Lighting a fire under my adhd riddled brain with arbitrary deadlines to see if it works: If this post gets more than ten notes, I’ll post the next chapter of my fic by the end of the day.
seen from Poland
seen from Chile
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from Ukraine
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from Australia
seen from Russia
seen from Yemen
Lighting a fire under my adhd riddled brain with arbitrary deadlines to see if it works: If this post gets more than ten notes, I’ll post the next chapter of my fic by the end of the day.
More tiny things about Drifting Inbetween (the Nights Into Dreams!au):
• Sun and Moon are twins, and like most twins they have a playful rivalry that extended to their fighting skills as much as their duty tormenting Dreamers and beyond. Sun was very good at his paraloop skills and powerful attacks that were not merciful. Moon's skills lied in his quick, stun attacks, hitting a target quickly and getting out of their reach before attacking again.
• Psychologically, they had very different ways of terrorizing the Dreamers. Sun is a master manipulator, he would dig around in your subconscious and find something you are sensitive about and bring it to the forefront. It never had to be something that was big, but even if it's the smallest, most minuscule doubt, he could make it into your entire nightmare, and something you'd dwell about in your waking hours. Moon on the other hand was all about the slow creeping dread, nightmares that are a slow boil that builds up until the Dreamer doesn't realize the true terror before its too late. Dawning horror was really Moon's cup of tea and he prided himself on being the sibling that took the longest time with his schemes but had a successful streak. Eclipse was a nice combination of both tactics (he taught them) and loves to use manipulative, dream gaslighting and drawn-out horror to get his jobs done. Over the last few years however, his tactic has changed, becoming more stilted towards hurtful, malicious emotional attacks with an undercurrent of genuine fear, latching onto feelings of inadequacy and helplessness.
• Eclipse, Sun, and Moon are quite the cuddlebugs. Moon loves holding onto things and people, and he will grab onto his brother's hand, shoulder, or Y/N and proceed to hold them like a pillow or wrap himself around them like ivy up a pole. His favorite cuddle buddy is a Shleep he named Dom <heh> and together they tend to take naps in random sunny spots at the Dream Gate. Sun is a huge hugger, even before he rebelled it wasn't uncommon to find him slinging his arm in a side hug around Jackal, giving excited pre-mission jump hug attacks to Eclipse, or lazily hovering above Moon like he was getting a piggyback ride. He loves to give spinning hugs, paralooping with his target and nuzzling into their face or neck. Eclipse is/was someone who appreciates when others reach out to him for affection, as he doesn't give it easily. He is self conscious about his image and role as one of Wizeman's higher-ranking Nightmaren so he doesn't actually try to be affectionate with others at least not physically. He prefers to give gifts, from extravagant items to small and simple, but each is always tailored to the person that is getting the gift.
• NiGHTS was never on Eclipse's radar before he defected away from Wizeman. As one of Wizeman's generals he knew NiGHTS only as far as work itself. Once NiGHTS began to gradually pull away he would talk to the Twins often, as they were curious about what he would do as a General equal yo their brother and what he'd seen. Eclipse was not worried about it until Moon became introspective and Sun started to speak with Dreamers. Eclipse threatened NiGHTS to leave and when he finally did, Reala going off to chase him down and destroy him, he watched his brothers become more distant. Eclipse fully blames NiGHTS for turning his brothers to favor humans and, on the few chances they do cross paths, Eclipse with attack him with little to no warning.
• Y/N's roommates have personalities of roommates I had in college that I liked! One was very sweet and motherly, got us out of a lot of crazy situations, but still maintained a fun and creative down-to-earth persona. The other is a more chaotic and rebellious character, encouraging thinking outside of the box and much more ridiculous solutions to problems you would have never considered...and they work too! Both of these roommates we're fantastic friends of mine and they really did help me get through those first 2 years of college!
• Y/N and I share a common issue; we can't lucid dream without it getting horrible and the same goes for sleep paralysis. I've had a lucid dream once and it was a horrible experience, 0/10 not recommending. Sleep paralysis also yielded some fairly terrible results and multiple times because I'm not lucky. I won't tell you the dreams because they show up in the story and I don't want to spill the beans.
• Y/N, Sun, and Moon share 2 braincells. I have made this trio the ones that focus more on the situation at hand and very jump first and think about the consequences later. 2 people handle the braincells it's just a crapshoot as to who, but even worse is when one person has both and has to play wrangler. You have to have one of those baby bear backpack leashes and then you're being tugged around in two directions.
pairing: bughead (obviously) AU: pirates (if u wanna)
three sentences? what? I don’t know them.
Bughead The Princess Bride AU.
“Rest up, your highness,” The Man in Black instructed Betty, directing her to a boulder to sit on with unwarranted sternness. It was not in his intentions for her to faint or to fall in exhaustion whilst they were escaping both Vizzini and her…fiancé.
Betty perched upon a bolder reluctantly and set her features in a pinched, annoyed expression. “I know who you are, your harshness reveals it; you’re the Dread Pirates Roberts. Admit it!”
The Man in Black smirked and bowed to her in a show of mockery, “With pride. What can I do for you?”
“You can die,” she announced, eyes blazing with anger and sadness, “cut into a thousand pieces.” The pirate responded with a tsk and asked why she held so much hate for him. Slowly, evenly, Betty announced: “You killed my love.”
“It is possible,” he conceded, “I’ve killed a lot of people. Who was this lover of yours, not a prince like this one? Was he rich and savvy?” He voice was calm and even, revealing nothing, as he approached her, favouring his right leg the slightest.
“No, a farm boy. Poor,” Betty spat, then, her eyes dropped, expression turning wistful. “Poor and perfect. With eyes like the sea before a storm…On the high seas your ship attacked his! And the Dread Pirate Roberts never takes prisoners.”
He leaned back against a boulder opposite of hers and placed his hands behind his head, relaxing. “I can’t afford to make exceptions. I mean, once word leaks out that a pirate has gone soft, people begin to disobey, and then it is nothing but work, work, work at the time.”
“You mock my pain,” Betty shouted.
“Life is pain, highness,” the Man in Black proclaimed. “Anyone who says differently is selling something.” She turned away, facing the horizon, as the Man in Black gingerly got up and continued to speak: “I remember this farm boy of yours, I should think. This would be what, five years ago?
“Does it bother you to hear?”
“Nothing you could say would upset me,” Betty said, softly, her eyes far away.
The Man in Black crossed his arms. “He died well, that should please you. No bribe attempts or blubbering. Simply said ‘please, please I need to live’.” He turned, facing her. “It was the ‘please’ that caught my memory; I asked, what was so important to him. ‘True love’ was what he replied; then, he spoke of a girl of surpassing beauty and faithfulness — I can only assume he meant you.” Then, “You should bless me for destroying him before he found out what you really are,” he finished, bitterness seeping into his voice.
Betty spun around, getting to her feet, anger and belligerence colouring her as red as the scarlet silk of her gown. “And what am I!”
“Faithfulness, he talked of, madam; your enduring faithfulness,” the Man in Black snapped, enraged suddenly. “Now tell me truly, when you found out he was gone, did you engage your prince in the same hour or did you wait a whole week out of respect for the dead?”
How dare he? Betty thought, incensed, how dare! He, this strange man, this pirate, he knew nothing of the heartbreak she had endured. She had as much of a choice in the Prince’s courtship as the cattle has in its purchase. “You mocked me once, never do it again — I died that day!” she cried.
In the distance, hoofbeats rang, pulling the Man in Black’s attention off her. On the hill above them, Betty’s fiancé and his hunting party came into view, gaining on the two escapees. In that moment, Betty, overcome with fury and pain, pushed the Man in Black down the steep hill, hissing in a low, bitter voice, “And you can die too for all I care!”
As the pirate tumbled down the slope, he yelled back: “As!…You!…Wish!”
Realisation came over Betty in a sweep of cold clarity — Jughead, it was Jughead. “Oh, my sweet love! What have I done?!” she cried out, and threw herself down after him.
1) Give me a pairing. 2) Give me an AU setting. 3) I will write you a three-sentence fic.
I force myself to write something; anything at all on a blank document while wondering whether it’s worth the effort to continue. With tears in my eyes, sweat on my brow, blood on my face, I grit my teeth and repeat today’s writing mantra:
“Time to lock in or get locked out, bestie. The only way out is through.”
Smuggler’s Ruin: Aftermath
Read the Smuggler’s Saga from the beginning:
Part One: Smuggler’s Run
Part Two: Smuggler’s Ruin
Summary: Zallia and Morff deal with the fall out of her accidental love confession.
Never in the whole of her miserable existence had she experienced a shocked silence. Sure, she’d picked up a few holobooks where the main character said something uncouth and brought the room to a standstill, but living it in real time? Well, the holobooks didn’t do it justice. Prax stood in front of her, eyes wide but unseeing, his posture ramrod straight—still breathing, barely. Even the life support system, which had until this exact moment been shooting intermittent sparks across the room, invoked a scandalized hush.
“Fuck me,” she blurted out in appalled frustration before adding, in a breathless, mortified whisper. “I can’t believe I just said that…”
Morff’s head recoiled, as his eyebrows lifted to the top of his skull while his mouth hung agape at the hinge, frozen with everything he wanted to say but couldn’t. He blinked twice (she noted the second blink was slower than the first), catatonic and dazed with shock, his gaze far and away from where they stood, processing.
Behind the shock, she could see the gears turning in his mind, as he reviewed, calculated, agonized, weighed and otherwise mulled whatever he was about to do and say with the efficiency of her old navicomputer on the Nomad before it crashed and needed a reboot. Usually the reboot process involved her slamming her fist against the galaxy map terminal until it started working, but she doubted that the same method would be effective here.
There was nowhere to hide or avoid what she said. They were in the middle of a hyperspace lane with no perceivable interruptions. The ship was small, too. A bed, the medbay, a tiny galley; there was no safe place to hide. Even the ducting was too narrow for her to squeeze into.
“Forgive me.” He murmured hoarsely, his face stretched with bewildered disbelief. “Lia, what did you just…please repeat—”
“—Fuck me?” She repeated with her head tilted to the side and her nose scrunched tight to the bridge, confused why he wanted her to repeat that of all things until hit her like a sack of duracrete; he must think she was begging him to… “No, no, no—-I don’t want you to fuck me; that’s not something I would say to you… well, that’s not true. If I knew that’s what you wanted I would say it…errr…actually, what I mean is…it’s not something I would say at a time like this…”
Zallia’s brain screamed at her in silent horror, all the mental alarms and lights flashed glowing red:
‘Stop talking! Stop talking!’
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Meanwhile, the sputtering and otherwise flummoxed mood was spreading. The seated Senate and Jedi Council members murmured to each other in hushed tones, some scandalized, others bemused, but all of them had their eyes on Kerrilyn.
Master Nightstar went a vivid shade of puce, like the violations of procedure punched her in the gut and now she’d vomit up an ancient text of rules all over the exquisitely carved marble table. She leaned toward the table hard and caught herself on the edge.
Kerrilyn visibly searched her holographic memory bank, eyes darting left and right as she thought, before she snapped her fingers with a glowing smile and raised one index finger. The entire council came to a standstill with that solitary flick of a digit.
“Grand Master,” Kerrilyn interrupted as she cleared her throat in a move to appear more apologetic than she was. “I have a point of inquiry.”
Grand Master Satele inclined her head with a stately nod, cautious and observant of the dynamics between the quarreling quartet, with a sharp, observant and lingering look at Prax, who avoided the gaze like a youngling being asked to volunteer to clean up a mess that wasn’t theirs.
“You have the floor, Master Nightstar.”
Kerrilyn flushed, pink with happiness as she quickly swept away the seeds of chaos Zallia and Powin had sown with logic and decorum.
“While non-members may ask for personal points of privilege with the Grand Master’s permission,” Kerrilyn said with a kind of giddy exuberance that only appeared during discussions including points finer than minutiae. “Only a member of the Senate or Jedi Order may second the request.”
Ah, there it was. Some obscure rule to throw a hydrospanner into the cogs. It was for the best; she didn’t have a speech in mind anyway, other than to tell the Jedi Council and, more importantly, the Senate they could kiss her—
“—I second Captain Thane’s point of privilege.”
Every head at the council table and in the room swiveled to her left toward the Jedi Master turned procedure saboteur.
“Very well,” Master Satele said with a curious expression. “Master Praxis has seconded the motion. You may speak, Captain Thane.”
Well… shit.
🌹
Since I know you love him, here’s a little something featuring Powin:
“Lord Pasan, I’ll remind you that these are the chambers of the Republic Senate, and you are in the presence of the Jedi Council. You are not in the opulent halls of the Dark Council.” The Grand Master intoned with an undercurrent of gentle rebuke and exasperated respect. “You may not speak further because I have not yielded the floor, and the committee has not recognized your request to speak. Is it not a violation of the Senate’s Rules of Order for anyone to speak out of turn unless formally recognized, Master Nightstar?”
Kerrilyn’s chest puffed up, she stood straighter and stepped forward, shooting Powin a testy warning look before returning to her state of equanimous calm.
“Yes, Grand Master. A speaker must first request the privilege to speak, have their request granted by the chair, and have their right to address the body confirmed by a seconding witness. To ignore the rules of order is an egregious breach of this body’s governance. Therefore, Lord Pasan should have first requested a personal point of privilege before he waxed poetically against the imagined slights of the Jedi Council and Senate Budgetary Committee.”
At this, Senator Syd Schooze looked up from his datapad, with a narrow-eyed look from Powin, to Kerrilyn, and then at last to the Grand Master. He feigned a look at his bare wrist, as though to check the hour, and rolled his eyes.
“Time is a commodity, Grand Master, and Lord Pasan has seen fit to waste ours to soothe his injured vanity.” Schooze said as he struggled to conceal a yawn of boredom. He went back to his datapad as he dealt the final blow. “To prevent further interruptions, it is the choice of the budgetary chair to censure Lord Pasan for the rest of this session.”
“Seconded!” an enthusiastic voice shouted from somewhere in the back of the room. “That pompous green buffoon has gone on long enough.”
A murmur of scandalized whispers tore across the room like a hiss of wind through dry leaves. There was a beat as the room collectively drew a breath and held it until Powin dropped his Councilor’s pose with a stunned blink. He wavered on the toes of his elegantly embroidered slippers, then, ever so slowly, lowered himself into his chair without so much as a word, with a stony, defeated look.
Smuggler’s Ruin Chapter 20: The Confession
Awesome art by @theoasiswinds
Read the Smuggler’s Saga from the beginning:
Smuggler’s Run
Smuggler’s Ruin
The Confession:
The frenzied thoughts began as soon as he came-to; echoes from his Force vision. Screams—the agonizing terror of billions as Darth Sheasea destroyed planet upon planet, the pitiful shrieks of his darling Luz as she scrabbled and clung to gravel, fingers bloodied as villains dragged her away; those he could not, despite his best efforts, banish from the forefront of his conscious mind.
Pressing as the screams were, it was Zallia’s last words from his vision, spoken weak and weary as she stroked his cheek, accepting a fate she did not deserve that haunted him most. He did not throw the knives that severed her vitality from the galaxy, but his choices had twisted the knife and led to her gruesome demise. The anguish of those same choices lingered, a cataclysmic fire smoldering on the edges of his every waking thought.
He would turn to the dark side of the Force. Him! The battle master of the Jedi Order. The man who had not strayed from his master’s teachings one iota, save for one moment of teenaged folly. He needed time to ponder the message of his vision free of distractions. Yet, much as he longed for the blissful simplicity of contemplative silence, there was no rest for him. Not when the object of his conscious and subconscious desires stood just out of arm’s reach, hands on her hips, head tilted to the side, studying him in that astute way of hers that left him feeling exposed.
“Okay, Jedi Master ‘ready for active duty’ Praxis,” Zallia began with a long-suffering sigh as she toggled the last of the ship’s controls to send them into hyperspace toward Mek Sha. “Let’s get you back into kolto. “
Not kolto again! The narrow metal tank, shaped like the casing of a kyber crystal, was unlit, windowless, and wreaked of healing flesh and his blood. The fast working treatment set fire to his tender skin as it healed, making him feel like he laid atop the logs of his funeral pyre; set ablaze and roasted alive. No, there would be no more kolto for him; not without a fight. Perhaps it was his aching wounds, or the mental weight of his unanswered questions, but he gave in to churlishness, and despite his best efforts to fight his foul mood, remained there.
“You’ve helped me enough today. Thank you very much.” He grumbled as he pulled his elbow away from her solicitous hands. “I will manage on my own.”