i'm moving my main to a new account soon so this blog, which was already inactive, is going to become for real perma inactive. cheers
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Cosimo Galluzzi
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Sweet Seals For You, Always

Kaledo Art

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⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Noah Kahan
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
art blog(derogatory)
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

Product Placement
KIROKAZE
Claire Keane
hello vonnie
Sade Olutola
Not today Justin
One Nice Bug Per Day
seen from Malaysia

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@yagumokyoji
i'm moving my main to a new account soon so this blog, which was already inactive, is going to become for real perma inactive. cheers
fic: a drop of gold
ffn ao3
Sunset after practice, and Endou and Kidou are walking home. Gouenji is staying behind to work on an as-yet-unnamed hissatsu the team has jokingly suggested should be called Fire Hurricane, and so itâs just the two of them, walking along the same old path; the high school is some ways away from the middle school, but after a mile the route rejoins what it used to be, on the way home.
brainstorm, whirl, and a giant clock
brainstorm is laying out the briefcases, concentric rings, covering the floor. the hour is at hand. the clock is winding up. whirl is there. these are all synonymous things.
âso youâre basically building a giant clock,â says whirl, one bird-foot swinging.
brainstorm places the eleventh briefcase into position. âitâs a time machine. something no one else in history has been able to accomplish.â
âsure looks to me like a giant clock.â
the twelfth. âitâs a marvel of engineering and delicate quantum mechanics that it took me thousands of years to completeââ
âoh, talk, talk, talk,â says whirl, ticking around the circle like a second hand, âyou always did love to hear yourself talk. you think youâre so smart. you think youâre a genius, but really all youâre doing is building a clock and blowing a hole in somethingââ
ââin the fabric of spacetimeââ
ââyeah, in something. two hobbies i know a lot about. youâre just like the rest of us.â
thatâs one ring finished. brainstorm is in an ever-smaller bare circle around the floor, surrounded by briefcases. the clock grows.
âi know a little something about clocks,â says whirl, from the ceiling, âand about trying to turn them back. everyone tries to turn them back. you canât do it. clocks can only go forward.â
âiâm an unprecedented genius,â says brainstorm. âif anyone could do itââ
âso was i,â snaps whirl, âyouâre not special. you think i donât know it canât be done? you think i didnât try? the gears wonât go in reverse no matter what you do. sometimes when youâre a genius it blows up in your face and you gotta leave the ashes behind and move the fuck on.â
the seventeenth briefcase. âthatâs quitter talk.â
âthatâs stubborn idiot talk.â
âyouâre just jealous because you canât get back what you once had, and iâm about to.â
âidiot.â a snick-snack of claws right in front of brainstormâs face. âi could have new hands at any time if i wanted. i choose not to because iâve moved the fuck on, like a sensible grown-up motherfucker. but youâre not getting him back, loverboy! youâre deluded! time wonât unbuild itself for you!â
âyou need to learn a thing or two about love.â
âoh, you want to talk about love?â sneers whirl, circling the ceiling. âlove is a poison. it wonât get you anywhere. you ever seen someone stay up all night for some dying midget? you ever seen someone risk their life on a great sword for someone else? you ever see someone you know lose themself to that greatest of scams we know as love, and you canât do anything to stop them?â
âi have. itâs why iâm doing this now.â the next three briefcases are mach, pivot, and scattergun. âfor all of us. for all the lovers. everyone who was torn away from someone else. iâm fixing it.â
âthereâs no fixing shit.â whirl is upside down, the reversed card. âconjunxes donât pop out of the grave, workshops donât rebuild themselves, hands donât grow back and clocks donât run backwards. you know nothing.â
there is almost no bare floor around brainstorm. he has corralled himself into the clock-circle of briefcases.
âyouâre a scientist trying to fix a giant watch,â says whirl. âyou should have asked a watchmaker.â
. sad that i wasnât able to write the villain zero au for camp nanowrimo like i said i would... and iâm planning to use this coming nanowrimo for other fics. will this au ever see the light of day as a proper start-to-finish multi-chapter? doubtful. it makes me sad since i think about it so much
. in the event it does, however... it will mean everyone here has been exposed to my first draft, which is an embarrassing thing for any writer. there are already significant structural changes i have in mind from what iâve posted on here
the return of the zerox enemies to lovers au, once again delivered to you in isolated scenes completely devoid of context! you can read a previous scene (as well as explanation of the general premise)Â here.
Several hours after the trial, the prisoner, who had been sitting in the same position with his arms folded ever since it was over, got up, grabbed ahold of the iron bars to his cell, and tore through the gridwork of them like paper, barely grunting as the 800-volt current in them lanced through his body. Â Most of the guards were, by that point, already running, but a few were brave or stupid enough to stand their ground; Zero backhanded three of them in one stroke, grabbed one by the arms and swung him into two others, flinging them into the wall, and then seized the remaining reploid around the neck.
The guard was shaking with terror. Â âPlease make it quick. Â At least make itââ
Zero spun his buster to the right setting and pressed it to the side of his head. Â âWhere did they send X?â
âI donât know!â
The gun pressed harder. Â The metal of the reploidâs helmet was starting to dent around it.
âI swear I donât know itâs the truth all I do is guard the cells! Â Please!â
âWhere can I find out where they sent X?â
âUhhhhâŚâ  The noise stretched-out and wavering with panic.  âThe telepad in the courtroom should still have the coordinates logged into it!  I donât think it was a super big secret where he went so it shouldnât be encryptedââ
âThanks,â said Zero, and pulled the trigger.
He left the room in disarray behind him, unconscious bodies littering the floor. Â Stun frequency only. Â Youâre welcome, X.
So this was what not killing felt like.
The alarm hadnât been sounded yet. Â It would be in seconds. Â Teleport, vanishâ
.
Dr. Cain had a room by his laboratory with a futon bed where heâd spend the night when he was involved in a particularly important project, to spare himself the morning commuteâor even to grab a couple hours of rest at a time when he needed to work through the night. Â There was no such project now, but after the trial he hadnât had the energy to go home; simply pulled off his shoes and crawled into bed in the small office space with its tinted windows. Â He couldnât stop seeing Xâs face. Â All througout the trial, weary, hopeful, defiant and deferent in equal measure; so afraid, and at the same time so protective of Zero. Â Of Zero! Â An unstoppable killing machine! Â Feared as the Antichrist himself! Â Only X could be so compassionate, so all-loving. Â Dr. Cain was so proud of him, and so, so worried for him.
The closest thing he had to a son, exiled. Â The sorrow in Xâs face as the teleport engulfed him in light. Â Hours Dr. Cain lay there in the dark, the red light on the main computer in the lab blinking in through the window, his thoughts in turmoil.
He must have fallen asleep at some point, because he was woken up quite suddenly; some noise, the slightest sound must have alerted him to the thing that was in the room with him. Â Even before he could open his eyes he could hear the ever-so-faint hum of a reploidâs systems, but pitched a little higher, whirring a little faster, than the frequency that was so deeply familiar to him. Â Not a reploid, then.
A deep, cold, paralyzing fear overtook him, and he opened his eyes, deathly aware of what heâd see.
Public enemy number one was in the room with him, blue eyes the dimmest glow in the dark, horned helmet and wild mane of hair silhouetted against the window to the lab, in the faint light. Â He was sitting by the doctorâs bed, watching him, not moving.
Dr. Cain was no stranger to the idea of death. Â He was old, and didnât have many more years with him, and that was fine; that was just the way life went. Â Heâd expected it to happen of natural causes, though. Â That his life was going to end right here and now, in this tiny dark room, was a sudden and unexpected development; the proximity of it raised the hairs on his arms, the last few seconds of his life holding their breath.
Zero still didnât move.
âYou broke out,â breathed Dr. Cain, and laboriously propped himself up on one elbow, reached for the desk lamp.
âI did.â Â Zeroâs voice was somehow softer up close. Â It was an indescribable feeling, being so close to death personified; being so close to death, period.
âThat prison could never have held you, could it?â
âNo prison could.â
The desk lamp on. Â Dr. Cain had to squeeze his eyes shut for a moment as light flooded the tiny space; Zeroâs pupils contracted with mechanical precision.
âWhy only now?â  He was trying to move into a sitting position.  âIf you could have broken out at any time⌠ Why didnât you?â
âX told me to cooperate. Â He said I should wait and see what happened.â
âAnd⌠and you listened to him.â  That was the most baffling thing.  That was the crux of the whole matter, the reason X was being exiled as a collaborator in the first place.  âWhy?â
A long silence.  In the dim light Zero was sitting on a stool by the bed, elbows on his knees, reploid-sized hands dangling into his lap.  Intent, still.  His expression was remote, and the answer took a long time to arrive.  âHe is⌠very important to me.â
That much was obvious. Â Dr. Cain held back the questions piling onto his tongue; he didnât know how to word any of them in the first place. Â This was something bigger than himself.
Very quietly, aware that he was talking to a weapon of mass destruction that was now on the loose, he said, âWhat are you going to do?â
âGo after him.â Â Zero said it as though it were the obvious thing. Â Silence followed after it.
âThatâs all?â
âThatâs all.â
âAre you going to⌠hurt him?â
âNever,â said Zero fiercely.
Such raw, naked emotion in that refusal.  Dr. Cain could only wonder at it.  It was in that wonder that he said, âAnd⌠you came to see me.â
The blue eyes focused in on him, laser-intent, like a crosshairs. Â âHe cares about you a great deal.â
âI⌠yes.  Heâs like a son to me.â
âA son,â repeated Zero.  Was that Dr. Cainâs imagination, or was there a hint of wistfulness in his voice?  âIâŚ. wanted to see you.  Get to talk to you before I left.â
âAsk my permission?â offered Dr. Cain. Â An attempt at levity.
âDonât be cheeky,â said Zero coldly, and if Dr. Cain had been able to forget for a moment how very much in danger his life was, he would have been abruptly reminded right now. Â âIâm going after X. Â No oneâs stopping me.â
âYou wonât⌠kill anyone?â
A very long silence. Â The bulb in the lamp buzzed, the circle of light around them flickering. Â At length Zero said, âNo.â
Dr. Cain breathed out, the tension in his chest releasing slowly. Â He didnât think he would have been able to live with the knowledge that heâd watched a killer go back on the loose while powerless to stop him. Â âDid X tell you not to?â
âHe did,â sighed Zero, looking down at his hands. Â âI promised him. Â No killing unless provoked.â
âYou promised him,â echoed Dr. Cain, still a little in disbelief. Â This was the Maverick who had refused all negotiations, who had laughed maniacally in the face of peace talks, who had sent attempted diplomats back with their heads torn off. Â What had X done to him?
I kissed him. Â Xâs face, just revived from the brink of death, wide-eyed, earnest, miserable when Dr. Cain told him to stay away. Â Zeroâs voice right now, soft and contemplative and somehow, at the bottom of it, deeply tender.
Dr. Cain scrubbed a hand down over his face. Â He wasnât prepared to deal with this. Â It wasnât something heâd ever predicted happening. Â Quietly he surmised, âYou must care about him very much.â
âHeâs everything I have.â
So much in that simple statement.
The digital clock next to the lamp was gently blinking 1:17 am. Â Human and machine remained silent for a long moment, each embroiled in their own thoughts next to the sleeping lab.
At length Dr. Cain said, âWas there⌠anything else you wanted to say to me?â
âNo.â Â Hesitation. Â âI just wanted to see you.â
âWell, good luck out there,â said Dr. Cain, and found he meant it. Â Zero was a war machine, but at the same time, like X, he was so young. Â It had never been really relevant to the killing sprees, but it showed now in the uncertainty hovering in some of his words. Â Good luck in a world you were build to be at odds with, good luck learning how to be a person. Â He understood Xâs perspective a little more now.
âI donât need anyone to wish me luck.â Â Zero stood, the motion of his knees pushing back the stool. Â There was something awe-inspiring even in his simply getting up.
âIâm sure you donât.â Â Zero headed for the door. Â Dr. Cain said, âAnd, Zero?â
Zero stopped, turned back; one eye catching the light.
âI give you and X⌠my blessing.â  Something he never thought heâd say.
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âAsk X. Â Heâll tell you.â Â Heâll probably be rather flustered about it too. Â Oh, this was the position of a father, all right, strange and surreal though this turn of events was. Â Heâd never in his life have forseen things happening this way.
Zero snorted and left, without ceremony.
Dr. Cain lay back down. Â The room suddenly seemed very small without the larger-than-life presence that had filled it a moment ago. Â X was alone in the wilderness somewhere far away, and soon he wouldnât be alone anymore, and just yesterday Dr. Cain would have been alarmed beyond belief at the thought of Zero by his side, but now he was almost strangely comforted.
Two robots in exile, side-by-side. Â Hopefully they would be good for each other. Â Oh, but he was still worried. Â It was a big world out there.
It took him hours to fall asleep.
fic: 50 percent
ao3 link
How to make a time bomb: rig the delicate internal mechanisms, the snowflake-tiny gears and cogs, the millisecond-precise springs, a masterpiece created with love and care, up to the trigger. Strap several pounds of explosive to the watch, into the spark of it, forcing its function beyond something no watch was meant to do. Start the countdown.
How to make a time bomb: renounce bombs. Renounce gunfire. Renounce being a rain of destruction, renounce all destruction, become devoted to peace; tuck yourself away in your tick-ticking hole. Now you are in the middle of one, a situation that cannot hold. Sooner or later it will explode. At the end of the countdown there is a knife, a welding gun, and a pile of slack mouths and stilled fingers out in the back, bleeding rust.
How to make a time bomb: You must make sure it goes off. That is what a time bomb does. If the clockmaker doesn't get it rightâif the clockmaker is foolish and doomedâif the clockmaker has hands that can no longer make clocks like they used toâthen the bomb will never go off. It will keep ticking into eternity, loud and unnerving, filling the air around it with its harsh mechanical death knell, winding up for an end that never comes. Everyone stand back, don't get too close, it could explode at any minute. For some reason it hasn't yet. Why hasn't it? What is it waiting for? What good is a time bomb, built to die, that can't even blow itself out of existence?
How to make a time bomb: Dissent, and wait.
ao3
shikai-the-storyteller replied to your post âI just wanted to say I absolutely adored your "enemies to lovers"...â
I wish you the best of luck! Camp nano is an ambitious task, good luck! I do hope we get to see more of those out of context scenes too though, but I know what it feels like being buried in draft hell @_@ Godspeed
thank you! iâm touching up one of the ones i have lying around right now, i should hopefully have it posted this evening or tomorrow? i might work on others, weâll see!
as for camp nano... my main fear is that i wonât know what to set as a daily word count goal (because i have no idea how many words this fic is going to be) and without a set goal to work to each day, iâm less likely to put in effort..... we shall see
I just wanted to say I absolutely adored your "enemies to lovers" ZeroX fic. I'd love to see more from that AU in the future! Either way, it's a really interesting concept and I loved how you explored the idea. Good stuff.
thank you so much!! i saw your tags and was extremely flattered, iâm glad it touched you that deeply⌠i do have an outline of what the entire fic would look like, and iâm thinking of doing it for camp nanowrimo* in july, since thereâs no way iâd ever finish a fic that ambitious otherwise. i do have a couple unfinished out-of-context scenes already floating around, though, iâll try to post them when they sound good enough to! (iâm buried in wip hell 24/7 so i might forget for a while though rip)
*not an actual camp. which i only found out last week
fic: but for the planets and the stars
aliea kids, homesick for space
read on ao3
have a hiromido scene that to my chagrin wonât fit into the fic iâm writing
It happens when theyâre discussing potential plans to renovate the main office building, which was discovered to have asbestos in the basement so they might as well freshen up the look while the construction crews are there, and wondering what, in particular, to do with the connection between their two offices; and it happens when Midorikawa says, âWell, when we get marriedââ and then pauses with his mouth open. Â âWait,â he says, and the question hangs in the air. Â âDid we ever actually make it official?â
Hiroto considers this; thinks back through all their conversations laden with the unspoken assumption.  âI donât⌠think so, actually?â
Midorikawa twirls a strand of hair around his finger, looking thoughtful. Â âI mean, technically we got engaged in high schoolââ
ââbut I donât know if that counts,â says Hiroto, finishing the thought for him, âI mean high schoolers agree to get married all the time, when theyâre older, and it rarely works outâŚâ  A memory comes to him, and he smiles.  âThere was that time in college when you proposed to me while you were drunk.â
âI what?â Â Midorikawaâs face makes an exclamation point. Â âI donât remember that!â
âProbably because you were drunk,â supplies Hiroto mildly. Â âYou said, âHiroto, I wanna marry you, letâs get married right now,â and I told you Iâd love to but it wasnât legal yet, and you frowned and said âOh, that sucksâ and then threw up on my shoes. Â It was very romantic.â
Midorikawa snorts, and then, more pensively, âWell, itâs legal now.â
âIt sure is.â
Thereâs a meditative silence, and then Midorikawa straightens up, brushes the bangs out of his face, and says, âAll right, might as well make it official.â Â He clears his throat. Â âKiyama Hiroto, will you marry me?â
âItâs Kira now,â Hiroto canât help but remind him, then, âOf course I will.â
âGlad we got that settled.â Â Midorikawa returns to the renovation plans on the desk, picks them up, but the smile bursts from its restraints and spreads across his face like a sunrise. Â âWeâre getting married.â
âWeâre getting married,â agrees Hiroto, feeling it fill up his heart, and Midorikawa throws his arms around him and repeats, âWeâre getting married!â
âWe are!â says Hiroto, and canât help the laughter that bubbles up, and then he canât laugh because Midorikawa is kissing him for a long, long time. Â âWhen?â he asks breathlessly, when itâs over.
âMmm⌠April.  I want a spring wedding.â
âTwo months.â Â Hiroto considers it, still giddy. Â âCan we plan a wedding in two months?â
âI am your secretary,â says Midorikawa into his neck. Â âI am all about planning things efficiently.â
âI see,â says Hiroto, and his hands move up Midorikawaâs back. Â âAlso, if you start taking my clothes off in my own office, I might have to fire you.â
Midorikawa pulls away, grinning. Â âYou wouldnât fire your fiancee, would you?â
âIâm pretty sure not doing so would be nepotism,â says Hiroto, and then, dreamily, âSay that again.â
âIâm your fiancee,â repeats Midorikawa, equally dreamily.
âGod, I love you,â says Hiroto, and when the notification goes off on Hirotoâs phone for an appointment five minutes later, they are still kissing.Â
reblogs and feedback appreciated as always!Â
fic: my little ribs around you
ao3 link
i have an au in mind where zeroâs fight with sigma doesnât end the way it did in canon, and zero remains a terrifying villain with all the world-destroying potential he was built to have. and then, because my gay ass canât help but waste the potential of such an au, he and x go enemies to lovers. however, since the odds of me ever actually finishing a full-plot fic for it are 1 in 1000, i think iâm okay posting the various out of context, out of order scenes i write for it here
hereâs one.
anyone up for a good old gx/arc v crossover (part 1/?)
ao3 link
. oops i meant to queue that. oh well
9.8.16
yuuma/fuuya/astral. thereâs not enough content of them
11.14.15
unedited stream-of-consciousness that never made it onto ao3 by virtue of being unedited stream-of-consciousness.
puzzleshipping