#she's the key
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Theories about CPV2
I wanna talk about q!Etoiles' mission to the Nether for a bit. More specifically about the two opposed theories I have.
First off, something we can mostly agree is that the Code is scared of q!Etoiles. It faced him several times in the past, all of which ended with our favorite French Cucumber's victory, so much so that the last time it was forced to flee. Even now with the sword, it realized that killing him would be next to impossible. So, what to do about him?
Trap him in the Nether. In this scenario, the Code has no idea about the existence of the shield. It made q!Etoiles follow it into an active Nether portal, knowing he wouldn't resist, and then closed the door behind him. I watched the VOD, q!Etoiles misremembered, the Code wasn't in the Nether with him. It didn't drop the image frame with the shield schematics and coordinates, it was an invisible admin. The code has dropped items before while visible, so what gives? Moreso, the portal he went through is in an old structure. Someone built it before, and maybe it is one of the few known stable Nether portal (remember, q!Forever's portal was deemed "unstable"). Since people went through it in the past, they must've left clues, and the admin dropping those schematics might've been a meta way to say "q!Etoiles stumbled upon forgotten schematics when he arrived in the Nether". q!Etoiles is smart, but his specialty is game mechanics strategy (and culture), not mystery solving. Case in point, the "enigma" he faced while in the fortress was not hard per se (find keycard), and he still struggled. Again, I'm not saying he's dumb, people often forget that intelligence manifests in many different ways, and this just isn't his. We know the admins are adapting the difficulty based on the player involved, hence why Forever's Nether event wasn't too hard monster-wise: the players there were not strong enough. So in this scenario, the enigma was "easy" for RP reasons, and the Code had nothing to do with the shield. q!Etoiles just went through an existing doorway, found clues left by those who crossed it before him, which lead him to the shield. Unbeknownst to the Code, he then found a way out, where the Code was waiting for him just in case, however this time the Code was even more outmatched. This option has one major problem however: if CPV1 was so dangerous, how can we be sure CPV2 doesn't have the same flaw? Whatever intense trial CPV1 went through, it ended with its "remains" destroyed, which means despite its infinite durability, the experiment led to its partial destruction. The book says there were schematics for subsequent iterations (which includes CPV2 I'm assuming), and those were destroyed too "as per protocol", but nothing is said about getting rid of the iterations themselves. This means that the unprecedented events from the intense trial weren't worth even the destruction of presumably dangerous items, so they had to hide it. This also means those events might happen again now. Hence, my second theory:
The Code wanted q!Etoiles to find the shield. From the very beginning there has been clues that the code might be a mistake, an experiment from the Federation gone wrong. What if CPV1 is what created the Code? What if the intense trial led not just to the shield being destroyed, but to the creation of the Code? That would be why they didn't re-execute the trials, because it would unleash another monster. And who better than the hot-headed, dungeon-cleaner q!Etoiles to reproduce the conditions of that intense trial? Worse, what if the unprecedented event didn't just create the Code, but turn the user into it. Etoiles wanted a villain arc, what if it involves him becoming a Code Entity? That would be an excellent way for the Code to deal with its "q!Etoiles problem" imo.
Whatever the case may be, whether it was the Code's objective or not, I believe the intense conditions of the trial will be met once again due to q!Etoiles' behavior. Time will tell what this will unleash.
#if it's the second theory#and q!Etoiles becomes a code monster#I want Pomme to be the one to snap him out of it#he loves her so much#if anything can reverse the effects#she's the key#qsmp#qsmp etoiles#qsmp theory#qsmp lore#qsmp federation#qsmp code entity
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Just a friendly reminder that Kristie Mewis had :
83 touches, 61-of-67 passing, six tackles, three interceptions, nine defensive recoveries, and 10 duels won out of 12 contested against the same Japanese team that is currently beating Spain 3-0 at the halfâŚ
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I am so bad at posting here consistently but I feel like Tumblr would appreciate my best friend Fishbag (and the various creatures that live within her)
#she was born of the need for a very self indulgent project after a bad week and she's one if my favourite things I've made recently#i love all her features and secrets ...#she has 2 secret pockets in her mouth for keys and other such small things#and a divider in the main body with a fish spine design on it#and she turns into a backpack!#sewing#art#textile art#my art#fish#bag#whimsical#texiles#fish bag
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â・â§ËĘđÉËâ§ď˝Ąâ
#source: pinterest#genuinely fuck you to whoever edited what she said#Sheâs just trying to exist and cope but people canât help but continue to make fun of her#Fuck off#i wanna hug her#lifestyle jirai#irl jirai#jiraiblogging#jirai kei#jiraiblr#jirai girl#landmine girl#landmineblr#lifestyle landmine#landmineblogging#landmine type#landmine kei#girl rotting#bed rotting#jirai lifestyle#landmine blogging#jirai onna#Bpd#bpd feels#actually borderline#actually bpd#actually mentally ill#mentally ill girlies
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my dog is too antisocial for the dog park so for enrichment we put her in the reverse bear trap đ

#shitty saw traps#saw franchise#mod amanda#she loves it btw. once she digs up the key she brings the trap back to us to put on again
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YOU KNOW S3RK3T TH3Y R34LLY L1K3 YOU AROUND H3R3
YOU SHOULD V1S1T SOM3T1M3, YOUD G3T 4 K1CK OUT OF 1T
4NYW4Y
S33 YOU 4ROUND, 1 GU3SS
#I FORGOT TO POST THIS ONE#I DONT like it that much but I am proud of the Vriska stained glass#I think about their god status on Earth-C a lot#Thatâs gotta be a crazy thing for them to live with#Vriska is this ancient lost thing#The god that died at the genesis of the world#Or however the mythologyâs bloomed over millenia#And Terezi just saw her the other week#She canât really be gone can she?#Sheâs coming home? Right? She was just ehre#DO NOT TALK ABOUT BEYOND CANON I dont have anything against it#I am just not familiar#This is not meant to be about beyond canon#Itâs just terezi doomed yuri hours#homestuck#homestuck fanart#vriska serket#terezi pyrope#vriska x terezi#vrisrezi#earth-c#Homestuck earth-c#art#digital art#procreate#doodles#HAVE YOU EEEEVERRR STARED DIRECTLY AT THE SUUUUUNNN#HAVE YOU EVER SHARED A CLOSENESS SO EXPOSED AND HAD IT SPIT BACK BY SOMEONE#SO FORGIVE ME IF I JUMP#AT THE RATTLE OF YOUR KEYS
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AU where Hopper adopted Steve as a child but no one knows about it because Steve and Hopper are both chronic under-sharers and no one asked specifically about it.
Itâs not that Robin would care, right? She wouldnât. Itâs just that she wouldâve liked to know so she didnât spent their first month at Scoops Ahoy getting psych damage every time Steve used âDadâ and âHopâ interchangeably.
She mentions it to Dustin when they were stuck in the elevator together and Dustin shrugged like, âYeah, he does that. Nancy said he did that before he even knew Hopper.â
âThatâsâŚweird?â
âYeah,â Dustin shrugs again. âLucas thinks he does it as a joke even though itâs not funny. That would make sense since Steveâs not funny.â
Steve calling from atop the elevator, âIâm not what?â
âYouâre not funny!â
âDude, what are you talking about? Iâm hilarious.â
The conversation slips away from there and Robin wonât actually learn why Steve calls Hopper dad for another three months. She canât even be mad about it because, âYour dad died and you didnât tell anybody?â
#Robin: And your sister moves away#Steve: Yeah but that was actually for the best#Robin: youâre all alone#Steve: Iâm quite literally with you right now#the only person who knew Steve was adopted was Tommy and he swore up and down that if anyone ever found out#that Steve would be bullied into oblivion so they didnât even tell Carol (sheâs a blabbermouth)#and then Steve kinda forgot that was a thing so never brought it up to anyone#everybody thinks his birth parents are awful people but they just werenât good parents#they literally gave him a key to their rarely used house and said he could use it any time#steve harrington#jim hopper#robin buckley#dustin henderson
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I did these a while ago but here are the girls
#I am low key proud of how I did Annabellâs spider web lol#tma#the magnus archives#tma fanart#tma podcast#I love Daisy so much#I love contesting a scary character with very soft features#her face is so squish and she can also kill you#annabelle cane#daisy tonner#alice tonner#alice daisy tonner#the web#the hunt
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Save me green lesbians
#the guy she was interested in wasn't a guy at all#tgswiiwagaa#that looks like a key smash haha#mitsuki koga#aya oosawa#mine#my art
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á´Ęá´ á´Ąá´á´ĘĘ ĘĘá´á´ęą
Ęá´á´á´ÉŞá´á´ x ĘĘá´á´á´!ę°á´á´!Ęá´á´á´ęąá´ĘĘá´Ę!Ęá´á´á´
á´Ę
ęąá´á´á´á´ĘĘ: The bell over your bookshop door rings at midnight, and a stranger steps through. Tired eyes, old voice, and a hunger he tries to hide. He says little, but lingers like he's waiting for permission to need you. You should send him away, but something in you wants to see what he'll do if you don't.
á´Ąá´: 12.8k
á´/á´: firstly, thank you so much to everyone who enjoyed and interacted with let the wrong one in! i am so proud and so disappointed to be posting this because it's so shameless. if the fbi showed up to my door i'd let them take me to whatever white padded room they had waiting. i was up past midnight multiple times writing this out and it shows. just a completely unhinged self-indulgent mess. do not read without a rose toy (/j). as always, white girls i promise you can have your fun with this too! i don't do taglists personally, so just follow me if you want to be updated when i post c:
á´Ąá´Ęɴɪɴɢęą: SLOWburn, remmick is truly a fucking loser (pathetic!remmick supremacy), remmick will not leave the reader alone, reader is a know-it-all manipulative ass thought daughter, she's lowkey evil actually, don't read unless you support womens rights and wrongs, mutual yearning and obsession, vampirism, dacryphillia, overstimulation, blink-and-you'll-miss-it exhibitionism, sub!remmick, dom!reader, cunnilingus, p in v, ride 'em cowgirl, spit kink, praise kink, matching each other's freak, offscreen but confirmed stalking, excessive divider usage, probable excessive usage of "ain't" because i got worried about my accent skills, amateur knowledge of 1930s literature and bookstores, religious undertones if you squint, i think y'all know what to expect i'm not writing out everything
fanart!
You were one of the lucky ones.
Thatâs what folks said when they stepped through the little wood-framed door, brushing snow from their shoulders or sweat from their brows, depending on the season. They always paused in the entryway. Like the air was thicker inside. Warmer, gentler, laced with something that asked them to hush their voices and unshoulder their weariness. Most folks did. Theyâd glance around slow, wide-eyed and awestruck, like theyâd just wandered into a place stitched together by warmth and paper. Because they had.
Your daddy built it like that.
He opened the shop before you were tall enough to reach the counter, when your shoes still lit up when you walked and your teeth were missing in the front. A modest space, more narrow than wide, with walls that sometimes whispered when the wind pressed in. It was tucked between a shoe repair, where the scent of leather and oil clung to the brick, and a bakery that changed hands too often to name. But the bookstore never changed. It stayed.
He fought for it with every drop of charm he had and a stubborn streak the size of a mule. The bank didnât make it easy. Nor the city. Nor the neighbors. But he didnât flinch. Just smiled, signed the lease, and started sanding old shelves he bought for cheap from a shut-down place across town.
It wasnât grand, but it had room to breathe.
The shelves didnât match. The floors creaked. The ceiling had water stains shaped like cloud spirits. But the space had rhythm. Light pooled in through the front windows in the early afternoon, catching the golden flecks in the pine wood counter he carved by hand. You watched him do it over the course of a summer. His shirt clinging to his back with sweat, sawdust settling in his hair like snow. That counter had curves in it, places smoothed by a thousand passing fingers, elbows leaned, coins slid, mugs thunked down in thought. It remembered everyone who ever stood there.
The aisles were just wide enough for two people to pass without brushing shoulders, if one of them turned slightly. In winter, the windows fogged from the warmth of breath and the hiss of the radiator under the front table. In summer, he cracked the front door and the back one just right so the breeze cut clean through, carrying with it the scent of magnolia and newsprint. When the light hit right, the dust in the air sparkled, like it was carrying secrets you could almost read if you squinted hard enough.
He dreamed of it since he was a boy, back when books came secondhand and beat-up, passed along like contraband. Borrowed if you were lucky. Bought if you were white. His eyes always got faraway when he talked about those days, like he was watching some other version of himself hiding from the world with a paperback gripped tight like a life vest.
âThereâs magic,â he always said, tapping your chest lightly with one thick finger, âin knowinâ a story nobody else does.â
So he painted the sign himself and hung it crooked on purpose, because he said perfection made folks nervous. He sold trinkets and newspapers and penny candy at first, just to keep the lights on. He let local kids read in the back for hours so long as they didnât dog-ear the pages. And when folks started to drift in off the street, curious, then charmed, he opened the door wider.
People noticed.
Not all approved.
But he smiled at the right times, kept his voice low when he had to, and stayed on his side of town like they told him to.
But inside those walls?
He was king.
You took it over after he passed.
Not because you wanted to. You hadnât planned for that. You thought youâd leave, travel, study something big with a title hard to pronounce. But when he died, sudden, quiet, the way only the kindest men seem to go, it was like the shop exhaled. And no one was there to breathe it back in.
So you stayed.
Not because you had his gift for conversation. You didnât. Your voice didnât carry like his. You didnât know how to make strangers feel like theyâd known you all their lives. But you had his steadiness. His eyes. His love of ink.
And the shop had raised you.
Youâd spent your childhood curled between the shelves with your knees pulled tight to your chest, the pages of books flaring open like wings in your lap. You used to fall asleep in the window nook under stacks of fairy tales, the glow of the streetlamp outside pooling on your shoulders. You learned to read by tracing the letters with your fingertip, mouthing the words like spells.
You grew up there. Quiet, clever, a little too serious for your age, and always full of questions. The kind of questions books were made for. You learned the world in chapters, one page at a time, growing taller alongside the stacks.
Even now, the shop holds you like a memory refusing to fade.
The floorboards creak the same way when you step heavy by the register. The bell above the door still dings off-key. Thereâs a worn spot in the paint where the heels of his boots used to rest, and you never painted over it. The walls know your heartbeat. The ceiling hums with it.
The place smells of paper, cedar, and something floral you still canât place. Not perfume. Not fresh. More like dried petals tucked in a forgotten book. There are candles flickering low behind the counter, their flames soft and steady, casting halos of gold on the spines of the hardbacks lining the shelves.
Outside, the windows are tinted now. Reflective. You can see yourself in the glass, wrapped in lamplight like a ghost caught in the pane.
Itâs not strange for you to be up this late.
You have a habit of rereading old favorites until the pages feel like skin. You like the quiet. The familiar shuffle of turning pages. The low creak of the chair under your legs. The steady tick of the clock in the corner, marking time nobodyâs watching.
The radio went quiet an hour ago, the static fading to silence when the last gospel track drifted away. Now thereâs only the sound of night outside. The rustle of trees, the distant hum of a train slicing through the dark, far beyond the city line.
But tonight, something feels off.
You donât know why. Not yet.
But your candleâs flame flutters suddenly, like itâs caught a breath. Not a wind. A breath.
You look toward the door.
Thereâs no bell. No sound.
But the air feels... thick. Like itâs waiting.
You donât move right away. You sit there with your thumb hovering over the page, caught between the lines of a sentence and the prickle on the back of your neck.
You donât want to turn it.
Not yet.
Then the door creaked.
A sound so small it barely pulled your eyes from the page. Your heart didnât jump. Not right away. It didnât need to.
The bell rang just after. Clear, bright, and true. Same one you fixed the summer it snapped off in a storm so thick the trees bowed like they were praying.
So that bell was yours. It knew what time it was. It didnât ring wrong.
Thatâs what made the sound feel off now. Just a shade too sharp, too clean, like a voice cutting into a dream you didnât know you were having.
The sign still said âCome In.â Your fault. Youâd meant to flip it hours ago but got lost in the pages, lulled by the rhythm of ink and stillness. Still, no one ever actually came this late. Not really. Not unless they were meant to be here.
You closed the book. Not slammed. Just firm. A quiet full stop.
And there he stood.
Tall. Pale.
A white man.
Out of place in every way that mattered.
He filled the doorway like he didnât know whether he wanted to be let in or turned away. Light from the streetlamps slanted behind him, casting his face in half-shadow, like the world couldnât decide how much of him to reveal.
You didnât move.
Your fingers curled around the spine of the book, thumb against the front cover, the weight of it grounding. The silence stretched between you.
He just stood there, breathing slow like he didnât want to startle anything. His eyes swept the room, not lazily, but searching. Hungry. And when they landed on you, they stayed.
His voice came quiet. Almost careful. âEveninâ.â
You stared.
âWeâre closed.â
Your tone was even. Flat. Not rude. Not kind, either.
Still, he didnât leave.
Didnât blink.
Didnât move at all, not really. Just shifted the weight of his stare, like he was trying to remember a script. Like heâd played this scene in his head a dozen ways and still didnât know which one this was. His smile was a flicker. Half-done. It twitched and died on his lips before it could mean anything. But under it, something desperate. Thin and frayed, like he was holding on to a thread he couldnât name.
âApologies,â he said with a shaky drawl, dipping his head toward the window, where the sign still swung faintly in the breeze. The porchlight caught the paint in the glass. âSaw the sign.â
You didnât believe that for a second.
Nobody came here by accident. Not after midnight. Not across town lines like these. Everyone knew where they were supposed to be. Supposed to go.
He was tall, yes, but not in a way that meant anything. His frame was lean, his movements all hesitation and nerves. His coat didnât fit right, like it had belonged to someone stronger once, someone he was still pretending to be.
You stood slowly.
The book stayed on the chair. Your skirt brushed the floor as you crossed barefoot to the counter, each step deliberate. No rush. No fear. Just weight.
You werenât afraid of the man. You were afraid of what kind of story this was turning into.
He watched the whole way, his eyes flicking between your face and your hands, trying to read the space between your breaths. Like he expected you to call for someone. To yell. To throw something. To raise your voice.
You didnât.
You let the silence answer.
âWhat can I do for you.â
No question mark. A line drawn in the sand.
He flinched, barely, but you saw it. Like a thread pulled too tight.
âI wasnât tryinâ to cause any trouble,â he said, voice thinning out at the edges. âJust⌠seemed like a place a man might find a bit of quiet.â
You raised a brow, not moved.
âYou always find quiet in closed shops?â
He scratched the back of his neck. A nervous tic, maybe. Or maybe it was just something to do with his hands, which kept twitching like they missed holding something heavier than a coat hem.
âOnly the ones still lit up inside.â
He tried for a smile again. It trembled. Didnât hold.
âThen Iâd suggest you pass through quick,â you said. âI need to lock up.â
âRight,â he said, nodding too fast. âOf course. Sorry. I just-â
But he didnât leave.
He stepped forward, just an inch, like something was pulling him. Then stopped himself and stalled in place, weight shifting foot to foot like the floor might open up if he stood still too long.
âI⌠donât suppose youâve got anything by Hughes?â he asked suddenly. Then, without pause, âOr Hurston?â His voice cracked a little on Hurston, like the name had caught on something inside his throat.
You blinked.
That was new.
You didnât say anything right away. Just studied him.
A white man. Midnight. The wrong side of town. Asking for Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston.
It didnât make sense.
It didnât fit.
Men like him didnât read voices like theirs. Not unless they had something to prove. Or something to steal.
He met your stare but his hands betrayed him, fidgeting at his sides again, tugging at the seams of his coat like he could pull himself together if he just gripped hard enough.
âYou from around here?â
He laughed. Short, sharp, like he didnât mean it. âNot anymore.â
Then quieter, âAinât got much left to be from.â
That silence stretched again. Wider this time. You didnât try to fill it. You let it grow heavy.
He looked down at the floor like it might offer him a script.
You shouldâve told him again to leave. Shouldâve flicked the light off and locked the door and gone back to your chair and the soft, safe pages waiting there.
But you didnât.
You said, âHughes is second shelf, left of the register. Zoraâs in the back, top shelfâ
You paused. Watched him.
âAnd they ainât alphabetical. Youâll have to look.â
He blinked.
Lit up like youâd handed him something holy.
âRight. Thank you. I- thank you.â
He stepped into the shop like the floor might vanish beneath him. Light. Careful. Fingertips trailing along the spines of the books nearest him, like the wood might spark or whisper if he touched it wrong.
And you watched him the whole way.
You didnât trust him. Not even a little.
But something about the way he stood there, asking for voices not his, trying not to tremble. Something about his need made you pause.
It intrigued you.
You tried not to listen.
Tried to stay still behind the counter, eyes fixed on the book youâd set aside, though your finger hadnât moved past the corner of the page. You heard the soft drag of his coat brushing the shelves, the sound of someone trying to move quietly without knowing how. The occasional squeak of a shoe sole. The low shuffle of indecision.
Then his voice floated back.
âSorry to bother, miss. You said left of the register?â
You closed your eyes.
Heâd been in the aisle all of sixty seconds.
âSecond shelf,â you called, sharper than you meant it. âYouâll know it when you see it.â
A pause.
âItâs just, uh⌠the labels are all faded.â
You exhaled through your nose. Not quite a sigh. Not quite not one.
You pushed off the counter and stepped out from behind it, your skirt catching the air as you moved. He was standing a little too close to the shelf, squinting at the bindings like the titles might blink first. His coat hung open now, revealing a loose button-down tucked half-heartedly into worn slacks, belt twisted like heâd dressed in a hurry. His hair was still damp at the edges from the relentless humidity outside. It made you wonder why he was wearing something so warm in the first place.
He looked up when he heard you.
Not just looked. Jumped.
Shoulders startled up an inch, like youâd crept up behind him with a switchblade instead of bare feet and a mild expression. His eyes flicked to your hands again. You noticed that. Clocked it.
âAin't mean to pull ya from your reading,â he said quickly. âJust didnât wanna grab the wrong thing.â
You said nothing.
You crouched low instead, running your fingers along the lower shelf until they stopped on the slim spine of The Weary Blues. You tugged it free, checked the inside cover, and stood.
Then you crossed past him, just enough to brush by the nervous way he lingered too close to the wood. At the back shelf, your hand found the worn copy of Their Eyes Were Watching God with the creased corners and sun-faded cover. You held both out to him.
He hesitated.
Not out of disrespect. Out of something else. Like touching them would make it real.
When his hand reached for them, it touched yours first.
Only for a second. Less than. But it landed like heat.
You watched his fingers twitch at the contact. Watched him pull back slightly, then steady himself like a man whoâd stepped into unexpected water. His skin was cold, lonely. Like someone who hadnât had cause to brush against kindness in a while.
You gave him the books anyway.
He took them with both hands, careful not to touch you again. His eyes met yours briefly. Then dropped.
That shouldâve been it.
But something in the way he flinched, not in fear, but in startled awareness, left a strange twist in your stomach. Not danger. Not quite.
You narrowed your eyes at him. Watched how he shifted. How he clutched the books like they were lifelines. How still he got under your gaze.
And maybe you shouldâve gone back to the counter. Maybe you shouldâve left it there.
But you didnât.
You leaned just slightly closer, voice low. Baiting.
âYou always get jumpy when someone tries to help you?â
He looked up again, tongue wetting his bottom lip like he was about to speak, then thought better of it. Instead, he nodded, too fast, like agreeing might save him from saying the wrong thing.
And that, that, made you want to keep going.
Just to see what else heâd do.
You led him back to the front in silence.
He didnât try to fill it this time. Just followed, books clutched against his chest like they might steady his breath. You could feel his gaze brush the curve of your shoulder, your hands, the soft glow of the lamps pooling on the floorboards.
You stepped behind the counter, but didn't fill the space.
You stayed close. Leaning forward in a way that was probably too obvious.
The register clicked open with a metallic sigh. Your fingers moved slow over the worn buttons, each press deliberate. He laid the books down gently, almost mechanically, their spines aligning like he'd meant to do it. Like heâd practiced.
The light caught his face now, full on.
He looked younger in the shadows. But here, beneath the gold of your lamp, he was something else entirely.
His face was long and wide, covered in stubble that somehow looked neat and unkempt at the same time. Hollowed cheeks. A narrow nose that sloped like it had been broken once and never quite healed right. His mouth was set in a line that kept trying not to tremble. But his eyes...
They were wrong.
Not in a way you could name, not in any way youâd heard told, but wrong just the same. Too dark, too deep. And old. Old. You didnât know how you knew it, but it pulled at the back of your neck. Some instinct deeper than language whispering that those werenât eyes meant for a man that looked barely thirty.
Then there were his teeth.
You saw them when he smiled, faint and soft, like he didnât mean for it to happen. A little too sharp. Animalistic, almost. Pointed just enough to make you question how close you wanted to stand.
And still, you didnât move away.
âThatâll be four even,â you said, and held out your hand.
He blinked. Fumbled in his pockets. Fingers pulling out a crumpled bill like he hadnât checked how much he had. When he offered it, your hand met his again, and this time you didnât let go too quick.
Your touch lingered.
Not an accident.
Your fingers brushed his palm, smooth and dry and colder than before. You watched his throat shift like heâd swallowed something wrong. The money crinkled between you, forgotten.
You dropped it in the drawer without looking down.
Counted back the change slow. One coin at a time. Let your fingertips ghost over his as you pressed each one into his hand, watched how he tried not to flinch, not to twitch, not to breathe too fast.
There was something in his mouth now. A hitch. A tension.
You tilted your head.
His accent. It hadnât struck you before. Too quiet. But now, with him this close, you could hear the undercurrents. Southern, yes. That lazy hush to his vowels, that slant that curled around the ends of his words like smoke. But buried beneath it was something else.
Not from here.
A roll that didnât come from any county near yours. A roundness to the vowels that didnât quite match the cadence of Mississippi. It had weight to it. History. Like old hills and cold winters. European, maybe. English, Scottish, Irish? Or something older still.
But the twang was real, too. Earnest. Like heâd worn it long enough to convince even himself.
You watched him shift under your gaze, trying to shrink inside that too-big coat.
âWhatâs your name?â you asked.
Simple.
But your voice dropped half a note, low and steady like it was loaded.
His eyes flicked up again. Held yours.
âRemmick, miss.â
Just that. No last name. With an unusual politeness in tow.
You didnât smile. Nor did you give your name. You wanted him to work for that.
âRight,â you said. âRemmick.â
He shifted the books under one arm, his free hand ghosting over the edge of the counter like he wanted to say more, ask more, be more, but didnât dare.
âWell⌠good evenin' to ya,â he said softly. The words caught at the edges, like they didnât quite belong in his mouth.
You didnât answer at first. Just watched him take a step back, then another, boots creaking against the old wood floor.
Then, finally, you raised your hand.
Not a wave, exactly. Just a slow lift of your fingers in something halfway between farewell and warning.
He seemed to understand.
The bell over the door chimed once as he slipped through, swallowed by the dark.
You didnât move.
Not until the sound of his footsteps vanished completely.
The next night came heavy with quiet. Midnight again. And you were sitting in the same chair, same blanket folded over your knees, same book splayed in your lap. Different pages, but you hadnât turned one in ten minutes.
The lamp cast its familiar pool of amber over the counter, the window, the shelves. Everything was still. Too still.
You hadnât flipped the sign.
You told yourself it didnât matter. That it was habit, that your mind had simply been elsewhere. The story had you hooked, maybe. Maybe you were chasing some lost line between chapters, maybe thatâs why you kept glancing at the door without realizing it.
The âCome Inâ flickered faintly in the glass, reversed in the dark like a whisper only the street could read.
You licked your thumb, turned the page. Tried to focus on the words. You didnât remember them, even though you read them yesterday. Or maybe it was last week. Or maybe it didnât matter at all.
It wasnât like you were waiting.
You just hadnât gone to bed yet.
You shifted. Crossed your legs under the blanket. Then uncrossed them. Stared at the âCome Inâ again. Just a sign. Just a little slanted piece of painted wood that always tilted left because the hinge was loose and you never bothered to fix it.
The wind slipped through a crack in the front window. Barely there, just enough to nudge the edge of the lace curtain and carry in a scent from the dark. Not smoke, not rain, something earthbound. Loamy. Cold.
You turned another page. Didnât read a word.
Your candleâs flame danced sharp again, almost gleeful. You rubbed your thumb over your palm without thinking, the way you did when something was close. Some old habit from childhood, back when your parents told you to trust your instincts, even when they made no sense.
The bell rang.
Not loud. Not rushed. Just a single chime, clear as a knock to the chest.
He stepped through like heâd been summoned.
No coat this time. His shirt was pressed, collar sharp. Sleeves rolled just past the wrists in that careful way that said heâd redone them three, maybe four times. His hair was a little less wild, tamed with pomade and willpower. His boots were clean. Like heâd stood outside brushing dust from them just to make a better second impression.
And yet, nothing about him looked natural. Not the tidiness. Not the polish. He wore it like a child wore Sunday shoes. Tight across the toes, heavy on the ankles, stiff enough to slow him down.
His eyes, still dark, still glinting, scanned the room like he already knew youâd be there. They landed on you. Lingered. Not just in greeting, not just in recognition, but in reverence. Like he was taking inventory of you. The slope of your nose, the fullness of your lips, the tight, coiled crown of your hair haloed in the light. Like he was memorizing every feature he'd never had the right to admire this openly before.
And when they did, he smiled. A small, practiced thing. One that almost reached his eyes.
Like he was proud of himself for coming back.
And like some shameful, stubborn part of you was glad he had.
âEveninâ.â
Same greeting, but not quite the same voice. Still quiet, still that drawl sugar-coated in something older, something foreign, but this time with the faintest edge of self-assurance. Like heâd practiced it on the way over. Maybe even out loud. Like he hoped itâd sound natural if he said it just right.
You didnât answer.
Not with words.
You rose instead, slow and smooth, letting the silence stretch as you crossed the shop in bare feet. Your skirt brushed the floor again, soft as a whisper, trailing you like smoke.
He stood straighter when you neared. Or tried to. You watched the twitch in his shoulder when your fingers reached toward him, the way his breath caught behind his ribs. The little gold chain around his neck winked against his shirtfront, barely there, nearly hidden beneath the buttons.
You reached for it without asking.
âItâs crooked,â you murmured.
It wasnât.
Your thumb grazed the thin line of metal, adjusting it ever so slightly, letting your knuckles drift down the hollow of his chest. Just enough to feel the warmth beneath the cloth. Just enough to make sure he noticed.
He noticed.
Froze like someone struck dumb. Not like he didnât want the touch. No, not that. Definitely not that. But like he didnât know what to do with it. His lips parted on a soundless breath, his eyes locked somewhere over your shoulder like he was staring down a spectre only he could see.
The pulse under your fingers thudded once. Hard. Then again, faster.
You watched it.
You leaned in, just slightly, letting your hand linger longer than it needed to. He didnât flinch. Didnât pull away. But you could feel the tension ripple through him. Tight. Brittle. Wired.
When you finally let go, he exhaled like heâd been holding air since last night.
âThere,â you said softly. âBetter.â
He didnât answer right away. His throat moved as he swallowed, mouth opening like he might say something, then closing again when nothing came. His eyes met yours, flicked down to your mouth, then jerked back up with a flicker of something like guilt.
It was a touch.
Thatâs all it was.
But the way he looked at you now...
It had unmade him.
You let the silence sit for a beat longer, watching how he stood there like he didnât dare take a full breath without permission. Then you spoke, softly, like an idea you hadnât quite finished shaping.
âIâve got a thought,â you said, turning back toward the shelves. âWait here.â
But you didnât mean that.
Because you paused, half-turned, eyes sliding back to him, that little hook in your voice coiled just so, and added, âActually⌠no. Come with me.â
He obeyed without hesitation.
No question, no protest. Just a nod, and then his steps fell in behind yours like they were always meant to. You didnât look back to see if he was following. You already knew he was.
You smirked before you even realized you were doing it.
Heâs learning.
The rows of shelves narrowed the deeper you went, books stacked tall and mismatched. Some still had penciled notes in the margins. Others bore names and stamps from a dozen different hands. You moved with practiced ease, fingers gliding along the spines, then stopped sharp in front of a little patch of well-loved paperbacks with sun-faded covers and creased corners.
You didnât say a word. Just stepped aside and gestured.
His brow knit faintly. Then he reached out, tentative at first, letting his fingertips hover above the titles before settling on one with a cracked pink spine and a watercolor couple leaning too close beneath an umbrella.
You raised your brows but didnât speak.
Interesting.
He held it up like he was asking permission.
You nodded. âGood. Take that. Go sit by the window.â
Again, no hesitation.
He moved, soft steps, book clutched in his hand like it might disappear if he wasnât careful. He didnât glance back once as he settled into the reading nook. A curved wooden bench carved into the front windowâs alcove, piled with cushions in muted tones, threadbare but clean.
The light from the lamp behind the counter cast the glass in warm gold, bouncing off his hair and skin in a way that made him look more real than he had last night. Less ghost. More man.
You watched him a moment longer, then followed.
Your feet made no sound on the floorboards. You crossed the space and sank onto the bench beside him. Not too close, but not far. Not far at all. The cushions dipped with your weight, the fabric between you folding with tension that hadnât been there seconds ago.
He sat stiffly, book unopened in his lap, hands folded atop it. Like he didnât quite know what to do now that he was here. Like he was waiting for something. Or someone.
You.
Your gaze lingered on the side of his face.
The light revealed the fine things. His lashes, full and surprisingly long. The faint lines around his mouth that didnât come from smiling, but from pressing his lips together too tight for too many years. His skin was fair in a way that didnât come from the sun but from time, the kind of pallor that hinted at long shadows and colder places. Places you couldnât name.
His hair had been combed, too. Not just finger-swept like last time, but deliberately styled, though it curled stubborn at the ends like it wanted to fight back. That little gold chain still gleamed at his throat, straighter this time. Not crooked, like you convinced yourself it was.
Still, he hadnât changed enough to fool you.
Not with those eyes.
Ancient, heavy, and out of place in a face that didnât look old enough to carry them. They flicked toward you briefly, then darted back to the book in his lap, as if afraid to hold your gaze too long.
âYou gonna read it?â you asked, tone soft but edged with amusement.
He blinked like heâd forgotten that was the point.
âRight,â he said quickly. âYes ma'am.â
You watched him flip it open with care, thumbs brushing the pages like they might bruise. The moment hung quiet, thick with unsaid things and the scent of paper and dusk. His breath was steady but shallow, as if he were still adjusting to the shape of this closeness.
You didnât move.
You didnât speak.
You just leaned back into the cushions, eyes on him, letting him pretend he was focused on the words.
When both of you knew damn well he wasnât.
It was the way he held the book that told you first. Not the usual adulation you got from the diehards who lived and breathed these novels. No, this was different. His hands didnât cradle it like treasure. They held it like a bomb. Like one wrong shift in pressure might set the whole thing off and scatter the pieces between you.
His thumbs rested too gently on the pages, barely pressing enough to keep them open. Like he was worried his fingerprints might offend the paper. As if the book itself might recognize him as an intruder. He wasnât turning pages so much as he was coaxing them along, seemingly afraid theyâd snap if he asked too much.
He read strangely.
Slow.
Stilted.
Each word passed through his lips like it needed permission. Like it carried weight. His lips parted with the occasional word, mouthed in silence, and then closed again just as quickly, like he hadnât meant to let them slip. There was something priestly about it. Ritualistic. A prayer offered in secret.
His eyes, those impossibly ancient eyes, scanned line after line not with hunger but with hesitation. A wary sort of awe. Like he hadnât held a romance novel in centuries. As if the softness written into the pages was a dialect heâd nearly forgotten how to understand.
And every time you moved, even just a flicker of a shift, a breath caught a second longer than usual, he looked up.
Not startled. Not afraid.
Attentive.
You scratched your cheek, his head lifted.
You smoothed your skirt, his eyes snapped upward.
You uncrossed your legs, then crossed them again, he swallowed, too loudly.
At first, you thought he was just skittish. Just someone not used to sitting this close. But then the rhythm set in.
He matched you.
Without realizing it.
Without even trying.
You leaned back in your seat, slowly. Felt the cushion press against your spine.
A second later, he leaned back. One beat behind you, stiff at first, then settling.
You tilted your head, absently, the way you always did when thinking.
He mirrored it. Not perfectly, but close enough to notice.
You shifted your breathing, let it slow. Long inhale through your nose. Shorter exhale.
So did he.
So precisely that it didnât feel like coincidence.
It felt like mimicry.
Like you were the song, and he was trying to follow along without missing a note.
You frowned slightly, gaze narrowing. Maybe you were imagining it. Maybe you were reading too much into the silence, into the soft rhythm shared between bodies in the same room.
So you changed it.
Inhaled twice quick, then held the third.
Exhaled through pursed lips like you were cooling tea.
He matched it. Exactly. No hesitation. No thought.
Your pulse gave a slow thump. Not fear. Not quite delight.
You did it again, even stranger this time. Shallow breaths, uneven tempo, a stutter at the end.
He copied it like heâd been waiting for instruction.
Not a second too soon, not a second too late.
Not even pretending he wasnât. As if he couldn't fake it if he tried.
It was eerie.
Unnerving.
Youâd had admirers before. Youâd had men try to get close. Men with charm and swagger, who leaned too close too fast, who spoke in low voices like they were offering you a secret. Men who wanted something.
But Remmick didnât want.
He ached.
He ached to stay.
To keep.
To not mess it up.
It wasnât that he feared you.
It was that he feared what being with you might require of him.
He feared being found unworthy.
And something in you, something cold and clever and mean, maybe, was curious enough to let it keep going.
You watched his knuckles flex where they held the spine. Watched his breath stutter when you shifted forward ever so slightly. Watched his gaze flick to your lips before darting away, embarrassed.
There was devotion in the way he sat.
There was hunger too, yes, but buried under layers of control so tight they might as well have been prison bars.
He wasnât scared of you.
He was scared of doing anything that might make you not want him here anymore.
He was scared of disappointing you. Of offending you. Of being sent away.
Like heâd never had the chance to be with a woman like this. Not just someone beautiful, Not just someone sharp, but someone who saw him and hadnât yet told him to go.
Someone who let him sit.
Let him read.
Let him exist.
You leaned back, let your fingers curl loosely around the edges of the cushions. Not looking at him this time. Just listening.
His breathing matched yours again.
You heard it.
Felt it.
Let it echo in your ribcage like a second heartbeat.
He hadnât read more than five pages. Probably hadnât retained a single one. But he was trying. Oh, he was trying.
Trying not to ruin the moment.
Trying not to ruin you.
Trying not to ruin himself.
And you watched it all. Watched him struggle to be small, to be quiet, to be acceptable, and something in your chest twisted. Not out of pity. Not even out of care.
Just fascination.
You wanted to see how far this would go.
How far heâd go.
And more than anything, you wanted to see if he could keep it up.
He hadnât turned a page in three minutes.
You timed it without meaning to. Just sat there, letting your own gaze blur against the shape of his fingers still resting on the edge of the paper, and noted how still theyâd gone. How he stared not at the next sentence, but straight through it. Breathing shallow. Body gone tense in the shoulders, like he was bracing.
Then he blinked. Once. Twice.
âYa always light the window candles,â he said softly, not looking up.
The words were nothing at first. Just air. Noise.
But your stomach still curled.
You didnât respond right away. Didnât move. Just let the silence soak it in.
âEvery night,â he added, quieter now. âRight âround eleven. Even if ya ainât got customers.â
Still, you said nothing.
He turned another page, finally, but you watched his eyes. They didnât scan. They didnât read.
âYou notice that just now?â you asked calmly.
He hesitated.
You leaned forward, hands steepled under your chin. âOrâve you been noticinâ for a while?â
His lips parted. Closed. He looked over at you now. The air between you suddenly sharper.
âI-â he started, then tried to smile. âItâs just⌠somethinâ I seen. Thatâs all.â
You cocked your head. âFrom where?â
He faltered.
âThat little inn down the road donât got a view of this side.â
He tried to laugh, but it came out cracked. âI walk at night. Helps me think.â
âDoes it?â
He nodded too fast. âY-yeah. Sometimes I pass by. Thatâs all.â
You didnât blink. Didnât smile.
âFunny. You said yesterday you just stumbled in here.â
His jaw twitched.
A beat passed. You let it stretch like taffy, long and slow, until it thinned to almost nothing.
âI... did,â he said eventually, voice paper-thin. âDidnât plan to come in that night. But I-I'd seen the place before. So I guess it felt familiar.â
âFamiliar.â
âMhm.â
âYou been watchinâ me?â
His whole frame stiffened. A flicker of shame, or panic, or both, ghosted across his face. But it wasnât the embarrassment of being caught in a lie. It was older than that. Worn. Like being cornered in a truth he thought he could keep buried.
His mouth opened, but no words came out.
You shifted in your seat, leaned in just slightly.
He didnât move away.
âYou been starinâ at my windows from across the street, Remmick?â you asked softly. âThat it?â
He flinched. Not from your tone, which stayed silky smooth, but from the shape of your words. The accuracy of them.
âI ainât mean no harm,â he whispered. âIt werenât⌠like that.â
You gave him a long, thoughtful look. âThen tell me how it was.â
His eyes dropped to his hands. You could see the effort it took not to wring them.
âI just⌠I saw ya. Few nights in a row. Sometimes through the window, sometimes outside closinâ up. Youâd have your book in one hand, your keys in the other. Didnât even know your name. Just-â
His throat moved as he swallowed.
âYa looked steady,â he said. âA place that donât change. Like youâd always be here if I needed to come back.â
That shouldâve sounded sweet.
But it didnât.
It sounded like a confession. A possession waiting to take root.
And for reasons you werenât yet ready to name, you didnât shut it down.
Didnât throw him out.
Didnât call it wrong.
Instead, you asked, poised and deliberate...
âHow long you been watchinâ, Remmick?â
He looked like youâd just asked him to open his ribs and let you see inside.
But you didnât repeat the question.
You didnât need to.
The pause spoke louder than anything he couldâve said.
Then, finally, his lips parted. âFew months.â
Your brow twitched, just slightly. Enough for him to see it.
âI-I ain't mean to,â he said quickly, eyes wide, hands lifted like he was surrendering. âI just- I saw you one night and then⌠it was easy to keep passinâ by.â
You leaned back slow, fingers dragging along the wood between you.
âYou been lurkinâ outside my shop for months?â
His face crumpled like the word hurt. Lurkinâ.
âI wasnât-â He stopped. Started again. âI wasnât tryna frighten you. Werenât like that. I ain't know how to come in. Ain't think I should. Thought maybe if I stayed far enough back, you wouldnât see me.â
âI didnât.â
He winced.
You couldâve pushed. Couldâve watched him stammer his way deeper into the hole heâd already dug with his own too-honest mouth.
But you didnât. Not yet.
You tilted your head, voice softer now. âSo why now?â
His mouth opened. No sound came. Then...
âI got tired of beinâ scared.â
You stilled.
He didnât look up. Just stared at the woodgrain of the table, like it might open up and swallow him if he wished hard enough.
âI been scared so long, I donât know how not to be. But I kept watchinâ, and you kept beinâ here. Kept leavinâ that light on. And I thought⌠maybe that meant somethinâ.â
He finally looked at you.
And the way he looked at you, like you were the last fire in a dead city, made your breath catch.
He wasnât lying.
And that was the strangest part.
You were used to men who talked. Who wrapped their hunger in charm, or cleverness, or teeth. But Remmick⌠he was bare. He didnât even try to be anything else.
âYou think I leave that light on for you?â
âNo.â He shook his head, fast. âI- no. I ain't mean that. Just that⌠I hoped it meant I was allowed to come in.â
That did something to your chest you didnât expect.
And suddenly, you didnât want him to look at the table.
You wanted him to keep looking at you.
Only at you.
You leaned forward again, chin resting in your palm. âWell. Youâre in now.â
He blinked. Almost like he didnât believe it.
âDonât mess it up,â you added, slow and sweet.
And Lord help you, he nodded like it was a commandment.
You watched his eyes. Watched how they clung to you like a lifeline, like the mere sight of your face was the only thing anchoring him to the moment. You could see it, plain as anything. The panic winding tighter beneath his skin, the quiet horror that heâd said too much. And maybe he had. Maybe he hadnât said enough.
And then you smiled.
Not warm. Not cruel. Just knowing.
âWell,â you said, slow as molasses, âthat still makes you a liar, donât it?â
His shoulders tensed.
âI ainât-â
You raised a hand.
He stopped.
âWatchinâ me for months and pretendin' you just stumbled in? Thatâs dishonesty, Remmick.â
His mouth opened again, then shut.
He looked like he wanted to explain. Wanted to pour out the right words, dig his way out of the pit heâd slipped into. But the silence between you left no room for excuses. And you didnât fill it for him. You just stood, smooth and sure, brushing imaginary dust from your skirt like you were done with the whole performance.
The way his breath hitchedâŚ
You almost felt bad.
Almost.
His voice cracked, desperate before he could tuck it down. âI ain't mean no harm. I swear it.â
You walked to the door.
Unlatched it.
The bell above gave a soft jingle as you pushed it wide, letting the warm night air curl inside like smoke. The light spilled out into the dark, carving a golden archway he didnât dare cross.
âYou can go now.â
He flinched like youâd slapped him.
âI- what?â He stood too fast, nearly knocked himself over. âI ain't mean nothinâ bad. I just- donât send me off like that. Please.â
You turned, hand still on the doorknob, gaze calm.
His breath was coming faster now, eyes darting like he was trying to find the version of you that wouldnât be doing this. âIâll sit quiet, wonât say a word. You wonât even know Iâm here. Just donât make me go.â
He took a step forward.
You didnât move.
âPlease,â he said again, voice ragged now. âPlease donât make me leave you.â
Leave you.
Not the shop. You.
And wasnât that just the most pathetic thing youâd ever heard.
You tilted your head, quiet.
âI said you could go,â you repeated, soft this time.
That made him stumble.
But not back.
Forward.
Toward you.
But not close enough to touch.
Just close enough to be seen.
And you let him sit in it. That want. That begging.
The humiliation of it.
You could see how tightly his hands were balled at his sides. How his throat bobbed with every failed swallow. How badly he wanted to collapse to his knees and sob at your feet.
âYou can come back tomorrow,â you said lightly. âIf you behave.â
He swallowed so hard you heard it. Loud in the hush of the room.
Then he nodded.
Not like a man, but like a child handed a punishment he knew he deserved.
He didnât say anything at first.
Didnât move.
You gave him time.
Let him make the choice.
And when he did, it was with slow, aching reluctance. Every step backward like a string snapping off of him one by one.
âEveninâ, Remmick,â you said, voice sugar-sweet now, hand still resting on the open door.
He stood there a moment longer. Still. Wrung out.
Then, quietly: âGânight, maâam.â
You didnât answer.
You just watched him go.
Watched the dark swallow him.
And made no move to close the door until long after his shadow disappeared.
You knew heâd come back.
There was no need to check the sign. No reason to glance toward the door, or listen for the bell. You didnât need to do anything at all. The air had already shifted, thickened with the weight of what was inevitable.
You were curled into your chair like youâd been there all night, though you hadnât been able to concentrate for more than five minutes at a time. You told yourself it was the book. It was always the book. But your eyes traced the same paragraph for the third time, and your fingers tightened just slightly at the edges of the page.
Still, you didnât look up.
You wouldnât.
The clock ticked. Somewhere, a train whistled. The candlelight wavered once, then stilled.
And then you heard it.
The bell.
Soft. Perfect. Like a cue whispered by the world itself. The clock chimed midnight.
You didnât lift your gaze, but you heard him. Felt him. The uneven shuffle of his steps. The small hitch in his breath.
He was back.
You turned the page.
The scent hit you first. Not bad. Just weary. Tired. Like sleep had refused him all night, and heâd wandered instead. Rain-damp clothes. Paper. Something earthy, mineral-like, maybe even metallic. Like he hadnât meant to be anywhere but had found himself out in the wild with only his thoughts for warmth.
He didnât speak at first. Didnât dare.
The sound of the door shut behind him.
âI been good,â he blurted out.
Your lips twitched before you could stop them.
Still, your eyes didnât leave the book.
âReal good,â he continued, voice cracking slightly with the rush of words. âAinât even come near the shop. Walked past it, but that donât count. Thatâs just the sidewalk, right? Just pavement. I didnât linger. Ainât even look in the window. Well, I peeked, but only âcause I missed the smell of it. Missed you.â
That earned a slow blink from you.
He stepped further inside. His boots dragged slightly on the floor like they were too heavy to lift. Like his shame lived in his heels.
âI sat still all morning,â he said. âDidnât wander, didnât do nothinâ. I thought âbout what you said. Over and over. Thought about why it was wrong. What I did. Even wrote it out. I did. Wrote it out.â
You closed the book softly.
Still, you didnât rise.
Remmick stood in front of you now.
And good Lord, he looked a mess.
His shirt was wrinkled at the collar, sleeves rolled and uneven. His hair had a wild, raked-through look like heâd been dragging his fingers through it for hours. The shadow beneath his eyes was sharp, and the line of his jaw was clenched in barely-held desperation. Not even his chain looked presentable. He didnât smell unclean, but there was a wildness to him now. Like if you stood too close, youâd hear the hum of his blood vibrating beneath his skin, frantic and restless.
âI didnât lie, not really,â he said. âJust⌠held it. In. âCause I didnât wanna scare you off. Ainât had someone like you before. Not in a long time. Maybe not ever.â
His accent pulled at the words, thinner now, stretched tight with pleading. That strange, syrupy Southern lilt gave way to something raw beneath. Sharper, guttural, not quite human in the way it frayed at the ends. It slipped, like his mask was crumbling, revealing a voice that hadnât begged in centuries. Not just a borrowed twang anymore, but a whisper of whatever place had taught him that hunger in the first place.
You finally looked up.
He froze.
Then, slowly, like the world trembled beneath him, he knelt.
He didnât say another word. Just lowered himself to the floor like it was natural. Like the hardwood was the only place he deserved to be.
Your legs were crossed, the hem of your skirt brushing his boots. He didnât touch you, not yet. Just sat with his hands in his lap, chest rising and falling in quick, shallow breaths.
You studied him.
He tried not to move under your gaze. Failed.
You tilted your head slightly.
He flinched.
âI ainât sleep,â he admitted. âCouldnât. Just kept seeinâ your face. Thinkinâ of how soft your hands were. How still your voice is. Youâre not like other folk. You look right through me, and it-â
He broke off, jaw flexing.
âI want to do right,â he said, softer. âTell me how. Please. Iâll listen. Iâm yours.â
You leaned forward.
He didnât dare meet your eyes, not at first. Not until your fingers brushed the side of his face.
His head snapped up slightly.
You cradled his cheek in your palm, watching as he leaned into the touch. Like the heat of your skin might be the first kindness heâd felt in years.
He was trembling.
Not from fear.
From want.
His eyes closed, lashes fluttering like moth wings. You stroked your thumb along his cheekbone. Cooler than expected, but not cold. Never cold. Not with you.
His hands rose without thinking, resting on your legs. Then his shoulders followed, and soon, most of his weight was against you, folding like a supplicant at an altar.
You didnât stop him.
Didnât move.
Let him rest there.
Let him need.
Because thatâs what this was. Not desire, not lust.
Need.
He was breathing in sync with you again, like your rhythm had become his only truth.
You didnât speak.
You didnât need to.
His mouth moved against your knee.
Not in a kiss.
Not yet.
Just a whisper.
A plea.
You cupped the other side of his face, anchoring him.
He let out a sound. Quiet, fractured, grateful.
And stayed right there.
The weight of him on your legs wasnât light. But it wasnât heavy, either. It felt like gravity doing what it was always meant to. Like he had been built to collapse right here, in the hollows of your thighs, the shape of him fitted to the shape of your waiting.
You ran your thumb along the corner of his mouth, picking up a string of saliva along the way. Drool, thick and abundant. His lips parted. A breath spilled out.
He didnât dare look up.
So you said it.
âKiss me.â
Not a whisper.
Not a barked command.
It landed like a fact. Like dusk falling, like snow melting into earth. A truth that didnât ask to be believed. It just was.
He didnât move at first. Didnât blink. Didnât even breathe.
He lifted his head like a man surfacing from deep water. His eyes, those beautiful, imperiled, bloodshot eyes, searched your face for any sign that you might take it back. That it might be a test.
It wasnât.
You didnât flinch.
And that was all it took.
He surged forward, and his mouth met yours with a force that stole the breath from your lungs.
It wasnât careful. It wasnât sweet. It wasnât the kind of kiss you read about in the first chapter of a romance novel. It was the kind that belonged in the final act. The kind that felt like something was ending just as something else began.
His hands fumbled for your waist, your back, your shoulders. Any part of you he could grab to prove you were real. He held you like he was scared youâd vanish between blinks. Like you were smoke and heâd never had lungs strong enough to keep you in.
He moaned into your mouth. Low and wounded and starved. Not loud. Not filthy.
Desperate.
And grateful.
Like this was more than he thought heâd ever be allowed to have.
You clutched the fabric of his shirt, fingers curling tight in the rumpled linen, and he gasped against your lips like the pressure burned. He kissed like someone who hadnât touched another soul in a hundred years. Thousands, maybe. Not properly. Not intimately.
Like every part of this might be the last.
He pulled you closer, though there was nowhere left to pull. His teeth caught against your bottom lip, breaking skin. Not intentional. Just too much, too fast, too hungry.
He pulled back immediately, breath hitching in horror.
âIâm-â he started, but your hand curled in his collar and you kissed him again, harder this time, and it unraveled something in him so completely that he made a noise against your mouth, something guttural and ruined.
Your hand tangled in his hair.
His arms caged you in, trembling with restraint, with fervor, with some old broken thing inside him that was only now waking up.
You pulled back just enough to breathe. His mouth chased yours, like instinct, like starvation.
He was panting.
You were panting.
And his forehead dropped to yours.
âI didnât mean to-â he started again, but you shook your head. Barely a gesture.
He was still gripping your waist like the floor was about to give out.
He pressed his lips to your cheek. Then your jaw. Then your mouth again. Softer now, but still with the same unbearable urgency.
âI dreamt of this,â he whispered, voice all but crumbling. âEvery night. Since I saw ya.â
You believed him.
How could you not?
He kissed like this moment was the dream. And he was scared of waking.
His breath shuddered against your cheek as he pulled back, just enough to look at you. His eyes were wide, dark, feral. Stripped down to the fundamentals of human existence.
âPlease,â he begged. âI need to- can I-â
His hands were already moving, slow and reverent, like he was scared you'd vanish beneath his touch. They skimmed the sides of your waist, your ribs, the curve of your spine. Like he was learning you through touch alone.
He swallowed hard, throat working. âI wanna see ya. All of ya. Been dreaminâ âbout it. Wakinâ up in a sweat, reaching for something that ainât there.â
His fingers found the hem of your shirt, toying with it. Not lifting. Not yet.
âPlease,â he said again, softer. âLemme see ya. Lemme-â
He cut off with a sharp inhale, like the words hurt coming out. Like they'd been buried in some deep, untouchable place inside him.
âI won't touch,â he sounded so earnest. So wrecked. âNot âless you want me to. But I swear, if you lemme, I'll worship every inch. I'll-â
He broke off again, jaw flexing. His eyes were pleading, desperate, broken.
âI'll do anything,â he breathed. âJust... please. Lemme look at ya.â
Your heart was beating too hard, too fast. Like it was trying to reach for him through your ribs.
âYes,â you whispered. âYou can look.â
And that was all it took. The floodgates opened. He surged forward, hands suddenly urgent, suddenly everywhere. He was mapping your skin like it was the only geography he'd ever need. Like you were the only country left to explore.
He peeled off your shirt, slow and cautious, like he expected you to change your mind. Like he expected you to pull the rug from under his feet, again.
But he didn't linger. Didn't stop. Shaking but determined, tugging at fabric, pulling at buttons, dragging clothing aside until there was nothing left between his gaze and your skin.
And then he just froze. Stared. Took you in like a dying man taking his last breath.
âGod,â he whispered, voice sapped. âYou're...â
He didn't finish the thought. Couldn't. Just looked at you like you were the answer to a question he'd been asking all his life. The beginning and end of every prayer he'd ever whispered.
And you smiled, being looked at like that. Like a God. A deity that commanded his unwavering, exclusive devotion. And like any God, you demanded more.
âUndress for me,â you said softly.
It wasn't a question.
His breath shuddered out unevenly, and he nodded. Not a hesitation in sight.
He stood slowly, like his body was weighed down by the gravity of what was happening. Like he could feel the significance of this moment in every bone.
His hands went to the buttons of his shirt first, trembling just slightly. He fumbled once, twice, then let out a soft, frustrated noise and just tore the fabric open. Buttons scattered.
You didn't flinch.
He shrugged the ruined shirt off his shoulders, letting it fall to the floor. His undershirt followed, tugged over his head in one fluid motion.
And then he just stood there, chest bare, skin seeming to tighten under your gaze. Like your eyes were a physical touch.
His boots were next, kicked off with barely a thought. Then he went to his belt.
He paused for just a second, looking to you for confirmation.
You nodded.
He exhaled shakily and fumbled with the buckle. It came undone easily, the leather sliding out of the loops with a soft hiss.
He toed off his socks, then shoved his pants and underwear down in one motion, kicking them aside.
And then he was bare. Completely. Not just in body. In everything.
He stood before you, chest heaving.
His cock was hard, achingly so. Thick veins wound up the shaft, pulsing with each shudder of his heart. The head was swollen and pink. Glistening. A bead of precum pooled at the tip before spilling over, tracing a slow path down his length. He twitched, but made no move to touch himself. As if he didn't consider it a possibility until you allowed him to.
And you wouldn't. You had him exactly how you wanted him.
Slowly, he lowered himself back to his knees, hands resting lightly on your thighs, his touch gentle yet possessive. He looked up at you, his eyes laced with desire and something more profound. Veneration is the word that came to your mind.
âPlease,â he pressed, as if trying to convince himself that he deserved it more than convincing you to relent. âLemme taste ya. Just a taste. I swear I'll make it good for ya.â
His lips brushed against your thigh. A soft, tentative kiss that sent shivers down your spine. He lingered there, his breath hot against your skin. He squeezed your thighs gently, urging them to part.
You could feel his desperation, his need for your permission. He was squirming, his body aching for more, but he held back, waiting for your consent.
âPlease,â he begged again, sounding tortured. âNeed to taste ya. Need to feel ya on my tongue. Need to-â
You cut him off with a nod, a small smile playing on your lips. âYes. You can taste me.â
The words were barely out of your mouth before he was moving, hands urgent and eager as he pushed your thighs apart, his body leaning in, his mouth already seeking your core.
He started at your knees, kissing his way up your inner thighs, his lips soft but his touch urgent. He was a man possessed. Gripping your thighs. Worshipping your skin. You could feel his hunger, his need, his desperation to please you.
When he reached the apex of your thighs, he paused for a moment, his breath hot against your most intimate place. Then, with a slow, deliberate lick, he tasted you. His tongue slid through your folds, a long, slow lick that made you gasp, your back arching off the surface beneath you.
And then he dove in, his hunger relentless. His tongue explored every inch of you, hands gripping your hips, holding you in place as he feasted. He sucked and licked and nibbled, his movements desperate and urgent, like a man starved and finally given a meal.
His groans of pleasure vibrated against your sensitive flesh, sending waves of sensation through your body. You could feel his enjoyment, his pleasure in pleasing you, and it only served to heighten your own.
He looked up at you, his eyes dark and feral, mouth glistening with your wetness. âYa taste like heaven,â he growled against your skin. âEven better than my fuckin' dreams.â
And with that, he redoubled his efforts, his tongue delving deeper, his sucks more insistent, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you to him as he devoured you.
Remmick didn't slow, didn't pause, didn't come up for air. His tongue was a relentless force, moving from your folds to your clit and back again at a breakneck pace. Each flick, each suck, each lick was a testament to his insatiable hunger for you.
You could feel the tension building in your body, a coiled spring ready to snap. Your hips bucked against his mouth, meeting his movements with your own desperate rhythm. Your hands found his hair, gripping tightly, holding him to you as if he might try to escape the torrent of pleasure he was creating.
His groans vibrated against your sensitive flesh, sending shockwaves of sensation through your body. He was as lost in this as you were, his actions fueled by a primal need to satisfy, to please, to devour.
âRemmick,â you gasped, pleading. âDon't stop. Please, don't stop.â
As if to answer, his tongue moved faster, his sucks more insistent. He pulled your hips tighter against his mouth, gripping your waist, holding you to him as he feasted.
You could feel yourself falling apart, your body tightening, your breath coming in short, sharp gasps. The world around you narrowed to the point of his tongue, the suck of his mouth, the grip of fingers
And then, with a cry that tore from your throat, you shattered. Your orgasm crashed over you, a wave of pleasure so intense it was almost painful. Your body convulsed, your hips bucking wildly against his mouth as he rode out the storm with you, his tongue never ceasing its relentless assault.
But Remmick didn't stop. Even as your body began to relax, he continued, his pace slowing but his hunger undiminished. You were overwhelmed, your nerves on fire, every touch sending jolts of pleasure coursing through your body. The sensation was almost too much to bear, your skin hypersensitive, your mind a blur of ecstasy. He looked up at you, his eyes wild, mouth soaked, a sinful smile giving you another look at his predatory canines.
âAgain,â he was near unintelligible, now. âI wanna feel ya come again.â
âNo,â you whispered, hoarse from your cries of pleasure. âRemmick, no more.â
He froze, his body tensing, his eyes widening in alarm. The fog of lust cleared from his eyes. Replaced by a look of concern and uncertainty. âDid I hurt ya? Did I do somethinâ wrong?â That tone of genuine, unabashed fear returned. As if he was standing in front of that open door again, begging you not to send him away.
You smiled gingerly, your hand still cupping his cheek. âYou were perfect, Remmick,â you assured him, gentle yet firm. âNow, I want you to move to the reading nook. I want to see you there.â
He nodded immediately, a mix of relief and eagerness in his eyes. He stood up hastily, his body still glowing with a sheen of sweat and desire. But before you could even think about moving, he was there, offering his hand to help you up. You took it, appreciating the strength and support he provided as you stood on legs that felt like liquid.
He didn't just lead you to the nook. He made sure you were steady on your feet the entire way. His arm wrapped around your waist, holding you close as he guided you to the cozy corner by the window. The nook where he read to you. Mimicked you. Begged you.
His body was still tense with anticipation, his breath slowly returning to normal. You could see the mix of emotions in his gaze. Desire, fear, hope. Something deeper, too.
âRemmick,â you said softly, your voice a soothing balm to his frayed nerves. âI'm not goin' anywhere. Not tonight.â
He let out a shaky breath, a deeply insecure smile playing on his lips. âI wanna make sure you're happy. That I'm doin' this right.â
You leaned in, pressing a soft kiss to his lips. âYou are. Now, just relax and enjoy this. Enjoy us.â
He nodded, a small, content smile playing on his lips as he leaned back, though not fully. You followed, straddling his hips as you positioned yourself above him.
âLay down,â you commanded softly, and he complied without hesitation, his body molding to the contours of the nook as he stretched out beneath you. Those prismarine eyes bore into you, filled with nothing but adoration.
You could feel the length of him, hard and ready, pressing against your entrance. You took a moment to admire the sight of him, his chest heaving with each ragged breath, his muscles taut and defined.
âHold my hips,â you instructed, and his large hands immediately gripped your waist, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you with a possessive, desperate strength.
You began to lower yourself onto him, inch by slow, agonizing inch. You could feel every vein, every ridge, as he filled you completely. His eyes rolled back, a guttural, incoherent moan escaping his lips, a sound so primal and raw it sent shivers down your spine.
You bottomed out, your body flush against his, your breasts pressing into his chest. He let out a shaky breath, body trembling beneath you. âPlease, move, please,â he begged, hoarse with need. âI need to feel you move.â
You smiled, a slow, sensual curve of your lips, and began to ride him. You started slow, a gentle rocking of your hips, feeling him slide in and out of you, the friction building with each movement. But it wasn't enough. Not for either of you.
You picked up the pace, your hips slamming down onto his, taking him deeper, harder, faster. Each impact sent a jolt of pleasure through your body, your nerves alight with sensation. You could feel his hands on your hips, guiding you, urging you on. His fingers digging into your flesh, leaving marks that would fade but never be forgotten.
He chanted in an old language you weren't familiar with, likely the mother tongue of the faraway place you guessed he came from. His head thrashed from side to side, eyes squeezed shut,
You leaned down, your lips capturing his in a fierce, hungry kiss, your tongues dueling as your bodies moved in sync. You could taste his desperation, his need, his sheer, unadulterated ecstasy. You pulled back, looking down at him, his face a portrait of pure bliss and agony.
âOpen your mouth,â you commanded, and he complied without question, his lips parting, tongue resting heavily in his mouth. You spit, a slow, deliberate stream of saliva that dribbled down his tongue, pooling at the back of his throat. He swallowed reflexively, his Adam's apple bobbing, his eyes never leaving yours.
You could feel his body coiling tight, his muscles tensing, his breath hitching. You changed the angle, your body leaning back slightly, giving him a new depth to explore. He let out a low, guttural groan, his body quaking beneath you as he found his release, his hot seed spilling into you, filling you completely.
But you didn't stop. You kept moving, your hips slamming down onto his, riding out his orgasm, drawing it out, milking every last drop of pleasure from his body. His cries turned to whimpers, body shaking and trembling beneath you, hands gripping your hips with a desperate, almost painful strength.
And then, the tears came. Silent, shuddering sobs that wracked his body, tears streaming down his temples, disappearing into his hair. You leaned down, your lips pressing soft, gentle kisses to his cheeks, tasting the salt of his tears.
âShh, it's okay,â you cooed, almost taunting. âLet it out, baby. I've got you.â
He looked up at you, his eyes filled with unshed tears, body still shaking with sobs. âYou're so f-fuckin' beautiful,â he managed to choke out, completely spent. âSo fuckin' p-perfect. I can't⌠I can't evenâŚâ
You smiled, merely shushing his whines. You had never seen anything so beautiful, so raw, so real.
You could feel your own orgasm building, nerves on fire as your muscles instinctively clenched. You changed the pace again, your hips moving in a slow, deliberate grind, feeling every inch of him, the way he filled you, the way he completed you.
âI'm close, Remmick,â you gasped, raggedly so. A far cry from the steely demeanor you always carried.
He looked up at you, his eyes wide and intense, body still trembling with exertion. âI know, darlinâ. I-I can feel it. You're somethinâ else when you're like this,â
His hands gripped your hips tighter, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you to him as you moved, as you chased your release. He was still hard, still pulsing inside you, but you could feel the tension, the strain, the sheer effort it was taking for him to hold on. To be there for you in this moment.
âYou're doinâ so good,â he encouraged. âJust let it go. I'm right here with you. Ain't goinâ nowhere.â
And with that, you shattered. Your orgasm crashed over you, body trembling, hips bucking, nails digging into his chest. He let out a low, guttural cry. A sound of pure, selfless pleasure. His body tensed as he rode out your orgasm with you, hips moving in sync with yours, giving you everything he had left to give.
The world outside the window was still black.
Not the kind of black that came with sleep or stillness, but that deep, oceanic kind that pressed against the glass like it might swallow the shop whole. A cold wind tapped once, then again, against the panes, but the sound was too soft to pull your focus. The only thing you could hear was Remmickâs breathing. Still ragged, still uneven, like he hadnât quite landed back in his body yet.
Your own chest was rising slower now.
The adrenaline had drained out of your limbs, leaving only warmth behind. Thick and heavy and strange. The cushions beneath you were slightly askew, the throw blanket hanging off one edge like it had tried and failed to cover something uncontainable. The air still smelled like him.
You werenât sure you could breathe without pulling him deeper into your lungs.
Your hand rested low on his abdomen, where the tremors hadnât stopped yet. He was flushed, head tilted back, mouth parted slightly as if waiting for something. Maybe breath, maybe words. The slick between you had cooled slightly in the open air, but neither of you moved.
The moment didnât ask for motion.
Outside, the wind howled once. Higher this time, almost mournful. But no lights flickered. No car passed. No one knocked.
You were still alone.
Still unseen.
Still safe.
There was a thrill in that. Not just privacy, but secrecy. The knowledge that the two of you had made something here, something raw and holy and utterly indecent in a world that would never, ever be able to comprehend it. No one would guess. No one would imagine it.
You leaned forward slowly.
His eyes fluttered open. Glazed, desperate. Still begging, but quieter now. Not for forgiveness. Just for the chance to stay.
You kissed him.
Gently, firmly, like sealing a letter before sending it somewhere far away. He melted into it. Helpless again, the way he always was with you. And you tasted the salt at the edge of his mouth, not knowing if it was his tears or your sweat, and not caring either way.
When you pulled back, he followed instinctively, chasing the kiss without knowing he was doing it.
His breath hitched.
âIâŚâ he started, but couldnât finish.
You rested your forehead against his.
He let out something between a sigh and a sob.
âI wanna be better,â he whispered.
âI know.â
âI wanna deserve this.â
âYou donât.â
He froze. Just for a moment. Then his throat worked, and his whole body shuddered.
But you werenât cruel about it.
You reached up, brushed your fingers through his hair, and let your voice drop to a hush. âYou donât need to earn me, Remmick. Thatâs not how this works.â
He blinked at you like that didnât make sense.
But he didnât argue.
Didnât say another word.
You let him stay there. Small and grateful and unraveling against you. One hand resting at your hip, the other fisted weakly in the blanket like he might drift off if he didnât anchor himself to something.
You stared past him, at the darkness beyond the window.
There was no morning yet. No birdsong. No hint of light. The world hadnât returned.
And you liked it that way.
His breathing was steadier now. Shallower. Slower.
His lips moved once, not quite forming a word. He was trying to stay awake. You could tell. Trying not to miss anything.
âHey,â you said softly, pulling his attention back.
His eyes opened again.
You traced a slow line across his jaw, following the path of stubble like it meant something. He watched you like it did.
Then, finally, you said your name.
Quiet.
Careful.
Deliberate.
Just that.
Just your name.
His eyes went wide, and then impossibly soft. His mouth parted in disbelief.
Youâd never told him before.
You werenât sure why. It had always seemed too personal, too final. Like once he had it, heâd have a piece of you no one else did. But now that youâd said it, now that it was in the air between you.
You didnât regret it.
He mouthed it back to you.
Once. Twice.
Then again, this time with sound. Reverent. Fragile. Yours.
You smiled.
Not the kind you gave to strangers or ghosts.
The real one.
And in that tiny, echoing silence, while the window fogged from the heat of your bodies, and the shadows stayed long and untouched, and the world outside forgot to turn, Remmick finally let himself exhale. Finally let himself rest.
You held him through it.
And didnât let go.
#remmick#sinners movie#remmick sinners#sinners 2025#remmick x you#remmick x reader#smut#jack o'connell#remmick smut#remmick x black!reader#black!reader#black!fem!reader#sinners#lock me up and throw away the key#gnawing at the bars of my enclosure#here she comes world please be kind to her#do you think god stays in heaven because he too lives in fear of what he created#1k!!!!!
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They canât enjoy anything
#good i donât want them trying to appropriate cool mecha girls#sheâs clearly kei dirty pair and noa patlabor inspired#and appleseed of course
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Nice block âď¸
#haikyuu#haikyuu!!#hinata natsu#tsukishima kei#she's actually asking to be carried but he likes to joke around first#those cosplayers made my day#kwad draws
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#âđ â ° âš â§#jiraiblr#jiraiblogging#jirai kei#ghostyâs rambles ..#ghosty is going insane#aaaaa#pien kei#menhera#sheâs just like me fr#god help me#i hate everything#:3#love angel syndrome#needy streamer overload#class of 09#ddlc#kin list#menhera chan
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#sfw#kawaii#artist on tumblr#cute#lpsblr#littlest pet shop#lps#persian cat#catblr#catcore#glittercore#glitter graphics#spacehey#silly!!!#shes so silly#shes so cute#SHES SO ME#the silly :3#kidcore#kidwave#toycore#2000s nostalgia#nostalgiacore#kawaiicore#kawaii kei#cutecore#silly cat#yippee!!!#silly goober#happycore
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Orochis! đŽ I'm replaying fe:if hoshido route and love this glass canon
#fire emblem#fire emblem fates#orochi fire emblem#fe14#artists on tumblr#fanart#video game art#myart#low key proud bc these were just doodles but rly think i made it look like shes erving c*** in the first one
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i havent drawn this little lady in forever
not my finalized design for her by any means, i would've liked to push it to be more inhuman and weird
#scp#scp foundation#meri#scp 166#meri wojciechowski#fan art#fanart#digital art#digital drawing#digital illustration#digital painting#art#artists on tumblr#scp fanart#mori kei#i tried to incoporate some art nouveau and alphonse mucha inspirations#i think it got lost somewhere along the way though#designed her after a whitetail deer before i actually reread her profile and realized shes meant to be a reindeer#but both shed velvet i believe#blood -
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