Mini Oitsukkis!
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States

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

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Luxembourg
seen from Luxembourg
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Poland
Mini Oitsukkis!
Please Haikyuu fandom,......,... I am Starving and I will singlehandedly revive the OiTsukki ship myself if that’s what it takes to get some more content out of this ship 😭
Tsukishima Kei
♧ authorized reprint for tumblr // artist: まめはる / 腐向け排球②
✿ please do not remove source link// edit illustration // change caption // upload to other websites!
Smaragdine & OiTsukki
Send me a color and a ship and I’ll write a ficlet that feels like that color.
It was like playing hide-and-seek. Tsukishima wasn’t in the mystery section, or among the reference books. He wasn’t where his guilty-pleasure manga was kept, or in the books on dinosaurs. He wasn’t anywhere on the first floor of the university library, which was open to the public. Which meant there was only one place Tsukishima could be.
The second floor of the library was where the literature majors hung out. The third was for the engineering and biochem majors. The fourth was for those too desperate to face the world outside, those who hadn’t left the library in days, though it technically closed every night. And the fifth floor?
The fifth floor was a secret, known to only a handful of grad students and those few undergrads they deemed worthy of knowing. Tooru had told Tsukishima about it in his first year, back when he was still trying to win over the surly blond’s attention. He hadn’t expected it to become a refuge for Tsukishima, a place to go when the world became too much.
Tooru pushed through the door emblazoned “ALARM WILL SOUND” and listened to the creak and conspicuous absence of an alarm. He trotted up the stairs two at a time and pulled open the door at the top of the stairwell. Standing in the doorway, he paused to take in the sight before him.
Tsukishima was sitting, because there was no room for him to stand in the little attic area that was the fifth floor. He was positioned by the window, because the entire wall here was a window. He had a book open in his lap, because he usually did when he came here, but he wasn’t reading. He was staring through the rain-soaked glass at the quad below.
“You know I can see you there, right?” Tsukishima asked, without looking away from the window. Tooru smiled.
“I was just enjoying the view,” he said.
“It’s much better up close.” Ah, so it was that kind of day. Good. Tooru knew how to work with Tsukishima when he was clingy. It was far better than when he was grumpy, but not in a touching mood. Tooru huffed theatrically and stumped his way over to Tsukishima, picking around the piles of books and nests of blankets and cigarette butts left by other students seeking a chance to get away. He sat down by Tsukishima, and Tsukishima leaned his head on Tooru’s shoulder.
They didn’t say anything, because nothing needed to be said. They simply watched students darting back and forth through the rain and took in the scent of damp and tobacco and paper and each other. Tooru smiled, utterly content.
the song i sang
(title from something @ryekamasaki sent me forever ago)
here’s a little something I threw together for @notsuchasecret‘s birthday
i tried for nothing but smooshy fluff Bre but... you know how things go for me. hope it’s still tooth rotting enough after you get past the baby muse fingers taking over.
A prophecy had been told once long ago. Of war and ruin and paralyzing fear. Of treacherous darkness covering the land, seeping over hills and dipping cautious fingers into valleys and caverns. Of hubris overflowing and pride shattering.
The prophecy forgot, however, that with the darkness came the silver shine of moonlight, the hazy interpretation of walls and shadows, the teasing reminder of sparkling stars reflected in still waters. Of long fingers sending ripples through time and piecing shimmering mirrors back together.
“Yeah, haha, I’m a jerk ghost who loves sticking your keys into the freezer. Like that hasn’t been done a million times before! Seriously, get some new pranks- or well, maybe don’t.” OiTsukki
Directly follows this lovely ficlet.
They’d been in the house for a week, and already there was a distinct pattern forming. At 8PM, on the dot, every single night, there would be manic giggling. Giggling that sent Suga running from the house. There seemed to be no direct source of the giggling, and it always sounded like it was coming from every single direction. The first few nights were startling, making Tooru jump out of his skin. Tsukki would often fumble whatever he was holding, nearly dropping their wine glasses one night. They knew to expect it by now. And right at 8PM, the giggling started. It would last twenty minutes, and then abruptly stop. This was not a routine Tooru was keen on keeping up.
Week two started much like any other, 8PM giggles and all, except for the missing keys. That was new. At first, Tsukki had tried to convince Tooru that they were simply misplaced, and they hadn’t gotten used to their surroundings yet. Tooru reminded him that you do not simply misplace your keys in the freezer.
“Yes yes, I’m a jerk ghost who likes sticking your keys in the freezer.” Tooru was wandering around the house, alone, trying to ignore the entity as best he could. “Because that hasn’t been done a hundred times!” He sighed. “And now I’m talking to myself. Or you. I don’t even know anymore. Maybe you should start coming up with new pranks, yeah?” There was a distinct crashing sound from upstairs in Tsukki’s office. “Shit. Or not! How about not? I prefer not!” Tooru did not dare venture upstairs. He grabbed his keys from the freezer, and put them back in the basket by the front door, where they belonged.
Week three stayed relatively quiet. Keys still went missing, books kept falling off shelves in Tsukki’s office, and the giggling kept up like clockwork. Tsukki was getting used to it, but Tooru knew it was going to escalate. He really didn’t want it to escalate.
Week four was the breaking point. One night, post-giggling, Tsukki was searching the freezer for his keys when he heard Tooru shout. Running to the living room, Tsukki stopped dead in his tracks.
“What the… Am I seeing things?”
“No, Tsukki, you are not hallucinating. That is indeed a floating book. Your floating book, to be precise. I think it’s trying to tell you something.” Tsukki just stared. He couldn’t even grasp what was happening.
“This is not good.” Tsukki tried to look past the floating book. He tried to look at Tooru and not panic.
“No, love, it is not. Do you happen to have that card Asa-chan gave you?” Tsukki nodded. “Good. Call them. I think this is worse than either of us anticipated.” Tsukki made a mental note to do just that, as soon as he could bring himself to move past the floating book and retrieve the card from his wallet, which may or may not be hidden in the laundry basket upstairs.
1, 2, 3, 4!