Very belated birthday drawing for my lovely partner! I love these boys dearly.
seen from Austria
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seen from Suriname
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seen from Poland

seen from Türkiye
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Italy
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Very belated birthday drawing for my lovely partner! I love these boys dearly.
RP shenanigans lead to Amba needing clarification on a term. He did not get any. (Okay, he did eventually, mainly to spare him the answer Khai would have given him)
Art of a friend’s character after they put up with me disappearing for a bit due to rl. I hope you enjoy it.
Prompt #24: Illustrious
“I want the stars.”
“… What?”
“I want the fucking stars.”
The words prompt Amba to prop himself up on an elbow from his position in the grass and stare over at Dayir, lying close beside him. Dayir’s eyes slowly shift away from the stars overhead to land on him, a content expression on his face. Waiting.
Amba considers him for a few moments before asking, “Have you been chewing on some of your mother’s… less medicinal herbs?”
A slight grin. “Mm. A little.”
Amba stares at him.
“What? It’s hardly any different from alcohol. Plus, they’re a little medicinal. And my shoulder still hurts.”
He shrugs inwardly and flops back onto the grass, directing his eyes back at the heavens above. “I think they don’t work the same.”
“You’ve never had them, have you?”
“No.”
“Hmm.”
The conversation fades into silence. After a few moments Ambaghai decides to muse him.
“Why do you want the stars?”
In the corner of his eye, he sees Dayir’s head roll toward him. Can practically sense the pleased smile on his lips.
“Cause they’re pretty.”
Dayir’s gaze lingers as Amba waits for further explanation. None comes.
He rolls his own head to the side to look at him, “That’s it?”
“Do I need another reason?”
Ambaghai narrows his eyes slightly. Knowing Dayir, there was bound to be more to it than that. Too many thoughts going through that head of his at any given time. Not that that was a bad thing.
Dayir’s smile spreads into a wide grin, a brief note of laughter, and then, “There’s no matching the stars in your eyes, though.”
Amba’s face falls flat as he takes a moment to process that, while beside him Dayir squeezes his eyes shut and laughs at his own terrible line.
Amba frowns. “I’m leaving.”
Dayir breaks from his laughter, “Wait, wait! Come back! I’m sorry!” another snigger of laughter punctuates the end of the sentence as he sits up and twists an arm around Amba’s to pull him back to a sitting position. Amba allows him to do so easily, having never really intended to leave. Just a part of an act, and he smiles in spite of himself.
They don’t lie back down, but Dayir keeps his arm wrapped around Amba’s, moves his hand down to twine their fingers together. He rests his chin on Amba’s shoulder, a seemingly simple gesture that involves a complicated but familiar maneuver to keep their horns from clacking together. There’s something comforting about the gentle pressure on his shoulder.
They stay like that quietly for a time, before Dayir speaks into the silence.
“I don’t really want the stars, you know.”
Amba waits for him to continue.
“They’re just… a sign of something vast. I think I want to know them.”
“I… don’t know what that means.”
“Hm. Neither do I, not completely. But I guess it just makes sense.”
Amba hums an acknowledgement at the statement. He thinks he can begin to understand what Dayir is getting at. He squeezes the hand wrapped in his own a bit more tightly.
I guess it just makes sense.
Prompt #22: Fluster
They ran into the yurt, a flurry of feet and horns and tails, and stopped. Waited in silence as they all turned to stare at the entrance, Khaishan peeking outside, waiting to see if their trouble had followed them.
Ambaghai heard a noise behind him, the beginnings of laughter. He turned to Dayir to see a wide smile across his face, eyes creasing as he dissolved into proper laughter. Unbridled joy, delight. Something about the sight made him smile, too.
Dayir’s laughter died down, his smile relaxing and becoming somewhat lopsided as his eyes flicked up to Amba’s and –
Prompt #5 - Matter of Fact
“Hey.”
“Hm?”
“Can your sister swim?”
“What?” Dayir blinks at the unexpected question, turns his gaze over to Ambaghai. “Yes?”
“Good.”
You’ll be Okay
[ cw: death, grief, blood, violence, animal death ]
❛ I loved you completely. And you loved me the same. ❜
This was hard, ok?
(Start references back to this)
—
He’d taken his hand, against all the doubt in his head, and it had felt right, and comfortable, and comforting. A bit unexpected, but not unwelcome. And as he leaned over to rest his head on Dayir’s shoulder he’d felt quite suddenly the sting of tears, which fell as he’d let out a heavy huff of air. He hadn’t known what had caused them then, but looking back now, he could say it had been fear and relief in equal measure.
Because that’s what it had been, at first. Fear, trepidation. The anxious doubt that came with not knowing something – not knowing how to know – because Ambaghai was used to dealing in sureties, and this wasn’t that.
It was strange to think that was how it started, when loving him had so quickly become a simple truth. As simple a truth as the sky being blue. When, as the years went by, being together came to feel like the only natural thing to be, when any other possibility seemed foreign and wrong.
He had doubted for some time, questioned why Dayir would want to be with someone like him. Unexpressive, not terribly affectionate, and not at all romantic. In fact, he had never really even flirted with the man he’d eventually married. He’d spent years asking himself whether or not he’d ever want things that seemed normal to want in so many other relationships that he saw – wondered if it would be okay if he didn’t.
And every single time he brought up these doubts, they were laid to rest as gently as they could be, and they were never dismissed, and Dayir had told him each time that what he wanted was to be with him. The rest didn’t matter. And even if he wanted to question, to ask if he was actually happy, he saw the truth in his eyes and he knew that his doubts were irrational, however loud they may be. Because Dayir loved him back.
Simple.
And being together had become as natural as breathing, to the point that Ambaghai had never thought to consider any other possibility. He’d taken for granted that Dayir would always be there. Even on the Steppe, where death was not uncommon, it had never occurred to him that that truth might apply to his husband. But it did.
And now, three years past, he can still hardly bring himself to speak of him in the past tense. So he does his best not to speak of him at all.
((Thanks for the ask @astrolevitation!))