Tumgik
#welcome back from the war
butchdykekondraki · 14 days
Text
OBSESSED with everyone treating butchdykekondraki like a beacon of hope . my inbox is literally full of people rejoicing about her return
26 notes · View notes
Text
Yet another wild crackship between my LDB and some Skyrim dumbo, but this time it's General Tullius, and it actually gets madder from there
Look, a lot of this surprised me too. It sure surprised @elder-dragon-reposes and yet it makes sense and that's the strange beauty of it
He could be forgiven for not seeing her at Helgen. Between Ulfric's capture and the following dragon attack, Tullius had his hands full with escaped prisoners and a town in ruins. Not to mention Elenwen's attempts to take over his execution. One half-elf caught in the crossfire was below his attention at the time. When she came into Castle Dour, a cold wind in her wake as she spoke about fire and death, he had no choice but to pay attention to her. Especially when she brought up things like "peace" and "ceasefire." This Last Dragonborn was out of her mind.
Yet somehow, she led him into an agreement to meet with the Stormcloaks at High Hrothgar.
Tullius isn't quite sure he likes that. She's as double-edged as any Thalmor diplomat with her words. As noble as her intentions appear on the surface, he's not sure he can trust her.
At High Hrothgar, the Last Dragonborn, Leara, leads both sides into an agreement where no one gets what they want, but no one is worse off, and she plans to trap a dragon in a castle.
She . . . plans to trap a dragon in a castle.
Tullius knows he was sent to Skyrim to tame the rebellion, but no one ever prepared him for how maddening the people of Skyrim were. No one is as maddening as the Nords' hero. Tullius cannot understand her. He's not sure he wants to, all things considered.
The Legate is amused by his consternation. He knows this even without her saying anything. But Tullius is worried. This Leara has the power to sway Skyrim in whatever way she chooses, and if she joins the Stormcloaks, then he has a feeling that the Empire might lose more than Skyrim before all is over.
He keeps an ear out for the Dragonborn's movements. His spy network throughout Skyrim is extensive: If she breathes in Windhelm's direction, if she says anything about the Civil War, then he'll need to be ready. This woman has slain dragons. He doesn't want to see what she'll do to a legion of mortal men. Tullius needs to be ready.
Tullius is not ready when Leara walks into Castle Dour again, armorless and prim as she waltzs into his war room. Legate Rikke greets her, but Tullius pretends to give half an ear. He looks like he's going through reports, but he's trying to keep an eye on the anomaly in the room.
Legate Rikke and the Dragonborn talk quietly together. And then the Dragonborn leaves and Tullius finally puts down his paperwork. Legate Rikke is frowning.
"What did she want?"
The Legate's attention snaps to him.
"She wanted to know about our support from Cyrodiil, sir." "Support?" "She mentioned your inability to negotiate a peace settlement, General."
Tullius recalled that. He'd told the Dragonborn he couldn't do more than accept Ulfric's surrender. But why did the Dragonborn want to know about the Imperials' ability to negotiate with the rebels? Didn't she already get her peace treaty and trap her dragon?
Tullius cannot wrap his head around her. Everything his spies have reported paints her as kindness. Even the coldest Nords seem to thaw around her. But Tullius can't base his understanding of such a power player like the Dragonborn on reports and a handful of interactions. He'd have to speak with her himself.
The Winking Skeever is busy when he steps in. A few heads turn, but otherwise, no one pays Tullius any particular attention. The Dragonborn isn't difficult to find, either: She's at a corner table with her nose buried in a dusty book.
Tullius makes his way over to her.
The Dragonborn is surprised to see him but still invites Tullius to sit at her table.
"I assume this is about my discussion with your legate earlier."
She's perceptive. But Tullius already knew that.
"Do you always discuss politics in a bar?"
At his question, the Dragonborn offers a little half-smile, her eyes dancing with amusement.
"Do you?"
No. Honestly, Tullius couldn't recall the last tie he even visited a bar or tavern other than while traveling. Perhaps he was working too late, but between the Civil War, Elenwen, the dragons, and (maybe) the Dragonborn, he couldn't afford to slack off. Why else would Tullius chase the Dragonborn down to the local inn?
"Have you read much about Skyrim?"
Her question surprises him.
"War commentaries mostly. Military history."
The nod of her precise head is measured as if she expected that response. Marking her page, she closes her book and shows him the cover. It's some thick tome he's never heard of, but the knotwork dragon design around the edges breathes of old Nordic craftsmanship.
"As Dragonborn . . . [she pauses for a long moment] . . . As Dragonborn, I am highly invested in the preservation of the Empire and Skyrim."
She chews her lip.
Tullius almost asks if she's about to join the Legion. He can't deny that he'd hoped that would be her ultimate decision, but sitting here across from the Dragonborn as she was now, deliberating over words and tapping her book's cover, Tullius knew she wasn't about to swear fealty to the Emperor.
When she continues, she speaks slowly.
"General Tullius, would you be willing to help me? I need to reach out to people in the Imperial City about a peace summit, and I don't know where to begin."
A peace summit?
"I take it Ulfric didn't put you up to this?"
Her frown is surprising.
"No, he didn't. I asked him."
The Dragonborn asked Ulfric if she could talk to the Empire about a peace summit?
Before he could ask what in Oblivion that was supposed to mean, the server brought a tea service to the table. Just as quickly, he was gone.
"Would you care for a cup, General? I'm afraid all they have is lavender honey." "I . . . would like that--" "Leara."
She supplied. Her lips quirked.
So Tullius found himself ensconced at a table in The Winking Skeever and discussing different politicians and diplomats back in the Imperial City with the Dragonborn – Leara. He's halfway through his second cup when she admits that she's trying to find a peaceful resolution to the Civil War that could please everyone. He calls her a hopeful idiot, but she smiles.
"You can't please everyone." "Well, I don't think I can please the Dominion, but I can tie them in legal knots."
Leara wiggles her fingers at him, her rings glittering in the candlelight, and Tullius finds himself speechless.
If the Dragonborn – Leara – can tie the Thalmor up with a loophole, how imminent would their retaliation be? Tullius is at once intrigued and put off.
She was mad.
"Here, you'll want to write . . ."
But by the Divines, he was going to help her anyway, wasn't he? If Leara could talk Ulfric off his warpath, then maybe there was something to her hair-brained scheme.
Tullius sees Leara a few days later. She's been to the Blue Palace and the Bards College, she tells him when he meets her again at the 'Skeever. She's combing through maps and treaties, drafting letters, and making lists. Her mind is running at speeds Tullius can't comprehend, and yet she keeps looking to him for advice.
As Leara stirs a lump of sugar into her snowberry spice tea and peruses another list, Tullius wonders if she did this with Ulfric when she went to ask him to consider peace.
Her penmanship is as poised as the rest of her. He cannot see her against the harsh stony backdrop of Windhelm, amidst the snow and vitriol. She's too civilized for Skyrim. She's almost too civilized for Cyrodiil, but Tullius won't think of that.
He doesn't have a chance to give it much thought anyway when she's asking him about neutrality and the terms of the Concordat.
It's late when Tullius leaves her the second time. As he leaves, she's carrying a stack of papers upstairs. She has a hopeful lift in her step.
Tullius almost smiles.
Almost.
The next morning, Legate Rikke drops a new report on his desk. It's from Captain Aldis.
"What's this, Legate?" "There was a break-in, sir." "And we're concerned with this, because?"
Legate Rikke's jaw tightens, her eyes are wide. Whatever it is has unsettled her.
"It was at The Winking Skeever."
She sighs. Heavy. It's a familiar frustration.
"General, I believe that the Thalmor were exercising their Concordat-given rights."
A pit settles in Tullius's stomach.
"They took the Dragonborn, sir." "On what grounds?" "It doesn't say. sir. It doesn't even mention the Thalmor at all. But you know–"
Tullius doesn't hear the rest of the sentence because he realizes his mistake. He should never have discussed the possibility of an armistice with Leara in a public room. Who overheard her? Who saw Leara's notes and lists and books? Who ratted her out to the Thalmor?
Tullius's fist clenches, his knuckles pale. The one person with a Divine's chance in Oblivion to bring a favorable resolution to the Civil War and the Thalmor took her like every Talos worshipper the Empire was supposed to turn a blind eye too.
He paces around his office. Legate Rikke has left him alone, and now all Tullius can do is think and walk. Turn. Think and walk. Turn. The cycle repeats throughout his office. He only suspects that the Thalmor took Leara. Without concrete proof, he can't accuse them or he'll risk something far more uncomfortable than paperwork. But if he does nothing, then every hope for peace in Skyrim vanishes in the Dragonborn's wake.
Tullius stopped in the middle of his office, standing at a crossroads. Was it possible to ascertain that the Thalmoor abducted Leara and to request her freedom without bringing Elenwen down on his head? Probably not. But . . .
Tullius recalled the wide eyes, the fear swimming in the teary blue when Leara was faced with Elenwen at High Hrothgar. At the time, Tullius didn't think much of the Dragonborn's aversion to her. Most people hated the Thalmor Ambassador on a good day. But the terror that flickered in Leara's face before she grew cold and distant and manipulated the entire table to her own ends came back to him.
No, Tullius knew Elenwen personally had the Dragonborn. There was a history there he couldn't see, but it peeked at the edges of his vision in brilliant horror.
Elenwen had Leara, and she wouldn't let the half-elf go lightly.
If Leara could cheat an entire room of warring politicians and soldiers while ensuring a truce, then Tullius could sure as Hell try to manipulate Elenwen.
Sitting at his desk, the General ruled out any official Legion channels. Those would be tied back to him and ruin any chance Leara had of negotiating her armistice. Something under the table, then.
Mercenaries were messy. Robbing Elenwen would take a different hand. He grimaces and drafts a letter.
General . . .
The messenger hawk returns the next evening. Tullius doesn't want to think about why the hawk returned so quickly. He just hoped his charade would hold.
(Writing Galmar Stone-Fist of all people to encourage a Stormcloak raid on Northwatch Keep was something Tullius knew he could never live down if it got back to any of his superiors in Cyrodiil. He couldn't trust that General Stone-Fist would take an anonymous tip at face value, but as Leara soliloquised late that last night,)
"The enemy of my enemy is my friend."
It's four long days of giving only half his attention to his job before an Imperial scout reports that the Stormcloaks attacked the Thalmor fortress of Northwatch. When the Legion got there, nothing was left but smoldering ruins.
"They had a dragon, sir."
Tullius didn't want to know how they had a dragon, but he was optimistic that it meant Leara made it out of there alive.
With the Stormcloaks, but alive.
He sleeps through the night for the first time in over a week. When Tullius wakes up, he wonders how he could turn to the rebels to save the Dragonborn. Effective, yes, but it went against everything he was supposed to represent.
But she's alive.
She would be dead or worse off if he hadn't done it.
Tullius uses that thought to bolster himself through the coming weeks.
Then, a letter addressed to Tullius comes by way of Whiterun of all places. He recognizes the slender script curling his name across the paper. It's a short letter asking him to retrieve her belongings from her room at the 'Skeever. Two things stand out to him: The first is the thank you. Tullius cannot tell what Leara means by it because he knows that Stone-Fist didn't know who sent the tip about Northwatch. And yet there's a tearstain on the parchment, small and alone as if any others were quickly dashed away after the first one fell. The second is that all her books, papers, the things she worked on for her peace talk were all hidden in a panel behind the bookshelf in her boardroom.
Tullius didn't even think of Leara losing all her work. He was more concerned about getting her out. He was more worried about her than anything else.
Tullius buries his face in his hands.
This was a familiar feeling. It'd been years since the last time he felt like this.
Although, Tullius gave himself a wry smile, he doubted he'd have betrayed the Empire for the Countess of Anvil's cousin.
Tullius goes early the next morning to retrieve Leara's things, hidden or otherwise. A member of his spy network is tasked with getting the parcels to a Lydia in Whiterun. Then Tullius watches as every connection he has to the Dragonborn disappears out the doors of Castle Dour.
It's back to the everyday humdrum of war, then.
Until, some months later, a familiar half-elf comes into Solitude. Now, she's accompanied by a dark-haired Nord woman in heavy armor. Her stormy expression and hawkish eyes remind Tullius of Rikke at times. Leara introduces her as Lydia, her housecarl. Then Leara is handing him a folio of papers.
"I've been corresponding with some of the Elder Council. I'm planning a summit in Whiterun."
He takes the folio from her.
"What's this?" "My draft for a permanent peace treaty. I thought that since you helped me, you'd like to peruse it. Of course, I need to get it to Jarl Elisif when you're finished."
That Leara is offering to let him be a part of her peace treaty isn't lost on Tullius. He sets the folio on the table but leaves his hand on top, protecting it.
"I can come back for it tomorrow." "I'll get it back to you tonight."
Legate Rikke coughs, obviously. Tullius adds,
". . . we can discuss it over dinner, if you like?"
Leara's smile is full.
"I would like that."
They don't end up talking much about the draft. But Tullius gives Leara some of his favorite brandy after their dinner of roast lamb and stewed vegetables. Her giggle is light and airy, and her hand is cool like spring water when he takes it across the table.
Perhaps he drank more than he should have, but liquid courage was a reassuring friend.
At the end of the night, Leara, tipsy and yet all grace, presses a petal soft kiss to the corner of his mouth. She pulls away.
His hands slide up her arms, callused fingers catching on the soft linen of her sleeves. And he pulls her back and kisses her, full and properly on the mouth.
Leara tastes of tea and winter and something floral and frosted. There's more than magic in her mouth – there's music and mercy. If Tullius wasn't drunk before, he finds himself intoxicated on Leara.
She strokes his face, smiling, always smiling, and then backs away. Her eyes are bright and liquid and as deep as Lake Rumare. In the low glow of golden orange firelight, she is beautiful.
He loves her.
He doesn't say it, and soon she's gone, slipping through doors into the night. An angel passing from the room.
The next day, he finds that she left him her address. It had been a long time since Tullius even tried to write a love letter. They were never his strong suit, but Leara had a way of inspiring madness in him. He wrote her.
And Leara wrote him back.
Again and again and again.
Tullius doesn't expect for his presence to be needed when the summit is called in Whiterun. The Empire has its own group of delegates to negotiate the terms of Skyrim's division. But still, Elisif the Fair says that General Tullius has been asked to attend. The young queen seems as if she can't quite believe it, but she was often wide-eyed and overwhelmed as it was.
(Maybe Julia was right. He should listen to Elisif more. But pretty soon, it was likely Tullius would never see the Queen of Solitude again.)
Leara is there in Whiterun, laying out the terms of the Armistice with the light and delicacy he'd come to expect from her. How many others here knew she was anxious that things would crumble apart, that things would come to blows, and that the war would escalate for all her efforts to temper the fire?
Ulfric's face is a dark stormcloud, but somehow the Jarl of Windhelm appears to hold his tongue around the Dragonborn. He watches her, defers to her, and in return, Leara smiles at him.
Tullius is simply in an advisory position for the Imperial delegates to mine information on the state of the Civil War and the Imperial Legion. He never speaks to Ulfric, and seldom to Leara during the weeklong summit. But he sees the Jarl speak to her between sessions. Leara is quiet and nods. Her eyes are faraway and thoughtful.
Tullius remembers that when she first brought the idea of the summit to him, Leara mentioned that she convinced Ulfric to agree to it. For the first time, Tullius wonders how Leara went about winning Ulfric Stormcloak to her side.
His chest burns.
When the Armistice is signed and Skyrim divided in two–
"Divided, you can finally be united."
Leara said.
–there is a feast. Leara is in demand all night. Tullius watches from the sidelines, some Cyrodilic brandy in hand as he watches one person after another flit around her, bees buzzing around a blooming rose. After a while, Tullius gets up and retires to the quiet of the Dragonsreach porch.
He isn't out there long when the doors open again. From the dark stairwell where he sat, he saw Leara flit by, orbited by Ulfric.
Tullius's hand tightened on his glass.
"You must be relieved that's over." "I'm glad we could reach a resolution."
She deflected Ulfric's concern with a wave of her hand.
But Tullius knew the truth: She was terrified of the summit. She was terrified she'd fail.
"What will you do now?"
Leara's question broke through Tullius's thoughts.
Ulfric shifted.
"There's much to do. Skyrim hasn't been in a state like this since the Second Era. I'll need to work quickly to bring stability to the east before we can truly reap any of tonight's rewards." "You have a busy schedule, Jarl Ulfric! [her laugh is musical] Even when my work ends, you still have so much to do!" "Leara . . ."
There's a hesitation in Ulfric's voice that Tullius never would have imagined from the man who Shouted High King Torygg apart. Leara's responding,
"Yes, Ulfric?"
is careful.
"I was hoping that you would come to Windhelm with me. To help me." "Help you? As an advisor? Certainly, but–" "Not as an advisor. Not . . . as you're thinking. Leara, surely you must know what I feel for you." "Oh."
If Tullius didn't fear being caught, he'd have stormed from the porch. Or over to Ulfric and pushed him off. Or something. His blood was rushing in his ears.
Certainly, he and Leara hadn't truly defined what it was between them. This week was the first time he'd seen her since kissing her that night in Solitude, and in this week, they'd hardly been alone together long enough to discuss anything beyond the summit and the usual pleasantries.
But her letters were candid and funny and full of ideas. Her mind spilled across the page in curling and shifting lines.
Tullius knew then that while he had Leara's mind, there was every possibility that Ulfric had her heart. She was as divided as Skyrim was.
"Ulfric–" "While Skyrim was at war, I knew I couldn't give you the attention you deserved. But now that we can have some peace, I wish to ask you for your hand. Leara, you ignite a fire in my chest that burns my heart when you are near. Please do me the honor of agreeing to marry me."
There's silence. Long, drawn-out silence. Somewhere on the plains, a wolf howls. Its cry echoes the pain in Tullius's chest.
"Ulfric . . ."
Leara's voice is choked, emotional but she is forcing it down.
"Ulfric, you're very dear to me, but I can't marry you."
It was only Ulfric's loud,
"You can't? Why?"
That covered the sound of Tullius's brandy glass slipping to shatter on the stone stairs.
Leara hesitated.
"I can't give you my heart because it belongs to someone else. I can't take it back." "Who?"
Leara quieted.
"Please, Leara, if you won't marry me, then allow me the courtesy of knowing who I lost you to!" "I–"
Leara choked.
Tullius's heart sped up as his hands shook. He was as anxious as Ulfric to hear her answer.
"You won't like it." "Who is it? Galmar? I know he was the one to pull you from that Thalmor pit."
Divines. That would just be the cherry on top of this entire fiasco, wouldn't it?
"No, not . . . It's . . . General Tullius."
The silence that followed was more deafening than any that proceeded it. Even from the darkened stairwell, Tullius could since the thunder around Ulfric, rumbling silent and yet violent.
"You won't marry me because you're in love with Tullius?" "If that's how you want to put it, yes, that's it." "Leara – I, he . . ."
For once, all of Ulfric's fine speeches seemed to fail him.
"Please don't be upset."
Leara's voice is as soothing as the first spring rain, as far apart from Ulfric's hurricane as possible.
There was a rustle of skirts.
"You are a very important person to me, for more than you can possibly know, but I can't give you the love you want. It's not mine to give you." "But Tullius–" "Has been so vital to me during these last several months. We would not have this peace if not for him. I needed him." "I need you." "I know, but I've given you all I can. I can't give you any more."
Tullius peeks around the corner far enough to see Leara on her tiptoes. She whispers something in Ulfric's ear, then presses a fleeting kiss to his cheek. Tullius ducks back just in time to be hidden as Ulfric turns and leaves the porch. The doors shut behind him with a whisper of finality.
"You can come out now, General."
Tullius's knees are stiff as he gets up from the steps. Leara is waiting for him in the middle of the porch, her red hair a dark contrast against the white gold of her skin and the pale ivory of her gown. She's aetheric in the moon and aurora lights.
"I hope you finished your brandy before the glass fell."
His neck grows warm with embarrassment.
"Is that how you knew I was there?"
Leara's coy smile was her only answer. Yes, then. Well.
"Ulfric Stormcloak proposed to you." "Yes, he did." "And you turned him down." "Yes, I did. " "Why . . ."
Her hand was on the side of his face. She was perhaps a hairsbreadth taller than him, maybe an inch, but her hand felt so small against his face that Tullius couldn't help but reach up and clasp it with his own for fear that it slip away.
"I thought you were eavesdropping." "Well, I wouldn't say that–" "And, therefore, would know why I turned Ulfric down."
Tullius tries to swallow, but his throat is tight. Leara's hand is cool against his skin, and he takes comfort in that.
"You love me." "Yes, I do."
Her smile is radiant.
Tullius's hand slips from Leara's, but then his arms are around her waist, pulling her into him. She is slim and cool and everything a flower in winter might be. He buries his nose in her neck, amidst the frost and flowers.
"I love you."
She doesn't reply. She only tightens her arms around his torso. They stand there in the quiet of the night, away from the celebrations but togehter under the stars.
Later, when Tullius returns to Solitude for the last time, he packs his things for the return to the Imperial City. He takes his bags to the docks.
And there Leara is waiting for him, Lydia her housecarl in tow. She smiles at him, full and vivid.
"You're late. My trunks are already on board. Right, Lydia?"
Lydia rolls her eyes.
"All eleven of them, my Thane."
Tullius chuckles, quiet.
Leara's hand finds his, and he helps her up the gangplank of the Imperial Naval ship. It would be a long voyage, but Leara had never sailed before, so that would be their mode of transportation back to the Imperial City.
"What will we do when we get there?"
Leara's question is teasing and free of the burden of being Dragonborn and peacemaker. There were still the Thalmor to worry about, but after the ruin of Northwatch and the signing of the armistice, Tullius hoped they'd think thrice before going after Leara again.
"I'll buy you expensive teas and you'll drain my accounts on tea and books."
Her giggle rang out amidst the sounds of the ship preparing to leave the harbor.
"Oh yes, that must be why I've gone and married you."
Tullius pulled his wife to his side and slipped his arm around her waist.
"Must be."
It couldn't possibly be that she was the most maddening thing in the world and she drove him mad by proximity.
Madly in love.
What nonsense.
fin
37 notes · View notes
myloish · 6 months
Text
there's this thing with critical role (and RP shows in general but most of my experience is with CR,) where you are aware that you are watching both a narrative unfold in real-time, but that it is also being done through a group of people who are also having fun, and making jokes, and are really tuned in for the moment
and so because of this, sometimes things in-game happen because someone at the table was feeling a little sillay, and sometimes that has long-term ramifications (🦌🐟). and sometimes it's a spur of the moment thing that could be important, but there are a lot of important things going on, and so it gets pushed under the rug
it also doesn't help that sessions are at least a week apart, and it just seems difficult to carry too much negative energy between characters week-to-week. If this were all happening consecutively to a written character, they'd feel the frustrations pile up fast. but there's a lot of breathing room between all of the small things, and unless someone deliberately keeps note of those things and repeatedly brings them up (bard's lament), they do kind of just get dropped.
and so you end up with people who are just like. waiting for imogen to tear orym apart because he gave laudna a beat of approval for the bor'dor incident. you end up with people who spent the entirety of late CR2 waiting for the nein to reckon with how they mistreated, or at least underappreciated, caduceus. (🙋‍♀️)
and on the one hand it's like, yeah, these actions could have consequences. and it'd be really great if that did get explored in canon. but it's also funny going from scathing twitter threads about the weak, fractal connections of these characters that are sure to blow up in their face, and then the next episode imogen is giving orym a piggyback ride through the sky.
33 notes · View notes
carebeartherese · 9 months
Text
In honor of the revival of the whrp site, I give you a poll
25 notes · View notes
solivagantingrebel · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
Ofc Soap would, alongside other kinds of begging,,, if you know what I mean 😳
11 notes · View notes
im-tempted · 5 months
Text
I love when my mutuals get consumed by the blorbos
9 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Day 19- Crown
What you can't flawlessly recreate ancient jewellery from ice after only seeing em once? Ok, cringe.
(Edit: his face and the shading was irritating the heck outta me so i fixed that up!)
100 notes · View notes
childishfirmino · 5 months
Note
I wanna say that the new theme is spectacular i love it 🥹 Gavi holding you, cause you’re my world, yk yk
Tumblr media
thank you bestie ♥️ idc if it’s barely november ITS CHRISTMAS TIME ok
as a globe, I can confirm that gavi is holding me
and look!! here’s a pic of pepi holding YOU 🫵🏽
Tumblr media
(see?? right there)
7 notes · View notes
suffarustuffaru · 5 months
Note
Hello! I just want to share this because I know you're the biggest Ottosuba fan: I saw an Animate interview where Kobayashi (Subaru's VA) described Subaru and Otto's friendship as "a lover (Otto) who's waiting for him (Subaru)"
(link: https://www.animatetimes.com/news/details.php?id=1601378064&p=3)
THANK YOU ANON you know me very well. i do not understand jp T^T but!! thats very interesting 👀👀 thank you for sharing. ill take your word for it ig i mean. subarus va is right. is that not the essence of ottos entire character.
10 notes · View notes
persephoneflouwers · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
seravphs · 7 months
Note
sera the overwhelming amt of comfort i felt seeing ur post . u have come back to appease us all <333333 ure so right.
LMAO LOVE YOU 💗 I sensed a disturbance in the Gojo girlies’ (gn) psyche and knew I had to return.
9 notes · View notes
crehador · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
woag... parallels
12 notes · View notes
Text
the way we know nothing about kuwabara's dad. the way he doesn't show up at all until the epilogue chapters. why is he not portrayed as someone who kazu and shizu wouldn't care about like yusuke's dad. they're like. the same to me. neither show up even until the end except atsuko tells yusuke's dad that he wouldn't be welcome while that same logic isn't applied to Mr. Kuwabara and i have no idea why
so in chapter 170 he comes outta nowhere and starts talking about the stuff that's gone on so far and kazuma is like "who tf told you" which means they don't talk to him. we don't even SEE shizuru interact with the guy. the only ref to her he makes is talking about her accepting yukina into their household.
he gives off the vibes of an estranged older family member like an uncle that you never see but it's bad because he's their DAD. they don't even mention the kuwabara siblings having a mom and no other guardian is mentioned so that means their dad was the only one but we NEVER SEE HIM TIL NOW. where the hell was he while all this shit was going down?? obviously he heard about it so why didn't he come check on them earlier? maybe it's just a plot hole but honestly i just think he sucks so bad lmao
the fact that he came back randomly without saying anything and made it clear that he heard about all the world changing things going on and maybe even heard about what his son's been getting into and this is the first time we're seeing his face. Shizuru has been taking care of her brother all this time and they both went to the demon world for the dark tournament that kazu participated in at FOURTEEN. he almost died several times before and after this and no father in sight for either of them. idk man just something about it
6 notes · View notes
cannibalisticskittles · 5 months
Text
in the fic, astarion's view of amity for a long time is. generally conciliatory, far too willing to go out of her way to do shit for other people, really focused on peaceful solutions. yeah, she's a good fighter, but it's all pretty standard sorcerer stuff, nothing too noteworthy
and then at some point, they split off and amity goes with lae'zel and shadowheart to check the path ahead of something, while he and wyll and gale, idk, finish packing up the camp
and then the girls come back moderately wounded bc apparently there was an ambush ahead but it's Fine it's All Good Now, Nothing To Worry About; someone cast silence so amity and shadowheart had to rely on martial prowess rather than spells and they just weren't expecting that but Everything Is Fine. sure, okay, whatever, astarion doesn't really care.
except that lae'zel is... more pleased than she has any right to be, even for a successful small battle. she remarks that amity was a 'vision of death,' and she's pleased to know that amity can hold her own even without the use of those spells she's so fond of.
astarion... brushes this off. he's sure it was nothing too interesting, and that lae'zel is just easier to impress than he'd thought.
and then later on they encounter auntie ethel and amity immediately goes at her with her bare hands, trying to bite off chunks of her face and eventually burning a hole through ethel's throat and reaching into her body to keep trying to burn up her insides
and astarion thinks back to that night in the woods where he directly insulted amity to her face multiple times and realizes how close to death he might have been
3 notes · View notes
thedeathdeelers · 8 months
Text
when it’s a star wars meme
it’s a…,
star lols
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
asteromorph · 2 years
Text
anime dedede may suck but at least we got this cute moment
Tumblr media
63 notes · View notes