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#closed set fluffy robe on standby
icannotreadcursive · 8 months
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I'm not doing this in a reblog because it's not worth starting a fight, but I just saw a post that was saying that if your characters are under 18, they should never be naked on screen, no matter how old the actors playing them are.
And it went on for a bit about unreasonable and exploitative on-screen nudity is, and that there's no good reason to ever have young characters naked.
And it never outright said that all nudity is inherently sexual, but it was so obviously coming from a place of seeing all nudity as inherently sexual, to an extent that I find mindboggling and frankly sad.
One of my all time favorite movies is My Neighbor Totoro--which is animated, so there's no actors on screen, but our main characters are little girls. The younger sister is about 3, and the older sister is only a few years older. There's a very sweet scene of the two of them (and their father) taking a bath and laughing loudly to scare of spirits. This is a cultural in which communal bathing is normal. Nothing at all untoward about it, it's a family bonding moment, and of course they're naked, they're taking a bath.
Pan's Labyrinth also has a couple bath scenes--del Toro has a bit of a thing for using baths as places of sanctuary and introspection in his films. Our protagonist Ofelia is 10, the actress who plays her was 11 during filming. And guess what, she was never naked on set. I have seen the costume department notes for that film with my own eyes, she was wearing a skintone bathing suit and I promise you there was somebody standing by with a robe to bundle her up in as soon as cut was called; del Toro has a rep for being very conscientious about making sure his actors are comfortable on set. Point is thought, character nudity =/= actor nudity, not necessarily.
In fact, because of the laws and regulations around working with under-age actors, a lot of the time you can't have the actor nude. If it's a case of Dawson casting with a 30 year old playing a 17 year old? That 30 year old can make their own decisions about their willingness to do the scene and the character isn't real, the character is fine.
And if you're watching a scene like that and are really that fixated on the young characters' nudity, I think there's something wrong with you, not with the movie.
Are there issues with the ways in which actors--especially young women actors--are often pressured into on screen nudity? Yes. Absolutely. And it's worth it to step back and think about what role nudity is serving in a film or TV show--and, if you're on the creative end, to consider ahead of time if you need to put your cast in that vulnerable position and how you're going to protect their comfort and dignity if the answer is yes.
But nudity is not inherently sexual. On-screen nudity does not inherently require on-set nudity. On-set nudity (and partial nudity) can be done in ways that are respectful and comfortable for the actor. Children have bodies and sometimes those bodies don't have clothes; this is an entirely nuetral fact of life and there is absolutely nothing wrong with film and television reflecting that reality.
This is not the most coherent or in-depth write up I could do on this subject, but I just needed to spit these thoughts somewhere.
Somethingsomething Americans don't see their grandma's tits and it makes them weird.
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trulymadlysydney · 2 years
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little concept: I feel like H would be super super nervous and anxious the day of a release. He’d have a bunch of radio interviews to call into on top of being anxious about how others will perceive his new work. Let’s say you’re in LA at the time and so he’s up in the middle of the night doing his interviews and you’re their making him tea and on standby if he needs a second of grounding. Little kisses shared between calls and words of encouragement, running your fingers through his hair. Once those are all done you take him up to bed and turn his phone off (you know he’ll just lurk and scroll trying to gauge reactions). Eventually you both fall asleep him curled into you. You wake up a little early letting him sleep in and make his favorite breakfast setting up the kitchen nook. He stumbles down a little after 11 am in that purple fluffy robe and slippers. Kissing you on the cheek and thanking you for the breakfast. The rest of the day is spent doing his favorite things, going for a walk around your neighborhood and getting smoothies. Ending the afternoon with a little picnic on you little slice of private beach laying in your bathing suits in the sun. Reassuring kisses and cuddles. Tracing his face as he naps and listening to y’all’s favorite records. At the end of the day while y’all are in the shower rinsing off the ocean and sunscreen he’d just hold you and tell you how much he appreciated all that you did today. Especially because he would never ask you to do all of that and you just know it was something he needed especially today. Everyone of course is going to love the album, but he gets so anxious when releasing such a vulnerable part of himself. Being able to comfort him and be a distraction for the day is just so soft and 🥺. Later that night while you’re laying bed he’ll turn his phone back on and see the flood of praise and outpouring love the release is receiving. It’s not that he cares what strangers think he’s more worried about what his close family and friends think. You of course reassure him telling him you knew everyone would love it because it was made by him. Smearing light kisses down his neck and holding him tight.
I AM..... GOING TO LOSE IT BESTIE OH MY GOD
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libations and burnt offerings;
under the moon, long shadows are cast Part III of III
Author: feuillemort [AO3] / stillyourprussianblue [tumblr]
Rating: T
Pairing: 5986 (Gokudera/Haru), 1896 (Hibari/Chrome), DS (Dino/Squalo), 10088 (Byakuran/Bianchi), 8027 (Yamamoto/Tsuna), Lampin (Lambo/I-Pin)
Event: KHRWeen2020
Prompts: Graveyard | Costumes
A broken fourth wall and ramen deliveries on the spookiest night of the year.
[AO3] [image] [Part I] [Part II] [Part III]
“So he’s supposed to be loosely based on a kappa, but throwing a komodo dragon in there with an idol is so wrong!”
“Well at least the animal handler is on standby so Chrome-chan is safe,” Haru responded. “Same with her security team,” she added, eyeing the idol’s bodyguards lining the edges of the set.
Gokudera scoffed. “That airhead’s no use,” he grumbled. “He’s probably playing with the dogs again.”
He kept his back to the rows of grave markers that Haru gazed out over. He’d turned away from the set uncomfortably as his half-sister had thrown off her robes for the scene, Haru keeping watch to let him know when it was safe for his eyes to resume his post. “I meant that’s a sorry excuse for a kappa, even if they use CGI on it later. And those dogs are way too friendly to pass as werewolves.”
“You want them to release aggressive dogs onto set with this celebrity cast?” Haru gave him a look. “There’s a pop idol, a famous youtuber, and supermodels out there and you want to use dogs that are less friendly?”
He returned the look. “No, I’m saying that their cryptids are unrealistic! I’m a fan of the director’s work but no professional would half-ass their research like this!”
“I heard that it’s based on a dream his godson had,” Haru said, frowning slightly as she saw Tsuna chatting with Yamamoto, a leashed cat held in his arms. They shared a laugh over something they were too far away to hear. Sure enough, a bunch of dogs stuck close to his side, tails wagging.
Chrome’s bodyguard stood up from his relaxed perch on a spare tombstone just off the set and moved quickly through the fake cemetery, ducking under boom mics and low hanging branches. The sudden movement caught Haru’s attention.
“Hey!”
“What do you want? Gokudera growled as the back of Haru’s arm smacked into his side. He turned to her furiously, but saw that she was already running out into the graveyard. It only took him a moment longer to process what was happening as more thundering explosions rocked the movie set and he ran to catch up to the costume designer.
“Shit! Oi! Stay off the set, it’s dangerous, you idiot!”
___
Chrome stared up at the dark haired man that was the head of her security detail as he casually tossed aside the explosive he’d snatched in midflight as it had rocketed towards her. It blew up somewhere behind him but all it did was silhouette him for a moment, ruffling his hair and untucking the hem of his shirt. Hibari’s eyes remained locked with hers as she stared up in awe at the cold steel of his gaze that cut through the mayhem and promised murder to anything that dared to cause her harm.
All around them, fire crews were rushing to the scene to put out the minor disaster that was threatening to take over the set. Chrome pushed herself to her feet in the shallow grave.
“Cut! Cut! Cut!” Reborn’s voice boomed through the megaphone.
There was a sharp whistle and the dog actor that had accompanied her into the hole they dug was bounding away. Yamamoto whistled again. “Hey, hellhounds! Come back!”
The rest of the runaway pack was slobbering over a laughing man on the ground. She could only make out blond hair and flailing limbs before he was completely overrun with dogs.
Hibari turned to leave, but paused when Chrome called out. “Wait.”
He glanced over his shoulder to see her looking down at the huge lizard, knowing what she intended to do.
“He can’t get out,” she said, kneeling down beside the Komodo dragon, at least twice her size. She put her whole weight behind it, but couldn’t heave it out of the hole like she wanted to. She was well suited to the role she played despite what critics were saying –he knew she had the heart of a warrior inside such a small body.
The disgruntled lizard turned towards her and his eyes narrowed as its venomous maw reached for her exposed leg.
Before Hibari could jump into the pit and likely incite the wrath of dozens of animal welfare groups the world over, Yamamoto leapt in to wrangle the lizard back into what looked like an elaborate harness, a pack of dogs at his heels.
“Now, now, be good,” he chastised the lizard as he wrestled it into a harness.
Chrome climbed out of the hole to join Hibari, taking in the scene of destruction around them and the loose perimeter of security around the set. If this had happened years ago, the paparazzi would have been waiting to greet her with their dizzying flashes and intrusive lines of questioning. Now the only one waiting for her was her personal bodyguard, his presence enough of a warning for them all to stay back and give her the space she needed.
Hibari gave her a quick once-over.
“I’m okay,” she answered.
Satisfied, he turned away and she followed.
She was joined by Fran who seemed to materialize beside her, but because she didn’t react in alarm, Hibari did nothing. Over the months of filming, Fran had taken a shine to his co-star despite not knowing the idol prior to meeting on set, and Hibari had grown to accept that he would follow Chrome around though neither of them acknowledged the others’ existence.
“You have to stop breaking the fourth wall when we’re filming,” Chrome chastised lightly, referencing their takes from earlier in the day.
But Fran was staring off into space. “Huh?”
“You can’t just start listing off everything you see when you forget your lines,” she continued as they walked side by side.
“Oh, I’m narrating,” Fran replied airily.
“The film already has a narrator,” Chrome replied, looking ahead at Hibari’s retreating back.
“That creepy prophecy girl,” Fran said.
“Oh... mmhm,” she agreed softly.
“I mean she’s here.”
Chrome looked over with an owlish gaze. Hibari stopped a ways away but cast a watchful glance over his shoulder when he sensed her hesitation. He regarded the newcomer curiously.
Yuni approached with a bright smile. “Chrome-chan! Could I get your autograph?”
After a pause, the popstar nodded and accepted the poster and pen that Yuni held to her.
“What do you do after filming?” Yuni asked, hands clasped in front of her, leaning in with inquisitive politesse as Chrome signed the poster.
“Go back to my trailer and review my lines for tomorrow,” Chrome responded, handing the items back.
“I always knew you were dedicated!” Yuni smiled, holding the poster as if it were a treasure.
“We never do anything fun,” Fran complained.
“Can I join you?” Yuni asked. “We can order dinner and go over our lines together! It’ll be fun!”
Fran looked over at Chrome, thinking she would decline, tilting his head curiously when she nodded. “Ohh?”
Yuni fell into step beside them. “Chrome-chan, don’t you ever get lonely when you’re touring?” Yuni asked.
“Ah! Well...” She averted her eye, looking at Hibari’s retreating back. He had gotten bored and decided to go on ahead by himself. “No,” she replied, “not lonely.”
___
“He’s going to tear you apart later,” Haru said as Gokudera ran past them, shooting a glare at Yamamoto. She had collected Bianchi’s robe from the centre of the set and was holding it tightly to her chest until she could more carefully examine it at her workdesk.
Pushing the lizard into its cage, Yamamoto laughed sheepishly. “You think so?”
“Especially when he finds out you weren’t paying attention.”
Yamamoto laughed again. “What do you mean?” But his laugh had given him away and Haru raised an eyebrow at him.
But before she could say anything about how he had been chatting up the director’s godson who had come to visit him, he went on the offensive, his smile charmingly disarming. The pack of dogs milled about around his legs, bumping him this way and that, and he reached down to ruffle their fluffy heads as their tongues lolled out. “You’ve been spending too much time together if you’re making that face!”
Haru’s cheeks coloured immediately but she couldn’t hide the brief scowl that had preceded it. “I don’t know what you mean,” she said.
He didn’t spare her. “You know, Gokudera!” he replied, leaving her fuming as he ran off, followed by chorus of happily barking mutts. “Put in a good word for me, thanks!”
___
“Luckily Hibari-san saved most of Chrome-chan’s outfit,” Haru said, letting the light material of Chrome’s dress flow between her fingers as she inspected the fabric.
“You mean luckily she’s unhurt right?” Gokudera corrected with a raised eyebrow.
Haru plowed on as if she hadn’t heard him, pretending she wasn’t very aware of the way his eyebrow arched after Yamamoto had pointed out the habit she had picked up. “But Bianchi’s dress is completely ruined! That was our last set for the take before we went onto the scene where she destroys the dress in the lake with the selkies!”
He looked over at the scraps of white material that Haru held onto. It didn’t look like there was much left of the robe; she would have to make another one from scratch. “Yeah well just make another one or something.” He wondered if she would be able to find a replacement in time.
Her head whipped around and she finally fixed her attention on him. If only she wasn’t glaring daggers. “Excuse me! I can’t just make another one like you replace your fireworks.”
He glowered right back. “They’re not fireworks, they’re pyrotechnics. You know this; I’ve explained it to you a million times.”
“And I’ve explained it to you ten million times –these costumes take time!” Haru huffed and laid the pieces of fabric down on the table between them. He could still see the pieces of golden thread wound through the white material, frayed where his devices had torn through them, scorched like the earth on the set that was still smouldering.
She didn’t say anything else, turning her attention back to the work that needed to be done, only noticing that he had walked out after he was gone. He came and went, and she continued with her spot checks on Chrome’s skirt, only giving him a cursory glance when he entered and exited, collecting more objects each time until the table between them filled with flammable compounds all labelled in Gokudera’s neat script, various accelerants, and an assortment of casings and ignitors.
But she paused to look up from her sewing machine when his last trip had him kicking the door shut behind him. He wouldn’t meet her eyes as he deposited in front of her a few bolts of white fabric and golden thread.
“They all look the same,” he grumbled. “I brought them all so you won’t lecture me on the difference between them again.”
“Thanks,” Haru said slowly, turning over the bolts in her hands; there wasn’t much left so she had no margin for error, but what he had brought her was enough. She could make it work.
She pulled a bottle of milk tea from her yellow-polka-dotted lunchbag sitting on the ground next to her, followed by a can that she had grabbed as an afterthought from the convenience store the other day. She placed them both on the table and slid the canned coffee over to him, avoiding the minefield spread out between them.
Gokudera took his seat across from her and accepted the drink, cracking it open with one hand while he swept his hair back out of his face with the other. “Thanks,” he said quietly but she had already turned her attention back to her work. He took a drink of the coffee – she had managed to keep it cold in her insulated lunchbag for him.
The first time they had had to put in overtime like this, there had been a large accident and all spaces on set were being used by the production team and crew members and the two of them had ended up crammed into an abandoned cast member’s room that was purported to be haunted.
She had been anxious to share a crammed workspace with him at first, worried about the potential of something going wrong or of an accidental misfire. But then she had seen how precise his movements were, how carefully he measured out each component and assembled the explosives. His hands were steady as he wired each device, each component meticulously labelled and accounted for.
This night was no different. Gokudera worked in silence, headphones on, expression focused and serene, goggles secured, sitting crookedly on his chair. His usually prickly personality evened out his aura was almost peaceful as he ran his fingers over a length of magnesium ribbon thoughtfully. He reconsidered and picked up the firefly aluminum instead, pushing aside a container of iron oxide to make more space for it.
Haru always grew too engrossed in her work to notice how he observed her in return; the subtle way her brow furrowed as her eyes roved over her work to ensure perfection in each detail, whether it be correcting a crooked stitch or dyeing a slight discolouration in raw materials she received. Her fingers worked nimbly as she straightened out the large pins that kept her creation in place, each movement deliberate and careful as gold ran through her hands and became something more.
They looked up at each other when their stomachs growled, faces aglow from the flickering lights of the jack-o-lanterns that lined the edges of their shared workbench.
Haru smiled and did a quick back stitch to hold her place before she picked up her cellphone. “It’s going to be a long night. I’ll order us some ramen!”
___
“So you didn’t go on?” Dino asked.
“No we couldn’t shoot any of the selkie scenes because you started a fire on set,” Squalo replied as they walked down the dark street, unevenly lit by streetlights. He kicked an empty can down the road as they walked.
“Aww it was an accident! I thought I’d be able to catch you in your mermaid suit today,” Dino said, bending down to pick the can up when they reached it. “I didn’t think that there would be so many cute dogs on the set to play with.”
“It’s not a mermaid suit! It takes fucking forever to get the selkie makeup and prosthetics on in the morning. It’s heavy as shit.” He glowered. “I thought a supermodel would get it.”
Dino tossed the can up and down in his hand, chuckling softly. “Nothing super here, just a model,” he replied. “How’s Reborn treating you?”
“The man’s tough. I can see why you gave up on acting,” Squalo answered.
“Yeah he said I’ve got the charisma but couldn’t act to save my life. Then he shot at me!”
Squalo threw his head back, laughing uproariously. “Fucking kills me every time you tell that story. They say he’s unorthodox but they’ve got no fucking idea.”
The can slipped from Dino’s fingers and hit him in the head before bouncing over the pavement. He sighed before leaning over to pick it up, only to be yanked backwards by his friend.  A motor scooter zipped by right where Dino had been standing moments earlier.
“Lambo, step on it!” a voice commanded as they flew past. “Halloween’s a busy night for delivery requests!”
“VOI!” Squalo took off after them, yelling obscenities. He scooped up the can that Dino had dropped and whipped it at their retreating backs. “Watch where you’re going!”
When he realized that Dino wasn’t following, he retraced his steps only to find him crouched on the sidewalk with two children at his side. The older one had red hair and was dressed as a storm trooper. The only reason that Squalo could tell that he had red hair was because his helmet lay on the ground. The younger child was clinging onto Dino’s back, yelling at a group of teenagers across the street.
“I’m the mighty Skull! You can’t talk to me like that!”
The trio of bullies laughed and jeered.
“Give us our candy back!” Skull yelled. “O-or you’ll pay the consequences! Enma! Show them!”
“Oh yeah?” they jeered. “What’s going to happen? Are you going to get your stormtrooper to shoot us?”
Enma turned red and looked down at his shoes.
“That’s enough!” Dino said sternly. “Give them their candy back.”
But Squalo had enough experience dealing with Dino’s bullies during their school days to know that wouldn’t work. So he loomed over behind them. “VOI! What are you shitheads doing?”
His sudden appearance and shouting startled them and they jumped in surprise, spinning around to face him. His smile was sinister as he cracked his knuckles.
“Squalo! You can’t hit kids!” Dino exclaimed, putting his hand over Skull’s eyes, or at least where he assumed his eyes to be under his visor.
“I don’t see any brats here,” Squalo said, smirking down at them. “I see a shitty vampire, a half-assed wizard, and a... what the hell are you supposed to be?”
The teen responded indignantly through the furry mask covering his face. “A werewolf!”
Squalo squinted. “And crackhead bigfoot here.”
He unsheathed the sword he had at his side that Dino had told him not to take off the set.
“Oh shit he’s insane!”
“Yo let’s dip!”
The teens turned to run, and Squalo followed in pursuit.
Dino sighed and turned his attention to the two kids that stayed with him. Enma watched in silent dismay as Squalo chased down the bullies, catching them by the end of the block.
“What are you dressed as?” Dino asked.
“I’m Skull! The World’s Greatest Hitman!” he answered as if that didn’t leave Dino with more questions than he had started with. “And this is my brother Enma!”
Dino picked up Enma’s stormtrooper helmet and brushed off the scuffs and leaves as best as he could before giving it back to him. He thanked Dino so quietly that he thought the child had mouthed the words.
Squalo returned to their side, sheathing the prop sword and shoving the pillowcases full of candy at Enma. He stuttered a surprised thank you, gathering the superman and Mickey Mouse pillowcases into his arms, grimacing a little as some candy spilled out.
Dino scooped them into his hand and pressed a lollipop into Skull’s fingers before straightening up and putting the rest of the candy back into the pillowcases that Enma held tightly.
“Hey, I know a place that hands out jumbo-sized candy bars,” Dino said.
“Really!?” Skull’s face was obscured by the oversized biker helmet that he wore, but Dino could tell his eyes had widened by the way his voice jumped an octave.
“Haha yeah!” Dino assured. “It’s where we’re headed now if you want to come along?”
“Hey! Didn’t anyone ever teach you not to follow strange men that offer you candy?” Squalo shouted.
Enma looked between apprehensively but nodded. “Stay close,” he murmured, holding his hand out to Skull who ignored it and ran ahead.
“I’ll lead the way!”
“You don’t know where you’re going!” Enma ran after him across the street.
“Look both ways!” Dino called, starting after them, but tripped halfway through the crosswalk.
Squalo caught his arm and righted him gruffly. “Watch it.”
“Thanks Squalo!” Dino grinned.
“Yeah, yeah.” Squalo waved him off. “There’s idiots out here on their shitty vespas; if you got killed by one it’d be pathetic as fuck.”
___
“Thank you!” Yuni called from within the trailer.
“Ah, yeah, thanks,” Fran mumbled, already digging into their order.
Chrome thanked I-Pin as she stepped away from the door.
“That extra order won’t last until a midnight snack,” I-Pin warned.
“There’s no extra order,” Chrome replied, a little confusion bleeding into her tone.
“There were four orders,” I-Pin said, quickly checking the order ticket on her phone. “But three people.”
Chrome placed the fourth order of ramen on at the top of the stairs and looked up. “It’s not an extra.” I-Pin followed her gaze up to the moon. Seeing nothing, she shrugged and wished her a good night before bounding down the stairs to return to where Lambo sat waiting on the vespa.
“Ready?” she asked, putting her helmet on.
“W-w-what’s that?!”
I-Pin looked back at Lambo’s whimper to see him pointing up above the moonlit trailer with a trembling finger.
A silhouetted figure sat on top of the trailer, reclined comfortably with one leg bent in perfect repose. The moon was too bright to see the features of the figure’s face but she could tell they were being watched with lazy predation.
“I-Pin, let’s go!”
The waver in his voice made her trailer and hop on the back of the vespa again, knowing he wouldn’t drive off without her, but that he would cry if they stayed any longer with the spooky atmosphere.
Sitting in reverse with her back against Lambo’s, holding the rest of their deliveries close to her chest, she kept her eyes on the spirit that watched over Chrome until the trees grew so tall they obscured the moon, folding themselves over between them until she could no longer see the trailer or Chrome’s protector as they sped away through the night.
Only when Chrome went back inside did Hibari leap down gracefully to eat the dinner she had left for him.
___
She heard his approach but did not acknowledge it. Byakuran stayed in the entryway of the greenhouse, just watching her care for the toadflax that was a stand-in for the fantasy silk sage. He thought it ironic that she dedicated her attention to a plant that symbolized the desire for the recipient to notice of the giver’s love.
“You noticed the plants were dry when we were filming?”
Bianchi lowered the watering can from the silk sage plant and set it down beside the pot.
“You did too,” she replied. “And you almost broke character.”
“Not all of us perfectly embody our personas,” he said a little plaintively.
She registered his petulant pout and exaggerated expression and thought he fit the bill of a self-indulgent demon rather well.
“Oh?” She raised an eyebrow.
“Oh,” he repeated a little more softly.
They lapsed into silence as she ran her fingers over the soft leaves that the fictional plant was named for.
She looked up when he approached, painfully aware of his proximity like they had been over the last months of filming together, in a weighted and measured dance with the other, like the gravity of stars drawn together, or the certainty of waves to the shore.
He held up a cluster of flowers to her that looked to be what they used in place of the blood blossoms on set, except the rich colour was much more pigmented and there was an enigmatic scent emanating from them. “What do you think?”
She leaned towards the flowers he offered, holding a strand of hair away from her face; her eyes closed slowly and she inhaled deeply.
“An amaranth.” Bianchi pulled back slightly, the strand of hair slipping over her shoulder to trace lightly over his forearm. She looked up through her thick lashes at him, eyes lidded and lips parted in a small smile. “Decadent.”
He smiled back, pulling away entirely, that strand of her hair trailing down his arm. He let it slip through his fingers. “An amaranth,” he agreed. “For immortality.”
“Immortality?” she repeated breathily, stepping over to close the distance he had created between them.
Byakuran took another step back with a teasing laugh. “For an undying love.”
He seemed to float out of her reach even without the animatronic wings and the wires he wore during filming, but she kept pace with him, used to his movements from the time they spent on set together, with him as her shadow. They were very familiar with each others’ bodies.
“Now why would you give me such a flower?” she asked, her voice low.
He pulled the flower close to his chest before lifting it to his nose to breathe in its scent. “I didn’t give you anything!”
She continued her approach until he found himself with his back against the wall, the moonlight slanting through the glass panels of the ceiling.
“Maybe I’ll take it,” she murmured, plucking it from his fingers and placing it in his breast pocket.
“Should I keep calling you by pet names?”
“Well, it’s gauche to ask a witch for her true name.” He played along; it was hard not to recognize her as the face of the perfume industry, from magazine covers and red carpet events.
“You may continue to call me Byakuran; after all, you named me, witch.”
She played along too; she knew him from his youtube channel, avidly watching his every dessert mukbang video, every unboxing, and every sweet shop review.
“Is that right, demon?” She purred against his lips. He could feel the warmth emanating from her as her body pinned his to the wall, dizzy from that citrus scent wafting from her skin.
“Hurry! The noodles are getting soggy!”
Byakuran pulled the woman further into the shadows, whispering a quiet shhh in her ear, and Bianchi pressed closer still as two people rushed through the greenhouse, one in a red uniform and the other in a cowprint shirt. They darted through the set without so much as a glance around them and then they were gone out the other end.
“Okay, okay, there’s a shortcut through here... Geez, It’s not like Haru will let Gokudera kill us if we’re late again.”
“I’ll kill you if we’re late again!”
Bianchi didn’t even so much as glance over at them, taking the opportunity to pin him against the wall with her gaze. He watched their exit over her shoulder with a dispassionate smile. She wanted to make him feel something.
Wearing her shroud of night, she pulled him under, but the angel wasn’t as unmoved as he seemed. She leaned in to test the waters, just simmering below the surface, and he closed the distance himself to have a taste.
___
“Take care!” Tsuna waved to Enma and Skull as Yamamoto put the bowl of candy down on the side table. The green paint on Yamamoto’s neck and face was starting to rub off on the collar of his shirt, and Tsuna tried not to worry about the staining it would cause in the laundry.
Leave it to his boyfriend to use stage makeup taken from the film set to turn himself into a classic zombie.
Dino hovered just behind them, staring out down the path after them. “You think they’ll be okay?” he asked.
Tsuna shut the front door as Squalo laughed, having already made himself comfortable on the couch, feet up on the coffee table. “Go trick-or-treating with them if you’re that worried,” he called.
Yamamoto put a jumbo chocolate bar in Dino’s hands before leading him over to take a seat beside Squalo. “They’ll be fine!” His flippant tone was somehow reassuring and Dino allowed Yamamoto to take his coat. “They’ve got enough candy in their pillowcases to use them like clubs now!”
“I don’t know if that’s a good thing,” Tsuna said, making a face.
An orange tabby cat immediately jumped onto Dino’s lap.
“Even the cat loves you,” Squalo remarked as Natsu settled in and curled up on him, purring up a storm. “Just like the dogs today,” he finished, inclining his head towards Yamamoto who only smiled up at Tsuna, perched on the armrest.
Remembering the hours it had taken to get the prosthetics on only for it to have been wasted and then taken off, Squalo frowned at Yamamoto’s feigned innocence and Tsuna’s flustered guilt.
“Dino and I wanted to visit everyone,” Tsuna began.
“We wanted to get a sneak peek,” Dino said. “Especially since Reborn was making a movie based on Tsuna’s dream!”
“And you got distracted!” Squalo reprimanded, not letting Yamamoto off the hook even though he just laughed it off.
“Tsuna told me I forgot to buy the Halloween candy!” Yamamoto recounted. “But he forgot to prepare dinner for us, so we’re even!”
The doorbell rang again and Tsuna turned away from Dino and Squalo lounging on the couch to answer it, but Yamamoto beat him to it, jogging over with firm hand on Tsuna’s shoulder to tell him to stay put and enjoy his chat, and a quick kiss pressed to his cheek in passing to casually remind him he was adored.
“You said there would be dinner!” Squalo shouted after him.
“Yes, yes,” he called back as he scooped up the bowl of candy and answered the door.
On the other side of the doorframe, Lambo jumped in surprise as a zombie opened the door.
“Delivery!” I-Pin said brightly.
“Oh! I-Pin! Lambo!” he greeted. “That was fast!”
I-Pin rolled her eyes. “You don’t have to be nice, Yamamoto-san. Lambo took his time today. I would’ve driven like you taught me.”
Yamamoto laughed as she handed over his order of ramen. He held the bowl of candy out to I-Pin and she selected a few lollipops for Lambo.
“Yeah, but Lambo,” Yamamoto asked. “I thought you had a Halloween party to go to tonight?” He hesitated when Lambo flapped his hands and began waving his arms, giving him a panicked look.
I-Pin looked between the two of them confusedly.
“Ahh!” Yamamoto smiled knowingly. “I know! You’re helping her out on the scariest night of the year instead of going to the party!”
“VOI!”
Lambo and I-Pin jumped at the voice of the man that had pursued them doggedly earlier in the night. Squalo stalked over to the door to confirm that they were also the one and the same.
“It’s you on that shitty vespa!” Squalo growled.
“Um, trick or treat?” Lambo squeaked, backing away.
I-Pin was one step ahead of him, running back to the motor scooter. “Lambo, let’s go!”
He stumbled away from the door, jumping onto the back of the scooter and grabbing onto the seat for dear life as she took off without warning.
“I-Pin, slow down!” Lambo screamed.
“We gotta’ get to your party!” she called back.
He held his helmet to his head as the chinstrap flapped in the wind, staring at her back. “Don’t we have more deliveries to do?”
“I’ve only got one more for the night,” she replied, “and it’s me getting you to your Halloween party!”
“Oh no you don’t!”
Lambo shrieked as he saw that Squalo and his fury were gaining ground on them. He spun around in the seat, throwing his arms around her waist. “I-Pin, speed up!”
“That, I can do! Hold on tight!” she called back as they raced off into the night, or at least as quickly as the scooter would allow. Lambo held her tightly and hoped that they would arrive unscathed; but also that maybe when they did, she would accept his invitation to join him.
___
The sky was a bright grey, with golden rays filtering through. The full moon had cast long shadows in the night and it would soon pass the torch to the sun’s radiance. Daybreak was eminent over the graveyard, and the night was almost over, but not just yet.
Haru stretched and yawned, uncurling from the position she had held over her sewing machine through the night. She laid out Chrome’s repaired garments and the new robe that she had worked ceaselessly on for Bianchi. After the work was done, she was left with about a yard of material – too small to do anything with besides being used as scrap. She shook it out to remove loose threads and then folded it neatly at her side.
Gokudera had put his head down to rest hours earlier. Haru had noticed when he did not get back up. His back was rising and falling evenly with each breath, his goggles discarded beside his sleeping face. Crates of neatly stacked sticks of dynamite sat around him, carefully prepared and ready to be set off at a moment’s notice.
She stood to clear the empty takeout boxes overturned on the table between them, the disposable chopsticks unbalancing the empty Styrofoam containers. She hoped he liked the ramen she had ordered more than the instant noodles he would have made for them with the electric kettle he had kicked into the corner a few days back; she knew he would not have easily allowed himself the luxury of ordering food if he could find a quicker alternative on his own.
But then again, he was unused to someone else caring for his needs.
Smiling, Haru fluffed out the scrap of fabric again; it wasn’t large enough to be useful in any other way, but it would serve well enough to keep him warm. She settled the small white sheet over his shoulders and reached down to touch his cheek, but paused with her fingers hovering just over his face. Reconsidering, she picked up his can of coffee, swished it around, and finished it. He would wake soon and grumble about the makeshift blanket, but not just yet.
___
[AO3] [Part I] [Part II] [Part III]
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