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#macbeth fic
merciless-macdonwald · 5 months
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art based off of the fic "it will get better in the spring" by hollyus!! this fic lives in my head rent free it's so good. the characterisation and interactions are everything. I'm even more normal about Cawdor & Macdonwald after reading this (lying)
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branmer · 3 months
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narn fashion is so iconic
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"Why are you reading Shakespeare fanfic"
Maybe i'm just sad ok. Maybe i like the idea of Othello not having to deal with Iago's shit. Maybe i like watching Hamlet be a college student. Maybe i like Romeo dying painfully while Juliet lives happily. Maybe i like the idea of Lady Macbeth fucking me. Let me live.
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ingravinoveritas · 3 months
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It has just been brought to my attention--and why I have never seen this mentioned anywhere else before now, I cannot possibly fathom--that David actually takes his shirt off during this production of Macbeth. Specifically, this moment:
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As we know, Michael attended a performance of Macbeth in December, on press night. Which means Michael saw that moment happen. From the second row. And was likely staring at David without a shirt on. Which suddenly gives entirely new dimension to Michael and David making eye contact with each other at the end of the show:
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Do I think this was the first time Michael saw David shirtless? No (especially not if we take them filming two seasons of GO together into account). Do I think Michael outwardly* displayed anything other than complete respect and admiration for David's artistry and performance? Also no. Do I think that there are potentially a massive number of implications for Michael and David looking at each other like that right after Michael has just seen David shirtless on stage? Fucking hell, I don't know how there could not be.
Because the idea of Michael staring at David shirtless in a theatre full of people--unabashedly, unreservedly--is somehow quiet and incredibly brazen at the same time. The very epitome of "saying a lot by saying very little," which is a tag I have used for both Michael and David on multiple occasions. And David looking right back at him conveys just as much meaning, as if to say he knows he has to bare his flesh to audiences night after night, but Michael is the only person in that room to whom he can bare his soul. The person David has been vulnerable with in a way he hasn't with anyone else.
It's truly remarkable to contemplate. To think that the biggest, loudest statement Michael and David could make was done without saying a word. And that we all had the chance to see it thanks to one beautiful, timeless photograph...
(*Note: This does not mean Michael wasn't making loud AWOOGA noises on the inside, because he totally was...) **UPDATE: I have just been made aware that David is not actually fully shirtless in the play, but has a vest on underneath the shirt seen in the above photo. Apologies for inadvertently spreading any misinformation. But at least we can be satisfied knowing Michael has likely seen David shirtless in other contexts...
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Under The Sun (Thsc Fic)
I've been wanting to write something for my dear Oc, Choc but I never got the chance to until now. Here I wanted to expand on him as a character while exploring his relationships. This one-shot revolved his interactions with Mr. Macbeth. Hope everyone enjoys reading this. It came out better than I thought.
Combat boots hit the dirt ground with a thud and the heat waves of a summer day sends him to a slight stumble. 
“Careful there, big guy” Soon in his tired haze stricken with a mild case of a heatstroke, he hears a chipper voice lull him out. “You don't want to trip over your two left feet and get a face full of the dirt below, would you?” 
Macbeth switches his drowsy attention from straight ahead over to the source. Naturally loud, booming and smooth. Sure knows how to captivate someone in one shameless easy going swoop. Intensely scolding heat rises in his broad chest up to his face with his ears getting the brunt of it, turning a bright scarlet red. He coughs in his hand then uses it after to brush aside the beads of collected sweat from his bare head. 
“It'll be very embarrassing for you, won't it?” 
It would indeed be quite the harsh fall. As the ground below was a good foot distance from where he stood on the train and it's made out from rough dirt and jagged rocks. All it would take is one single awkward misstep on those steep metal stairs to ensure Macbeth let the earth swallow him up. 
Alone he handled it well as he went to dust off the grime, ignoring the blistering pain that surfaced around his likely scratched face and trudge along as if it's nothing. However that wasn't the case here and now. If it happened in front of another soul, anyone else, he likely would be a little flustered, yes on the matter as he aggressively swore them to secrecy. 
This he couldn't hide from. Not so easily. The other man at his side was built differently, he is eagle eyed and observant. Ready to pick on the details and tear them apart. 
“Need to hold my hand to steady yourself for a sec?” He's reluctant. A hand, bandaged, is held out to him waiting for his response. Eyes flicker between the hand to the ground then back, trailing up the arm. Once the bandages stop at the elbow he notices the bare skin is a distinct charcoal color with the faint veins a light gold color. It wasn't any of his business to begin with but Macbeth had been worried about that fact with his oldest friend. The thin material protected him from serious damage, and he should know however there came the underlying fear it won't be enough. He wasn't the only one in the clan who shared a similar intuition when it came to that fact despite the man generally being a goofy guy nobody can sincerely hate. 
Why would they?
“I'm all set here” Respectfully he kept his drooping gaze set firmly to the ground, afraid it may trail further to somewhere he couldn't explain. “Thank you though”  
“Ain't going to kill you” 
Where the hand pulls away, Macbeth drags a stilted breath. Awkward tension could be cut down by a dull knife. The hand returns again with a vengeance, grabs onto his wrist to the point it begins to hurt. Yet he didn't make an attempt in tugging free. 
“Look at me” It orders him, firm, no room for an argument. Although it wasn't like Macbeth would've won anyways. He listens, steadies his slumped posture and looks up. “Good boy. I hope you do know I'm looking out for you as a friend” The unintentional pet name spoken in a whisper doesn't go unnoticed by him. Warmth uncomfortably settled in his gut. 
What he sees staring back at him does him no favors. Golden eyes with hints of vibrant orange and reds swirling together are locked onto his dull gray. As if staring at the blazing sun up in the sky up close and personal that left Macbeth in awe, he couldn't look away from. Until it burns a gaping hole into his soul. 
“I know, Choc. I know” 
A part of him nuzzled deep in his own psyche suddenly feels very inadequate compared to his friend. Where he wasn't anything special to look twice at, really, described to be dull, too rashly hot headed acting before thought and he wasn't necessarily good with either his words or feelings. Classic socially inept, cold shut in. 
Then came along Choc, a social butterfly able to light up the mood who back in the day was considered conventionally attractive, had people draping off his every word. Still was in Macbeth's eyes, only in a different way, even when long years amongst fraught sickness clearly wore down his friend. As he can look past the plentiful amount of gruesome scars on the man, across his sun kissed face, past his gold row of sharp teeth, and his unnatural skinny body, it just adds on to ruggish charm. Macbeth then scanned him from head to toe, at one time there were firm muscles laid ever so nicely on the man that had melted away to skin and bones over the years. 
“Then you should know better, right?” Choc responds in an even tone and Macbeth feels worse. He isn't intending to worry him. This isn't what he meant to do. 
“Don't need you guilting me, I know” 
“I'm not. You of all people should know that. As your closest friend. I can worry” 
Today was a stressful day as it is, being the train conductor holding both all the Toppats’ most prized possessions and the majority of their members. It was his assigned priority to travel back and forth from one port to another for the clan. So he's built to stay set on a tight schedule that he held high expectations and standards which he's behind on. However he is thankful they got to one small port despite the delay in a reasonable time frame. So he doesn't need this right now. 
Really, didn't need it as Choc's hands cupped his tentatively in utmost care and led the way. 
“Don't get time in the world for this, y’know that right?” Half-heartedly Macbeth pleads, from his free hand, fingers pinch the bridge of his flat nose, his gruff voice gains an octave then he dryly swallows. 
A chuckle bursts out of Choc, shrugging, with a twinkle in his eyes, walking a few feet from the train through a path of bushes, “Dontcha worry. I do think we can squeeze in a couple minutes and relax, yes?” Choc lazily went to suggest though they knew it wasn't a choice, more an order. 
“The others won't like it. The chief surely won't” 
“They'll survive,” Choc scoffs, a hint of hidden agitation seeps in. “Maybe not the chief in his haughtiness with that gloriously pretentious stick shoved so far up his ass”  
“Choc” 
Soon the man in question stops in his tracks in front two trees, looking behind his shoulder at Macbeth, an unreadable expression on his face until he softens and discreetly rolls his eyes. “It's true, isn't it? Someone's gonna get real tired of it soon and do something about that”
Nobody should ever be brazen to detest the chief, his diligent reign brought the clan to new heights they haven't seen in a while, at least Macbeth thought so. 
“He's under a lot of pressure” Macbeth adds in defense to the chief's name. 
“Shouldn't be having the title and power then if he can't handle it. The cracks under the so called pressure is starting to reveal itself”  
While Macbeth squirms, swaying on one foot to the other, Choc walks to a tree, presses a hand on the bark, lowering carefully to the ground. Macbeth manages to take a spare glance around, he notices they were alone, together at the train's head, and not a thing or person is there to interfere. 
Woods surrounded them, as naturally thickly settled and so the colorfully painted autumn leaves above provide a decent amount of shade for whoever rests below. 
“At least in my opinion. Though let's not talk now on it. We're here to relax” 
Still holding hands it was until Choc let go Macbeth missed the soothingly comforting contact. What he would do to touch them again, worse is he wanted a better feel, and so the familiar overbearing sensation returns in his gut. 
“For a few minutes, okay” Once he finds his voice Macbeth speaks, “And I have to leave. Get back to work” 
“Sure. Sure, workaholic you. Beats me for wanting what's best” Leaned up against the tree Choc lightly jokes, scoots off to the side giving his friend room to sit. So with a grunt, he plops on the dirt next to the man, his hat laid off to the sideline. 
“Hmm” 
Macbeth hums, head back laying on the itchy wood behind him, eyes clamped shut, thin lips pursed with his large, calloused hands folded on his chest, and legs stretched out. 
Relaxation never came to him. An unheard-of  after thought. Yet this time around somehow it was different. There's a cool breeze nipping his cheeks, so having someone's presence for example, Choc's sets him at ease. Maybe it was the stress doing this, or all the pent up tension building inside kicking the wind out of his lungs. 
He didn't know how long it was sitting there until he snapped awake covered in a cold sweat. A tingling itch burns underneath his skin near his heart. Reassured immediately when beside him Choc remained, sat cross legged, hands at his side, and staring up at the sky, and he didn't miss how peaceful his friend looked right now. 
Rather he was mesmerized by the sight. The way the sun hits in all the right angles Choc shines a radiant glow. Once again the eyes are what took the cake, so captivating he is immersed and can't look away. At one point he opens his mouth but shuts it. 
Then he catches the hand grazing across his own; he may or may not have deliberately put them aside. Long, boney fingers wrapped in tinted gauze barely touch his thick, stubby digits. Even with the bandages on, they were so elegant compared to his that's missing a few. 
Temptation struck him. 
Slowly inching towards the man's hands he hopes isn't too noticeable. Macbeth wasn't the type to ask for much anyways. A simple man with the most basic needs and the way Choc feels under his touch is addictive. What was a need turned to a strong craving unable to be explained in words. Hand holding won't do, he imagined his curious touch traveling up the man's arm to his chest, and down his waist. 
How big his hands would be wrapped around the man, so slender, waist nicely cinched in by the corset vest. Push the sweet jester to the dirt ground, not caring if they got messy in the process as they return to the station. 
“Whatcha starin’ at?” 
Macbeth is startled out by his daydreams and snaps his attention to the man who returned an odd look at him.  
“Caught you staring” Tilting his head in to a certain degree that's not known possible to a man Choc merely laughs, “Handsome, I get it” 
A hefty shove amongst his friend's laughter later, Macbeth coldly replies, “Wasn't directed at you so don't get your head aired up, pal” 
Can't help to watch the shit eating grin falter while the wrapped up hand inches away. 
“Sure. You say that like you believe it's true as fact” Choc's smile returned just as quick, all knowing yet kept silent. 
“Watch it before I wipe the smugness off you”
“Oooh I'm so scared” 
Shambling back on his feet, Macbeth knew his time was up, hearing faint voices coming in the distance. In the corner of his eyes was Choc, usually teasingly persistent, resigned himself. Macbeth suddenly felt bad as he had to leave, turning around with the words on his tongue, however it died as Choc lazily waves him off. 
“Took enough of your time. I'll see you later” 
Nodding Macbeth, stiff, shambles on the trail to the train, turning his head slightly watching the figure disappear from his sight. 
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bellemeihua · 1 year
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“Stars, hide your fires; let not light see my black and deep desires. The eye wink at the hand; yet let that be which the eye fears, when it is done, to see.”
Cherik Macbeth AU edit, ft. my favorite Shakespeare quote.
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cpcposting · 3 months
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@cursed-princess-club @deldeldel90 @oyasumination I reread that cpc chat fic and it made me want to draw this.... this is her moments after creating the clubhouze
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teledild0nix · 1 month
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so i'm writing an 8th year fic and h&d are taking a muggle studies class together in which they read one of shakespeare's plays, and i'm trying to write a final project (for which they are partners) but like. hogwarts academics don't seem all that uhhhhh rigorous to me (like we see the students complaining about having to write a foot of parchment which is essentially ONE PAGE HANDWRITTEN) and i'm a little worried that my assignment is too rigorous.
it involves a lot of like. thinking analytically and using your imagination wrt the motivations of people unlike yourself, and that's not rlly something they do much at hogwarts as far as i can see. BUT it is muggle studies, and like. they could definitely all use some practice at those skills, following the recent implosion of their society.
#i showed it to my spouse who is a hs teacher#'where are they getting the books for this research? are there wizarding books about macbeth?' no there are not#the professor chose macbeth bc it has these concepts that will be familiar to them like witchcraft and prophesy#but presented from a muggle perspective#and also bc shakespeare is foundational to english literature and culture and it's good to be familiar with his work#and also bc they don't have a lot of experience with art esp language arts which is so so so sad and this will broaden their world#and ALSO bc shakespeare wrote before the statute of secrecy was signed which hopefully sparks their imaginations#to what extent might shakespeare's work have been impacted by ambient magic? or rumors of magic?#and if they had like a regular english literature education#they could talk about like the role of outcasts in shakespeare's work and whether magical people fit into that role#but they do not so we have to be a bit more literal#for the students that are prepared to like dig into this stuff it could be a very engaging experience#but most of them will prob be a bit lazy with it right? and maybe just resent the assignment and not get much out of it#and like!!!!#this assignment is literally just an excuse to have H&D putting their heads together in the library#and bring their relationship/the fact that they've been warming up to each other and spending time together out into the open#in a plausible deniability sort of way#a friendship soft launch if you will#i get a little carried away about these details sometimes#like if i mention the characters getting sandwiches i will look up menus for places they could plausibly have gotten sandwiches in that are#to make sure the sandwiches i mention are reasonable sandwiches#i heard some dumb story about meghan markle freaking out about not being able to get avocado when she was in the uk#and i remembered a fic i had written where aziraphale and crowley eat egg and avocado sandwiches#and i felt ashamed#an implausible sandwich!!!!
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unscrupulousartist · 8 months
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hellerby fic, part 10/10
19 December 1929
Sprawled across two booths in the Lackadaisy Cafe, the senior staff loosely gathered for a breakfast meeting. Furthest from the door, Mordecai had a table to himself to accommodate the piles of paperwork and books he was referencing. As such, Mitzi half kneeled in the other booth with Viktor and Ivy, both to be able to lean over the divide to bother him and also so she had a clear view of the doors. Outside, the streets were white with snow. The people of St Louis were bundled in colourful scarves and bulky jackets, and fewer cars were out and about. 
“Where is he?” Mitzi grumbled.
“Who?” Ivy asked, voice muffled with food.
Shuddering, Mordecai hunched over his ledger and started a second count of the day’s proposed expenses.
“Zib!” Mitzi answered. “He knows we don’t have a whole lotta time!”
“Perhaps you should get him a watch?” Mordecai pitched in without turning. “Though I doubt it would help. Why are we hiring jugglers?”
“Don’t worry about it,” Mitzi reached to smack his shoulder lightly. “You’re goin’ home at noon.”
“Yes, so you’ve said.”
“A nice, relaxing, stress free weekend for you while the rest of us frolic and play.”
“Sounds delightful,” he made a tally in the margin. “And suspicious.”
“Don’t worry so much,” Mitzi ruffled his hair, then straightened as the bell over the door dinged. “There you are!”
Zib’s voice carried across the cafe: “Here I am. Be grateful I’m even awake.”
“And with company,” there was a note of mischief in Mitzi’s voice.
Explained by Wick’s response: “Hullo.”
“Great,” Viktor grumbled. “Who do I owe money?”
“Money?” Wick questioned.
“No one, yet,” Zib answered. “Don’t worry about it, Wick. Ivy, budge over—”
There was some shuffling as three people squeezed together onto a two person bench, all of which Mitzi seemed to have no patience for. She turned to sit properly beside Viktor, leaving Mordecai as an eavesdropper. “Did you get it?” she asked.
“Who do you think I am?” said Zib. There was a fwump as something hit the other table. “Cost an arm and a leg, but I got it.”
Mordecai rolled his eyes and asked: “Is that why—?”
“Shush,” Mitzi shot back at him, then returned to the conversation. “And the recipe?”
“All sorted; I just need an hour in the kitchen before the festivities start.”
Wick cleared his throat. “Is this about the kissing booth..?”
The whole table laughed.
“No, no, Wick, that’s separate,” Mitzi purred. “But we’re still payin’ off Mozzie’s new piano, and there’s always something or another to fix.”
“I definitely have another kissing campaign in me,” Zib added. “You done with the paper?”
“Yea,” said Viktor. 
“So…” Wick started. “The mushrooms were for—?”
“Shhh,” Mitzi, Ivy, and Zib all chorused.
“Nothing to worry about,” Mitzi continued.
“Suspicious,” Mordecai repeated.
The bell rang again. “Goooood morning!” An exuberant Rocky sang; Mordecai slumped lower in his booth, out of sight. “Horatio! Good sir! Are there pancakes?”
“Come here, Rocky,” Mitzi called. Someone scrambled to remove something from the other table. “Horatio knows your order.”
“Of course, Ms M—”
“We weren’t expectin’ you this early.”
“Is it early?”
“Oi, Rocky—” Zib waved something in the air. “—says here your boy was found in the Missouri.”
“Freckle?” Rocky questioned. He came close to stand at the edge of the other table. “What was he doing there?”
Quietly groaning, Mordecai reached for his tea to sit and stare at; but he could still see Rocky in his peripheral.
“No,” Zib laughed. “Not him.”
“Freckle’s my boy, Rocky,” said Ivy. “But I forgive you.”
“Ha, of course,” Rocky’s arms flailed high as he rubbed his neck.
Zib’s voice lowered to near a whisper, and Mordecai’s ears twitched to hear him. “The one you kept awkwardly flirting with.” There was a beat of silence as Rocky inhaled, and Mordecai felt something twist in his gut. Zib continued: “Says right here—” there was the smack of flesh on paper; Mordecai pulled his tea close to sip. “—cops finally identified the body they found back in October—”
“Oh good,” Rocky interrupted, sighing. “You had me going there, but I saw Ol’ Serious Face yesterday.”
Sputtering, Mordecai spewed his mouthful of tea across his tableful of paperwork. He continued into a coughing fit as Rocky tensed and twisted to look at him.
“Oh my gosh,” Ivy squeaked. “Rocky!”
“Oh—uh—hey, Mordecai,” Rocky managed a laugh. “Didn’t see you there.”
Staring up at him, Mordecai froze. He could feel his face flushing hot, and his ears angled low and away. But he managed to pick out the details of Rocky’s outfit; a dark gray overcoat obscuring the blue of his usual suit and a hideously yellow scarf, half unwound from his neck. His clothes slowly dripped, a scattering of snowflakes disappearing in the cafe’s warmth. His pupils were narrow, his smile panicked, and he brought his hands up in front of him to pull awkwardly on his sleeves.
“Jeez, Rocky, you can’t just say that stuff!” Zib said loudly. It drew the violinist’s attention, briefly. Just long enough for Mordecai to start gathering his work things into messy piles; he sorted by wet and dry.
“Can’t he?” asked Wick.
“Not about Mordecai,” Zib added. “Not unless you have some sort of death wish. It was a joke, right?”
“Uhhhhh—” Rocky frowned.
“You gotta work on your delivery.”
“Mordecai?” Mitzi knelt again, leaning over the booth to look at him. 
“I’ll start that evening off now,” Mordecai rushed. “Should I take these upstairs or—?”
“I’ll get them, sugar.”
“Perfect,” he shifted along the bench, trying not to look at Rocky. “Don’t burn anything down.”
Flinching, Rocky managed a chuckle as Mordecai stood.
Wick asked: “Aren’t you staying for the party?”
“Definitely not,” Mordecai hissed. Standing, he could see the entire second table; they all stared, wide eyed, at him and Rocky. "I was promised ignorance and relaxation. Not jugglers and—"
"It was good to see you, Sugar!" Mitzi shouted, too loud. It drew the attention of several other morning visitors. "And don't you dare take any work home with you! I wanna hear about a boring weekend, full of plants and crosswords."
“So long as I don’t have to hear about tonight’s—”
“Shhh!” Ivy and Mitzi said again.
Shaking his head, Mordecai slipped on his overcoat and reached for his hat and scarf. 
Rocky startled into motion, stepping towards him again. “You’re leaving?”
Tense, Mordecai bit his tongue and glared as he looped his scarf around his neck. He turned toward the door.
Rocky motioned as if to block his path, but Viktor reached out and snatched his arm.
“Take the hint, kid,” Zib interpreted. The musician draped across a confused Wick to point at Rocky. “We’re all lucky he hasn’t gone feral again. Remember what happened to Sully?"
"No?" Rocky frowned at the table.
Mordecai used the moment to slip away.
"Miriam?" Zib tried again. "Chance?"
"I don't think Rocky was around yet," Ivy mused.
"Ah—wait!" Escaping from Viktor's hold—he contoured out of his overcoat, leaving the article in Viktor's hand—Rocky stumbled after Mordecai. "I got you something."
Slowing at the doorway, Mordecai was very aware of the room full of potential witnesses. Behind the counter, Horatio stood with a tray piled high with pancakes, and every third table sat one or two people. Still, his traitorous body paused to stare at Rocky, mortified, and he noticed a familiar pair of black cufflinks at the violinist’s wrists. He didn't speak.
"For the candle Holiday?" Rocky explained. He bit his lip.
Back at the booth, Mitzi spoke up: "You mean Chanukah, sweetie?"
"Yes!" Rocky shot her a brief but dazzling smile. Mordecai managed to shift an inch closer to the door before Rocky looked at him again. "It's in the garage? I could go get it right now." And he took a single step backwards, raising his brows at Mordecai.
“Oh, Rocky—” Ivy sighed. “Chanukah isn’t really a gift giving holiday?”
“It isn’t?” Rocky turned again toward the booth, face contorting into a puzzle. 
It gave Mordecai the final opening he needed to flee the cafe. As the door shut behind him, he heard Mitzi add: “and it’s next week, sweetie.”
An overcast sky accompanied Mordecai as he stormed home, carefully picking his way over compounded snow and slushy ice as he darted between people and cars. But the short walk wasn’t long enough to calm his swirling thoughts, and he continued past his building and down the block. 
“These are nice shoes,” Rocky remarked. Leaning closer, he disappeared out of sight beneath the table.
But Mordecai felt fingers on his feet a moment later. “Stop that—” he pulled his legs up out of reach. Squirming in his seat, he rearranged himself to put the violinist back in his sights. “How much longer are you going to sit down there?”
Half propped against the table leg, Rocky shrugged. “Use me but as your spaniel—” he hiccoughed, blinking, and continued. “—spurn me, strike me, neglect me—oh, hm, purrhaps that’s too romantic a prompt.” He pursed his lips and frowned at the underside of the table. “Someone wrote something under here.”
“Not falling for it,” Mordecai rolled his eyes. Looking across the room, he saw Mitzi and Viktor still watching them—Zib had wandered back to the stage. “Congratulations, Mr Rickaby, you’ve successfully drunken yourself under the table.”
“Not yet successfully,” Rocky countered. Then he listed onto his side, rolling. “But I can feel the first thralls of elixir, so it isn’t so bad.”
Eventually, Mordecai returned home.
Shucking his wet outer garments to dry in the bathroom, he methodically checked his plants. Most of them were dull as they overwintered, but they were still green and healthy. It was a five minute distraction he drug a whole hour out of. 
Frazzled, he made tea and a sandwich for a late lunch, which he took in the living room. Bundling up beneath a thin blanket, he curled in the chaise and stared out the window for the exact amount of time it took to steel himself to pick up Shakespeare. He leafed through the pages—now completely graffitied with notes and questions—until he found the sonnets, and read until his eyes felt heavy and his mind could drift.
It was full dark when the phone rang. Unused to the reasonable mode of communication, Mordecai chased the sound through the remnants of a dream, flailing away from a despondent violin player on a burning stage. 
Sitting up fully, ears perked and eyes wide, his consciousness clued in to what was happening just in time for the ringing to stop. He sighed, slumped, and straightened his glasses.
The phone rang again. Standing, he crossed the small apartment in a few long strides and picked up the device. “What is it?”
“Mordecai!” Ivy shouted, too loud. Then she giggled and shushed someone.
Mordecai looked for his nearest clock. “Ivy?”
“Yes!”
“It’s four in the morning.”
“Is it? It is! Can you come get me?”
He rubbed his brow. “Isn’t Viktor there?”
“His knee hurts.”
Mordecai groaned.
Ivy continued: “Because you shot it.”
“I know,” he hissed. “I was there.”
“Right,” Ivy giggled. “It’s late and I want to go home but everyone is too drunk to drive. Come get me.”
He knocked his head against the wall. “Sleep upstairs, Mitzi won’t mind.”
“Mordecai!” her voice dipped, crackling low over the line. “I’m bringing Freckle with me, I can’t take Freckle upstairs!”
“This seems like a phenomenal lack of planning on your part.”
“Mordecaaaii…”
“I’m not even working tonight.”
“Pleeeeease—”
“Why isn’t McMurray taking you home?”
“I tooold you, everyone is tooooo drunk. Just come get us!”
Waffling a moment longer, his other hand clenched into a fist. “Fine. I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.” And he hung up.
Not too bothered about being witnessed during the drunken hour, and still mostly dressed from falling asleep, Mordecai made short work of getting ready to leave. He took the stairs for haste, and nodded at the doorman on his way out. The weather, while mild, still held a midnight chill. The sidewalks had glazed over, and troughs had frozen in the streets. Very few people were out and about, and even fewer cars. So it was somewhat of a spectacle to see the dim glow of light coming from the Lackadaisy Cafe, and a small gathering of people outside the doors.
And, as he drew closer, Mordecai saw two unexpected individuals.
“Dere he is!” Serafine noticed him first, and nudged her brother.
“Peekon!” Nico cheered, but stayed in place leaning against the glass beside Viktor, who nodded a greeting. Mitzi, Zib, and Wick closed off the smoker’s circle, each of them bundled against the cold.
“What are you doing here?” Mordecai’s eyes narrowed.
Serafine grinned and shrugged. “Your musician invited us a while back.”
“Dou, he said you’d be here,” Nico added. He tapped the ash off his cigarette.
“Kid’s ballsy,” Zib sighed. Shaking his head, he leaned into Wick’s side. “I swear, he’s got nine fucking lives.”
“None of you could take Ivy home?” Mordecai glared at the group.
“We’re waitin’ for a taxi,” said Mitzi. “We offered to take her, but she doesn’t wanna hang out with the adults.”
“She’s twenty.”
“You try tellin’ her that, sweetheart. Lemme know how it goes.”
Mordecai shook his head.
“We could take her?” Nico offered.
Viktor and Mordecai spoke together: “No.”
“I’m hurt,” Nico pouted, first at Mordecai and then at Viktor. “T’ought we were gettin’ along.”
“Nothing personal,” Viktor over-enunciated in an uncharacteristic voice. Then Nico and Serafine started to laugh. 
“I feel like I missed something,” Mordecai remarked wryly. He peered in through the glass, where a dozen strangers were having coffee pick-me-ups before heading home. Horatio was again behind the counter, this time bustling back and forth between percolators.  “But I don’t want to know. Where’s Ivy?”
“Garage,” said Viktor. He rubbed at his knee.
“Be sure to knock,” Mitzi added.
Zib snickered into Wick’s side.
“Noted,” Mordecai drawled. 
Instead of risking going through the building, he continued on around the block. Bright headlights turned the corner as he darted into an alleyway, and he supposed Mitzi and the rest would be gone soon.
Someone had shoveled the drive, all the way back to the discrete garage, but Mordecai paid the snowdrifts very little attention as he spied the open door. There was no one outside, but he could almost discern the intimate whisperings of a couple. Before he stepped inside, he announced himself: “I’m here.”
There was a scrambling, and he entered to see Freckle awkwardly side stepping away from Ivy, who sat on the hood of their dodgy vehicle. “Mordecai!” Ivy hopped down, swaying. “It took you long enough.”
“Mhm,” he propped his hands on his hips and gave her a practiced look, flat. “This feels unnecessary.”
Freckle cleared his throat and straightened to a stand; but his voice slurred around his words. “Faank you, Missir Heller.”
“Come ooooon,” Ivy urged. She stumbled to Freckle, pushing him at the back seat; but she climbed up front to sit next to Mordecai.
“Did you not have a plan?” Mordecai asked as he came around the vehicle. He pulled open the door. “What were you going to do if I didn’t pick up?”
“Slept here and hate you about it,” Ivy answered simply.
In the backseat someone—not Freckle—groaned. Mordecai tensed as Rocky’s voice floated up from the floor. “Issit t’morrow yet?”
“Yes, Rocky,” said Freckle. He reached down to pat his cousin's head. 
“Oh, good… ma’by thin’s’ll be differen’ now…”
Frowning, Mordecai peaked over the seat. Sprawled out on the car floor, Rocky drooled into the upholstery. Slumping behind the wheel, Mordecai turned to hiss at Ivy: “What’s he doing here?”
Ivy rolled her eyes. “Well, usually Rocky drives us home, but, uh—Zib made something?” She scratched her head. “It was sorta like Rocky’s tea? But mush—much stronger.”
“He doesn’ ushully get like this,” Freckle added, then hiccoughed. There was a pause before he continued. “He’s got a tall—a taller—a tall-shurance?”
“Ignore him,” said Ivy. “He can barely tell his reds from his greens right now. Le’sss gooooo.”
Reluctantly, Mordecai started the car. He took care of the garage door himself, opening it, driving through, closing it again, and then they bumped down the little alley and out to the street. A couple more people were leaving the Lackadaisy, but the senior staff—plus guests—were all gone. And then they crawled, extra slow, through the streets of St Louis.
Ivy took up the cause of conversation. “You missed out on a fun party,” she sighed, drifting across the seat.  “There was a bit of a theme? The twelve days of Christmas. You know it?”
“Yes,” Mordecai growled. “It’s the worst carole.”
“It’s not that bad, you sourpuss. But ins’ead of the regular days of Christmas, Mitzi mixed it up. You know?”
“The juggler?” Mordecai guessed.
“Jugglers,” Ivy corrected. “Ten clowns-a-juggling, nine swingers swinging, eight—” and she rattled off a whole stream of nonsense as Mordecai tried his hardest not to bend the steering wheel beneath the force of his grip. In the backseat, Freckle occasionally nodded or added a comment, but Rocky was quiet. Oblivious, Mordecai hoped. He still found himself straining to hear any noise the musician might make. 
When they finally pulled in front of the midtown apartment Ivy kept, paid for by her inflated paycheque, the girl was still waxing about the three Dutch dancers that had taken up a whole segment of the evening. 
"We're here," Mordecai noted.
"Oh—" Ivy squinted out the window, then perked. "We are! Freckle, come on—"
Opening the back door, Freckle stumbled and tripped onto the ground. "Ow."
Ivy giggled, and carefully disembarked the front seat. "Thank you, Mordecai! Have a good—"
"Wait—" Mordecai leaned to catch her door, forcing it open so he could address her. "What about Rickaby?"
Taking on an air of innocence, she blinked at him. "What about Rickaby?"
He grit his teeth and waved toward the back seat. Ivy raised her brows and tilted her head. Mordecai narrowed his eyes and flattened his ears.
“Roooocky,” Freckle sing songed himself upright, and leaned into the car. 
Ivy giggled as Rocky snuffled to semi-consciousness. “Whaaaaaa’—”
“Haaaaappy biiiiirthday,” Freckle pushed on the frame of the car, rocking it.
Rocky snickered quietly.
And Mordecai froze, frowning.
Ivy cleared her throat. “You can just take the car back—Rocky will be fine.”
“Goodnight—” Freckle continued. “Sleep tight—”
“No bed buuuuuugs—” Rocky whined.
Mordecai’s ears twitched. “He’s not staying with you?”
“Nope,” the word popped from Ivy’s mouth, then she leaned forward to whisper. “Mitzi doesn’ know—he sleeps in the garage. Shhh…”
“He sleeps here?” Mordecai’s claws dug into the seat. “In the car?”
The backdoor shut, and Freckle stumbled around the vehicle.
“Shh,” Ivy reiterated. Then she leaned into the car to kiss Mordecai’s cheek. “Thanks again. Goodnight, Rocky!”
“Night, Mssssss Pep…”
Smiling, Ivy retreated, slamming the door. Meeting Freckle on the sidewalk, the two walked towards the building. Creeping across the bench seat, Mordecai watched until they greeted the overnight doorman and disappeared inside. Then, sighing, he slowly moved to peer again over the back of the seat.
At some point, Rocky had rearranged himself onto his back. His knees were bent, one foot resting against the back door and one arm sprawled beneath the seat. The thin blanket, wrapped around his waist, had tangled and lowered, showing the wrinkles forming in Rocky’s shirt and vest. His jacket was missing.
Mordecai shivered. “What am I going to do with you?”
Inhaling, Rocky’s eyes snapped open. They were a luminous blue in the darkness, his pupils rapidly growing and shrinking as he tried to focus. 
Mordecai held his breath.
Then Rocky relaxed, eyelids drifting partway closed. “‘Mmmmm I dreaming?”
Biting his lip, Mordecai looked around the car pointlessly. “Yes,” he decided.
“Tha’ makes sense,” Rocky sighed and closed his eyes.
Another moment, and Mordecai tapped his claws against the upholstery. “Get up here.”
“Hmm?”
“Up front.” Half crawling, Mordecai reached behind the seat. He caught hold of the blanket first, and tugged.
The motion caused Rocky to roll. “Whaaaaa—” he fell into snickers as he wedged under the backseat. Shifting, he scrunched his face up at Mordecai. “Why?”
“The symmetry,” said Mordecai. “Obviously.”
“Symmetry?” Rocky puzzled. But he climbed up, tipping over into the front cushions. 
Sliding back into place, Mordecai threw the blanket overtop of Rocky again. Clearing his throat, he restarted the car. “Well?”
“Well what, silly duck?” Rocky laughed as he fought his way out of the blanket. He managed to nearly kick Mordecai’s head as he awkwardly rolled around the seat, falling off the front. Snickering, he smiled up at Mordecai. 
“What should I do with you?” Mordecai asked.
Perking, Rocky struggled back into the seat. “Take me home?”
“I would,” Mordecai drawled. But his carefully measured tone did nothing for the goosebumps rising beneath his fur. He stepped on the gas. “But, apparently, your home is the garage.”
“Well…” still half on the floor, Rocky swayed close. “You could take me to your home…”
Shivering, Mordecai drove.
It wasn’t long before Rocky yawned, eyes drooping. He nodded several times, seeming to catch himself, before finally falling against Mordecai’s thigh. “This’s nice,” he mumbled, eyes closed. 
“Is it?” Mordecai replied softly. Overhead the clouds cleared, letting a handful of stars sparkle through the light pollution. The moon was out, gibbous and waning. “We’re just driving.”
“Is nice,” Rocky repeated. “I’s like our first drive.”
“Is it?” Mordecai repeated, panicking.
“Yes—no—” Rocky sighed, and turned to rub his face against Mordecai’s leg. “I couldn’t’ve dreamed that drive, I’m too dull.”
“You?” Mordecai scoffed. And, inexplicably, he relaxed under the pretenses. “Dull?”
“Dim-witted,” Rocky nodded, continuing. “Dotty, daft, dopy, dumb, brain-dead—”
“Sit up,” Mordecai interrupted. 
“What?”
“Sit up,” he said. “You’re throwing off the symmetry.”
“Nooooo—” Rocky whined. Pawing, he pulled one of Mordecai’s hands from the steering wheel and held it against his head. “It’s my dream.”
While the drive was relatively easy—nearing five in the morning, the day was too cold and quiet for the general public—Mordecai left his hand where it was. He traced along the nearly-even pattern of Rocky’s fur, listening to him purr and ramble. “Through the forest have I gone, but Athenian found I none—” Rocky spoke Puck’s part as he nosed into Mordecai’s palm. “—on whose eyes I might approve, this flower’s force in stirring love. Night and silence; who is here? Weeds of Athens he doth wear—”
They’d both shifted, laid out facing each other on the roof of the car. Rocky still performed, “Now, until the break of day—” But his voice softened, eyes hooded as he studied Mordecai’s reactions. And Mordecai, transfixed, watched the words as they formed on Rocky’s lips. At some point, his hands lifted to grasp at the front of Rocky’s vest, claws catching in the fabric. Their ankles were intertwined and their tails brushed together. Rocky continued: “—through this house each fairy stray. To the best bride-bed will we—”
Mordecai interrupted: “I think I want to kiss you.”
When they came close, Mordecai idled the car in front of the Lackadaisy. Still lying on the bench—though now he faced the seat more than Mordecai—Rocky continued reciting every line, regardless of character, straight into the third act. He didn’t seem to notice the pause in the journey, nor when Mordecai made up his mind and continued driving home.
Parking in the alley behind his building, he tried corralling Rocky out of the car. But the violinist frowned for a long moment before sitting himself up. “I have presents for you,” he announced; then he climbed again over the seat, falling into the back.
“I don’t need presents,” Mordecai sighed. Stepping out, he moved to open the back door.
Squirming, Rocky searched for something under the seat. Two somethings, which he produced with a flourish and a smile. “Ta da!”
Hesitating, Mordecai observed both objects. One was lumpy and wrapped in newspaper. The other was a cactus, decorated with googly eyes and planted in a familiar old shoe. “Well, I think this is already mine,” he remarked and tapped on the shoe’s toe, then leaned to inspect the unhappy plant. Its needles were shedding and its soil was dry, but it still seemed alive. “And you’ve killed the cactus.”
“Have I?” Rocky frowned and pulled the plant closer to look at.
Mordecai took the other present and tucked it under his arm. “Inside first,” he instructed. “Can you walk?”
“Pssh,” Rocky rolled his eyes, but moved to crawl awkwardly out on all fours.
“Stop, stop—”
“What?”
Mordecai sighed, tilting his head. “Your feet should be underneath you.”
“I’s fiiine,” he insisted. But he still teetered out the door, performing a miraculous shoulder roll to flatten himself on the icy pavement; somehow, the cactus remained intact. Rocky blinked, then grinned up at Mordecai. “See?”
“I see that your feet still aren’t under you.”
“The little details don’t matter.”
“You’re inebriated.”
“Am I?” Rocky’s puzzled. “There was, purrrrrrrhaps, more inbide—imblide—impride—” Scowling, Rocky stuck his tongue out. “Words.”
“Come on,” Mordecai shook his head. 
Somehow, he convinced Rocky to teeter on two feet. The trek inside was practice in balance and patience, and Mordecai tried to feel indifferent about the polite non-attention of the doorman and the lift operator. Rocky leaned next to the door while Mordecai fished for his key, and then they were inside.
“This is an awfully long dream, isn’t it?” Rocky remarked as he waited for Mordecai to shed his outer layers.
“I suppose typical dreams are short,” Mordecai agreed. A tinge of guilt crept into the corners of his mind, dark and sour. He tried to shake it off. “You should change into something dry.”
“Present first,” Rocky reminded. His tail twitched, and he watched Mordecai eagerly.
Mordecai frowned, but picked at the newspaper packaging as he wandered across the little apartment. “Isn’t it your birthday? Why get me a present?”
“I’ve never been good at birthdays,” Rocky shrugged, following with cactus-and-shoe in hand. "And I missed yours."
“Hm—” he ripped away the paper and sighed. It was a scuffed menorah, second hand. But… "I don't light candles for Chanukah."
"Oh." Ears lowering, Rocky frowned. "Then, what do you do?"
"Usually? Call my mother." Mordecai threw the candle holder onto the chaise and moved to take the cactus from Rocky’s hold; their fingers overlapped. “This one seems more like you.”
A snort drew from Rocky. Instead of yielding the plant, he moved as if Mordecai were pulling him along, too. “I’ve had it for years. I thought, well—” he let go to gesture at some of the many potted flora dotting the apartment, and Mordecai wrestled the shoe from his hold. “—if anyone could keep it alive, you could.”
“It’ll need new soil,” Mordecai noted. Walking into the bedroom, he moved to the little table by the window. Rocky followed him. “Dry clothes are in the closet. You can borrow something from the dresser, and put your things in the laundry for tomorrow.”
Rocky’s fingers rasped together. “Tomorrow?”
Mordecai tensed. Setting the cactus down next to a flowerbox of ferns, he kept his fingers busy by unbuttoning his cuffs. “Only if you’d like.”
There was a moment of silence, then Rocky stumbled to Mordecai’s little closet. It took a few minutes, but they both dressed down from their day, slipping into clean sleep things. Neither of them looked directly at the other, both awkwardly lost in thoughts and memories, until the floor was littered with clothes and their bedtime preparations were complete. Then Rocky waited, tail twitching, until Mordecai could again meet his eye. Reaching, he took Mordecai by the wrist and pulled him toward the bed.
Even inebriated—especially inebriated—Rocky was a force of chaos. The bedding seemed to rearrange around him as he maneuvered Mordecai into a little spoon. Nested, Mordecai arched back into Rocky’s torso. He tensed as Rocky licked a line up his neck, but slowly relaxed to the gentle pull of teeth across fur. The ministrations went no further.
Eventually, Rocky fell asleep with his face pressed against Mordecai’s scruff. 
The hitman was less fortunate. The afternoon’s early sleep, combined with the usual hours of his profession and a dash of nerves, kept his heart beating and mind racing. He tried everything from solving complex algebraic problems to mapping out the most efficient route around the great lakes and couldn’t settle his thoughts. It was worse when Rocky pulled close, an arm snaking around Mordecai’s waist. Then worse again when Rocky shifted to nose at the back of Mordecai’s ear.
And worser still when the first hints of morning finally invaded the room. A glow out the window suggested daylight, and the start of traffic sounds drifted up from the street. All at once, Rocky inhaled, sat up, and scrambled away. Mordecai curled a little tighter around his knees and feigned sleep.
Falling out of bed, Rocky made muted noises as he searched around the room. Mordecai heard him pick up his clothes and tip toe away. 
Consumed, Mordecai buried under his pillows and bit his cheeks. Minutes passed. The pain grounded his thoughts, and he tried listing all the reasons he was being stupid. It had been a mistake. A long, drawn out farce fuelled by alcohol and other intoxicants that, yes, perhaps both of them played into on occasion but neither of them had business pursuing. Outside of a penchant for the philosophical—and a precocity of word that often sent others racing for the exit—they had little in common. The idea of them together was a joke to their friends, an inconceivable notion that went unnoticed and unthought of; and even if it had, it would only be as betting fodder. He didn't even like to be touched—usually. And there was blood in Mordecai’s ledger, too much for any person to deserve—
“Shit shit shit!” Rocky’s voice chorused from the other room.
Sitting up, Mordecai smelled smoke. The blankets tangled around his ankles and he tripped from the bed. Half the bedding shed with him as he scrambled from the bedroom, only to pause in the doorway to watch as Rocky dropped a flaming pan into the little kitchen sink. The musician turned on the water, dousing the flames with a hiss.
“Not ideal,” Rocky cursed.
Mordecai took notice of the state of his kitchenette. Flour was spread across his small countertop, where a bowl of something sat balancing a whisk. His fridge was open, the contents disheveled as if they had been riffled through. “What are you doing?” he asked.
Startled, Rocky twisted to blink at him. Still undressed, his eyes were manically wide and ringed with exhausted circles. “Uhhhh—” the water was still running; he scratched at his disheveled neck. “—making pancakes?”
Habitually, Mordecai’s eyes narrowed and his shoulders hunched. “That’s cast iron. You can’t leave it in the sink.”
“Sorry—” Rocky darted to turn off the water. “It sort of caught on fire—”
“And—” continuing, Mordecai cast a quick look around the rest of the room. Seeing a pile of material on his coffee table, he pointed at it. “—I told you to put those clothes in the laundry.”
Biting his lips together, Rocky leaned against the little sink and raised his brows. He considered Mordecai. “So… it wasn’t a dream?”
Hand dropping to his side, Mordecai frowned. “... no.”
“I mean, the part where you seemed to reciprocate,” Rocky added. “You know I like you.”
“Yes.”
“And you—”
“Rocky,” Mordecai interrupted. “Please, get out of my kitchen before my cast iron rusts, or you manage to blow up the stove.”
Rocky’s nose scrunched as he grinned. “So bossy.”
“That’s not new,” he replied. Then, hesitant, he walked closer. “I thought you’d left.”
Rocky shrugged. “Technically, you weren’t wrong.”
“You know what I mean,” Mordecai intoned. “I would’ve left.”
Cautiously, Rocky reached out to hold Mordecai by the waist. “Do you want me to leave?”
“No.”
“Good.”
Slotting together, Mordecai nestled against Rocky’s neck. “I’m not good at this.”
Rocky snorted. “Neither am I.” He pet a line down Mordecai’s spine. “But… I think I’d like to kiss you. If that’s okay.”
Shuddering, Mordecai pulled back just enough to peer into Rocky’s eyes. “I don’t usually like kissing.”
“Oh.”
“But yes,” Mordecai added. “It’s okay.”
Tentative, Rocky pressed his lips to Mordecai's cheek. He started butterfly soft, leaving a trail of affection across Mordecai’s eyelids and up to his temple. "I don't understand kissing—" Rocky admitted in a whisper.
Mordecai snorted.
"I should say, didn't understand," Rocky corrected. He rubbed his face against Mordecai’s, knocking his glasses askew.
"What's not to understand?" Mordecai asked, aiming for condescending even as his heart beat with sincerity.
Rocky shrugged and tugged him closer. Boxed in against the sink, his hands pushed under Mordecai’s shirt to scratch claws down his back. "Usually people would act nice to get kisses, then hurt me and leave."
He couldn't help purring, even as another twinge of guilt had Mordecai leaning back against Rocky’s hold. Cadling Rocky’s neck, Mordecai pet the old bite wound. "That's what I did."
"You didn't act nice," Rocky snickered, nosing close. "You didn't pull your punches, or go along with things you didn't care about, or pretend."
"I pretended you were still dreaming just to get you up here."
"To kiss me?" Rocky raised a brow at him
Mordecai rolled his eyes.
"That's what I thought," Rocky hummed. "I like kissing you; I didn't realize it was fun for everyone."
"Who were you kissing before, that it wasn't fun?" Mordecai's eyes narrowed. "There's reasons we throw people into the river, Rickaby, and—"
"Hush—" Rocky licked Mordecai’s nose. "Who cares about them? You're fun to kiss—but only when you want to. No need to be a Miriam—or Arty—or Chance—or—"
Mordecai kissed him, licking into his mouth until they were both left panting. He scratched down Rocky's chest, enjoying the soft hiss that angled the musician's jaw wider and sighing as Rocky’s claws combed through his fur. Something reminiscent of flickering warmth and summer nights coloured in the corners of his consciousness, and he leaned closer, closer, closer until he felt Rocky’s spine arching backwards over the sink. Then, nipping at Rocky’s bottom lip, he pulled away. "You aren't like anyone else," he said. "You're very…"
A smile split across Rocky’s face. "Oh?"
"Tolerable," he settled on. “Now—get out of my kitchen, and I’ll see if I can salvage pancakes.”
Snickering, Rocky kissed Mordecai’s cheek before ducking away. He winked. “Yessir, Mr Heller, sir.”
As Mordecai scrubbed and reseasoned the cast iron, Rocky regathered his clothes to dump somewhere in the bedroom—presumably in the laundry basket, but Mordecai couldn’t be sure. He returned to the livingroom as Mordecai was inspecting the lumpy pancake mix, and curled up on the chaise with a well-read copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare.
When Mordecai served a tray of pancakes with jam—he made a mental note to consider adding syrup to his shopping list—Rocky tucked his feet under his knees and used his finger as a bookmark. “You’ve worked your way through the whole volume,” he noted with a smile.
“You do quote the bard a lot, Roark,” Mordecai replied.
Rocky’s nose scrunched. “Only Aunt Nina calls me Roark.”
“You’ll have to add me to that list,” said Mordecai. And when Rocky blanched, he conceded. “At least some of the time.”
Rolling his eyes, Rocky held up the book. “Do you have a favourite play?”
“I may have formed a preference along the way,” Mordecai sidled onto the chaise next to him. “But I’m afraid it isn’t the frivolous one you like so much.”
“You think Macbeth is frivolous?”
Mordecai narrowed his eyes at Rocky. “Your favourite play is Midsummer’s Night.”
Settling to sit closer to Mordecai, Rocky reached to fill a plate. Undeterred by the lack of syrup, he spread an inch of jam between two pancakes. "Yes, Midsummer is a little frivolous; but why did you think I would prefer Midsummer?"
"You quote it constantly."
"Ah—" Pausing to think, Rocky nodded. "—I suppose I do."
"You convinced the band to do the third act."
"A thematic choice, for Mayday."
"Why quote it if it isn't your favourite?"
Rocky shrugged and pulled the plate into his lap. “It’s a famous tale of lovers, drugged by faeries and left to frolic overweekend in the woods.” Picking up his jam-pancake-sandwhich, he shoved the whole thing in his mouth. “Id feld ap—”
“Don’t speak with your mouth full,” Mordecai admonished. “Or I’m changing my mind about everything.”
Cheeks puffing as Rocky strained his lips together, he raised his brows at Mordecai. Frowning back, Mordecai’s ear twitched; so Rocky tapped a sticky finger against the volume of Shakespeare as he chewed.
Sighing, Mordecai glanced out the window in pretense of annoyance. Really it was an attempt to stop his face from heating in embarrassment. Outside, the occasional snowflake drifted by. From memory, he recited: “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”
The rest of the morning passed both slowly and too quick. Food was finished and set aside, but instead of leaving the two cats reclined together. Mordecai dozed on Rocky’s chest; Rocky peered over Mordecai’s shoulder to keep reading; and both of them occasionally purred or whispered to the other. Everything was on track to becoming the most relaxed day off in Mordecai’s recent memory.
And then the window slid open.
“Mordecai!” Ivy’s voice yelled. Both him and Rocky flinched. “What did you—! Oh.”
Looking up, Mordecai and Rocky saw Ivy and Freckle perched on the living room windowsill. The four cats looked at each other for a long moment; then, Ivy continued climbing inside.
“I have a front door,” Mordecai noted. He pushed himself up until he was kneeling, more or less in Rocky’s lap.
“There was no time for the door,” Ivy snapped her fingers at him. “We thought you had killed him!”
“Who?” Rocky blinked.
“You,” said Freckle. He tripped as he tried to follow Ivy, falling to the floor.
“I have to call Mitzi,” Ivy continued, beelining across Mordecai’s apartment. “I think she owes Zib money.”
Sighing, Mordecai slumped against the back of the chaise. “So much for a peaceful day.”
Then Rocky took hold of his hand. “Good day, though,” he said with a smile. “Right?”
“Right—” Mordecai entwined their fingers. "—but if you tell anyone, I'll deny it."
Scoffing, Rocky lifted the limb to press a kiss to Mordecai's knuckles. "Deny it all you want," he said. "I've got you figured out."
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fandomfluffandfuck · 8 months
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Steve and feelings of cleanliness:
It's safe to assume that the serum heightened Steve's ability to feel, right? His nerves are hyper sensitive. He is hyper sensitive. Even the smallest touch to or brush against his skin, he feels. So, do you think that he gets phantom feelings of contamination?
Like, after a mission, he will take a shower. That's normal. Returning from a mission or a battle, you're absolutely dirty--sweat, grime, blood, etc. There will be any and all kinds of bodily fluids and gross shit covering you, so it makes sense to shower. That's a necessity.
However, Steve will stand under the spray of the shower until he can hardly breathe around all the steam choking the air bathroom; Steve will stand until his legs can't take it, shaking, and he has to sit to continue to soap himself up, rinsing and repeating, on the shower floor; Steve will stay in the shower until his skin isn't just pink but is red and he's more than squeaky clean, he's washed so much he's taken some of the lighter freckles off, exfoliated to an extreme degree.
Steve eventually gathers the courage to force himself out of the shower. Try the real world again. Hoping--pleading with the universe that he doesn't still feel disgusting.
Even then, though, Steve swears he can still feel the sweat and blood crawling all over him. Under his nails. Caught in his hair. Seeping into his pours.
So, not even a full hour after he's stepped out of the shower, he takes another.
Another
And another.
Steve is just desperately trying to get clean--trying to feel clean.
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laiqualaurelote · 1 year
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all the men and women merely players
A Ted Lasso Station Eleven AU
chapter six: returning were as tedious as go o’er
Bex said, arms folded over the slight swell of her belly, “You’ve got to take me with you.”
The thought burned briefly through Rebecca’s mind: how might they kill Bex? She turned away from it in horror.
“Why?” she said instead, sharpening her voice. “With me gone, you’re queen of this shithole. Don’t you want that?”
Bex shook her head. “He’s already looking elsewhere.” 
“He’ll never let you go,” said Rebecca. “It’s one thing if it’s me, but if it’s you, with his child – there’s nowhere in England where we will be safe from him.”
“I know.” Bex bit her lip. Tears were forming in the corners of her perfect eyes. “I know. I’m sorry. But I can’t have this baby here. I can’t.”
It takes five years, an apocalypse and a fair bit of Shakespeare for Rebecca Mannion to find her way back to Rebecca Welton. A Station Eleven post-apocalyptic theatre AU in which, in the aftermath of a devastating pandemic, American comedy actor Ted Lasso winds up leading a travelling Shakespearean troupe across the ruins of England (no knowledge of Station Eleven necessary to read).
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merciless-macdonwald · 6 months
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this is like 500 words but man. these two are fun to write
Macbeth reads his wife's mind and doesn't love what he finds. (The latter half of Act 1, Scene 5.)
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rorygilmoreh4ter · 6 months
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somebody needs to make a show that centers around a modern au of shakespeare characters in university or smth please @netflix PLEASE
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ingravinoveritas · 3 months
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I've posted on here before about the work I do as a professional speaker, so I field a lot of speaking requests in my e-mail on a day-to-day basis. Got a request last week from the UK and was super excited until I realized how off it seemed. It was from a monsignor at a church in London and had a lot of flowery, religious language, and I talk about autism and sex for a living, so why would a priest want me to speak at his church's conference? Although I might need a priest after doing that...
Did some research after receiving a follow-up e-mail with equally over-the-top religious verbiage, only to have my suspicions confirmed: It's a scam. A "keynote speaker" scam, of all things:
The wording of the e-mails described on this site was identical to the wording of the e-mails I received, down to the "theme" of the conference. Apparently the aim is to get your money via claims of needing a work visa and then having their "sponsor" get in touch with you to arrange the details once you've filled out the forms they send.
I'm feeling upset and disappointed for multiple reasons--at the thought of other disabled/autistic speakers or other vulnerable people being taken advantage of by these assholes, at the prospect of a speaking gig in a place I've always wanted to visit being taken away--but also because the so-called "conference" was supposed to be in March and I thought for a hot second that I might have the chance to see Michael in Nye.
I'm at least glad that my instincts were right, and that I was able to cut off contact before anything else happened, but still...ugh...
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dunbonnets · 11 months
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✧. ┊  LABOUR OF LOVE        Chapter 2: Grievous Injury
She could have counted on one hand the number of days it took her to realize that she needed to reconcile that there was no going back. As much as her heart longed for her old life, there wasn’t any way that Aoife could conceive where she’d actually be able to get back. And the sooner she accepted that she’d been given a new life and it was best to learn to enjoy it, the easier the days and weeks to come would be.
reading link | edited by dunbonnets | june 2023
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aeoneskova · 8 months
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for the wip tag!! i want to know about thy blood is murky :))) blood and marylily my beloveds it can only be incredible
VERY excited about this one, it’s one I’ll be focusing on as soon as I can :)
It’s canon compliant…. Kinda… but I can’t tell you why only kinda cause that’ll spoil it… the whole fic follows Lily and Mary through Hogwarts and into the war, with the premise that they’re from the same hometown and didn’t like each other at their primary school. But now they’re thrust into Hogwarts together as two of the few muggleborns, so they’re forced to connect.
The BLOOD comes into it because it’s also heavily inspired by Lady Macbeth :))
Not necessarily the plot of Macbeth, just her as a character. From the very beginning, because of Snape’s influence, Lily will be very involved in the dark arts and blood magic and a lot of conflict will surround her relationship with dark magic because it takes such a toll on her but she also can’t resist it… and also because the other Gryffindors are so against it. The way Lily gets sucked into it and the consequences are all inspired by Lady Macbeth and will also include a lot of the supernatural and religious themes of Macbeth
Yes it’s canon compliant so Jily does end up happening BUT the main focus of the fic is Marlily and I can’t fully say Jily is endgame… for reasons…. but I’m very excited to write more of this, it’s fully outlined :)
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