FFXIV - Kitsuno Ishida by @etroveria
-- I am so, so delighted by this lovely portrait of Kitsuno!! I adore the lovely shoujo manga style and wanted to see Kitsuno drawn in it, and I am so happy!! It looks like a true princess portrait, and her shiny jewel scales are so gorgeous! Thank you so much for such swift and wonderful work!
Last commission done! Gone one done for the Knoltros pair renewing their vows. Want to thank @etroveria for taking up both of my commissions and for how awesome they came out. Look ‘em up to see their other works if you’re looking for one as well!
@etroveria did a piece I commissioned for my little Lizard. Nhhhhnnnn.
She was wonderful to work with and I will go back for more. If you haven’t, go check out her stuff!
Got a commission earlier in the week from the artist @etroveria about Roger ICly sneaking up on Chi with a gift. It came out preeeetty awesome, if I do say so myself! Go check out her other works!
So out of the blue, I was surprised with this commission by my wonderful boyfriend, Xemera Takahashi.
Thank you so much to @etroveria for taking the time to draw this.
Words are failing me right now... I’ve always wanted artwork of Morgana, and now I finally have some! <3
Battle dress at the ready!!
This is my secret santa gift for @etroveria for @jaytimsecretsanta!!! I hope you like it!!!
Read on AO3
Tim came in the room, and Jason couldn’t speak for a second.
They’d been dealing with some sort of lesser imp who’d gotten a look at Christmas decorations and decided that it was time for its latest artistic venture. Tim and Jason had disagreed, especially after its first few tricks landed its victims in the hospital with broken legs and candy cane splinters in their hands. Jason and Tim had caught the imp, and even gotten off easy -- but they hadn’t been unaffected, either.
They’d both been caught in the imp’s last hurrah, but so far, Jason had been far more amused by it than Tim was, and for good reason.
The silence was broken by the jingle of the bells on Tim’s shoes and hat. Jason snorted; Tim closed his eyes for a long moment.
Jason unfroze and started to cackle.
“If you tell anyone about this,” Tim enunciated carefully, “I will arrange your murder.”
“Uh huh,” Jason hummed absently, sparing half a millisecond to give Tim’s statement all the weight it deserved. Which was none. He had a camera in his mask, of course, but he took out a better one from one of his many pockets just to capture all the little details of the expression on Tim’s face. There was no way Jason wasn’t immortalizing Tim’s current outfit: the guy was just so cute, from the tips of his ears to his curly, curly shoes.
“You’re an elf,” Jason pointed out gleefully, lowering the camera again. “This is going on all my Christmas cards for about twelve and a half years.”
Tim’s face scrunched up. It was almost -- but not quite -- exactly the same as his ‘wasn’t this mug full of coffee three seconds ago?’ expression, only missing the adorable head-tilt probably meant to jog the memory of whether he’d drunk the coffee or not.
“You send out Christmas cards?” he asked finally, tone dubious. “And where does the half come from?”
“I would most fuckin’ certainly send out Christmas cards in a heartbeat if they have your grumpy face on the front,” Jason said, grinning so wide his cheeks were starting to hurt. “Especially right now. I love the bells.”
Tim groaned and sat on Jason’s sofa like he belonged there, tucking his belled feet under himself in a flurry of jingling. Normally, Jason might’ve raised a stink about taking his shoes off first, but they’d both already tried that, and their shoes had been stuck firmly. Jason didn’t know how he’d use boots shaped like hooves ever again; he’d probably end up selling them, and hoping never to see the things again.
“You’re the one dressed as a reindeer,” Tim sulked, avoiding his eyes.
“Yeah, but I can take the helmet off,” said Jason, and did. He tweaked one of the antlers which had been somehow attached to his helmet and grinned. It wasn’t like he didn’t have backup helmets; they got broken or exploded (usually by Jason himself, admittedly) a little too often not to plan ahead for this kind of thing.
Jason felt smug, until Tim lifted his eyes again and immediately started laughing.
“Your nose,” he managed, and pointed with a too-pointed glove finger at Jason’s face.
Jason’s hands flew to cover his nose. “What’s wrong with it?” he asked, in as casual a tone he could manage with his hands over half his face. (It was not casual at all. He tried.)
Tim waved a hand at Jason for a minute, gasping out his laughter, then pulled himself together enough to sit demurely with only his shoulders shaking and a bitten-back smirk on his lips to show his amusement. “It,” he pronounced, “is bright red.”
Jason stared for a second before it clicked. “The red-nosed...”
“Reindeer,” Tim finished. “Should’ve guessed it, with the red hood and all. You’re Rudolph.”
“Ugh,” groaned Jason, and sat himself on the sofa with more force than was strictly necessary. “I hate that song.”
“What’s wrong with it? Or do you just want to be included in all our reindeer games?” Tim’s voice turned singsong on the last few words. Jason refused to find it adorable.
“Overplayed,” Jason grunted. “I’d rather hear yet another song stolen from Pachelbel’s Canon in D than Rudolph for the five millionth time. Unfortunately, I get to have both.”
“Poor baby,” Tim gloated.
It was easy for him to be smug; Tim’s walls weren’t thin enough that he had to hear the neighbors playing Christmas songs on repeat every night since Halloween. Jason had taken to hanging around the Batcave just to avoid Christmas carols, which should tell even passing acquaintances how desperate he was. He almost wished Thanksgiving was the kind of holiday people had songs for, just so he could’ve heard something new, but he knew he’d have been assaulted by those songs, too.
“Shut up,” Jason suggested, instead of explaining all of that. He put his feet up on the sofa, narrowly missing the edge of Tim’s curly shoes. It made Tim’s bells ring anyway; Jason grinned again.
Tim spared him a dry look, then pulled one of Jason’s burner phones from behind the sofa cushion. Jason wasn’t sure if that displayed uncomfortable knowledge of this safehouse or just Jason’s habits, but either way Jason wasn’t on top of his game even before he realized that Tim was calling Bruce with it.
Jason thunked his head against the back of the sofa and tried not to listen in. Tim wasn’t saying anything new -- only what they’d already covered between themselves, except with fewer jokes and more mission report. Jason wasn’t sure why Tim bothered; they’d left the imp trapped in front of a place Jason knew Bruce kept an eye on -- Bruce probably already had it in his grasp and at least five different plans on how to return it to its dimension.
Tim put the phone down abruptly, without saying goodbye; Bruce had hung up on him, then. He did that a lot when he thought he had better things to do.
“So what’s the word?” Jason asked, trying to restrain the frustration that still haunted him with Bruce. “Are we assigned cleanup duty or something? ‘Cause I gotta say, I’m not feeling going out again tonight in this getup.”
“Do you think I am?” Tim said, rolling his eyes and twitching his bells pointedly. “No, he said he’d take care of it. We’re supposed to rest tonight, and the magic on us will probably be broken by morning.”
Jason yawned pointedly just to see Tim’s eyes narrow. “Nothing we didn’t already know, then. I don’t know about you, but I’m really feeling a Christmas movie marathon tonight. It’s tradition, after all.”
“You’re putting on Die Hard, aren’t you,” said Tim, not even bothering to make his tone a question.
“Of course,” Jason lied. He’d been planning to play It’s A Wonderful Life, actually, but Tim’s question brought it to Jason’s attention that perhaps it was not a good idea to put on a movie during which he cried every single time he watched it, not when he had an audience. His nose was already red enough, and he didn’t want to get up to find wherever he’d put his box of tissues after he’d used a few tissues to wipe the blood from a knife slash on his leg. It’d have to wait.
“Fine,” Tim said, “but you're going to have to make the popcorn.”
“You forget how to work a microwave or something?”
Tim stared at him and wiggled one of his feet so the bells jingled noisily.
Jason sighed dramatically. “You’re so demanding,” he complained, and heaved himself to his feet to trudge into the kitchen. It was just as well, really, because he didn’t have Die Hard on DVD and his laptop was still on the kitchen counter from that morning -- he grabbed it and searched for the movie as the sound of popping kernels filled the air.
“Do you have coffee?” Tim called.
Jason rolled his eyes up to the ceiling. “Is that your way of asking for some, Timbo?”
“Please?”
“Uh huh,” said Jason, unimpressed. He did have coffee. He even had the good stuff -- but that wasn’t what Tim was getting. Instead, Jason reached for the container of ground decaf, a wicked smirk taking over his face. It was so much more satisfying this way.
Jason came back into the living room holding Tim’s mug and his own glass of water in one hand while balancing his laptop and the popcorn in the other. Tim was quick to reach for his coffee, but Jason handed the popcorn off to him as though that was what he’d been asking for. Everything else went on the beat-up old piece of junk that could kindly be called a coffee table if you squinted and ignored the books under two of its legs to keep it level.
Tim snatched up his coffee, faster than he’d moved tonight since punching the imp in the face earlier, and breathed in the steam coming off it. He looked like a very happy elf. Jason tried not to snort, but it escaped him anyway.
“Do you have something to say, Rudolph?” Tim said, his eyebrows raised in challenge.
Jason shook his head. “Not a thing, Buddy,” he replied, failing to keep the grin off his face.
Tim narrowed his eyes at Jason, but didn’t call him on the Elf reference. Which was probably a good thing.
They had to sit close, for them both to see the laptop screen, but that wasn’t a hardship. Tim was leaning on Jason anyway, since he was trying to hide his feet under himself. The laptop had to go on Jason’s lap because of the tilt to Tim’s lap, which meant that Tim monopolized the popcorn bowl, eating about a third before Jason even got his hands on it.
It was just easier to let Tim rest his head in the crook of Jason’s shoulder. There wasn’t any scheming about it or anything; Jason had to reach the popcorn somehow, and it wouldn’t have been comfortable for Tim to keep his head on the boniest part of Jason’s shoulder for that long. It made sense -- or that’s what Jason tried to convince himself, when he realized they’d ended up snuggled into each other like they’d planned it that way.
The decaf took its toll on Tim about halfway through the movie. Jason hadn’t really noticed when Tim’s eyes started closing, but he did feel when Tim’s head drooped lower onto Jason’s chest, in a position where Tim wouldn’t have been able to see were his eyes open.
Jason blinked down at Tim and then at the laptop screen.
He weighed whether it would be worth it to just let the movie play, but the lack of caffeine and the long night had caught up with him too; Jason felt his eyes growing heavier with each passing second. A volley of gunfire sounded on the screen, and Tim shifted slightly, a muffled whine slipping out. That decided Jason. He turned the movie off and shifted the laptop onto the table gently, using the arm positioned around Tim to grab the popcorn bowl and pass it to his free hand to set on the ground.
It didn’t take Jason long to fall asleep.
Jason woke in the morning with Tim gone from his chest and warmth where Tim’d been. He looked around to see Tim standing in the window, looking like himself again, framed by soft, gray light and wearing one of Jason’s sweatshirts.
“It’s raining,” Tim said quietly.
Jason stood to join him. It was true; the clouds were out, as usual, and the skies were pouring down water into the streets. No wind, just rain coming straight down into the streets, throwing up a thin sheet of mist right on the ground. It was almost beautiful.
“Yeah,” said Jason, then said, “Merry Christmas, Tim.”
Tim turned to face him, and smiled. “Merry Christmas, Jason.”