Like if he speaks, the weight of that tenderness might crush him.
And still — no “I love you.”
Just this,
“You don’t go in my phone. You go with me.”
────⊹⊱⊱♡⊰⊰⊹────
“The first thing that steadies his breath.
The last thing he thinks about before the dark close in.
It's you.”
Alfred Kubin (1877–1959), “Nach der Schlacht” (After the Battle)
ink and watercolour on cadastral paper, n.d.
source
Bataille de Passchendaele, Flandre, Belgique, 29 octobre 1917
Photo de Frank Hurley
16th-century plate armor perfectly illustrates when battlefield defense evolved into wearable high art. Crafted for nobility, the incredibly intricate floral and grotesque etchings served as the ultimate status symbol, showcasing the massive wealth and power of monarchies.
Master armorers utilized advanced metallurgical techniques to ensure these suits offered both maximum protection and breathtaking art.
What a bulid we had so much fun doing this
An Oil Study for the Battle of Königgrätz by Emil Hünten