imindhowwelayinjune:

I’ve been thinking a lot about Celegorm lately. Not Celegorm the handsome, sometimes charming, often crude rogue who teases his brothers and alarms the genteel, but Celegorm in Beleriand, Celegorm the terrifying.

Celegorm the Fair, dripping in blood. Celegorm all the more frightening because he can seem so jovial, and laugh so brightly. He who you do not believe could be subtle, as he stalks through the halls with a pack of jubilant dogs at his side, he who drinks hard and laughs loud and does not temper his voice – but who walks with absolutely silent tread, who comes up on you unawares, whom you do not sense until his breath is on the back of your neck.

They all have stories of Celegorm the Hunter, Celegorm the Wild, Celegorm the Mad. 

Once, on a hunt, his bow broke, and his knife was lost, and so he tore the hart’s throat out with his bare hands.

That’s nothing; I saw him do it with his teeth.

Ai, wait until you’ve seen him do the same in battle…

Celegorm who needs nought but hands and teeth and fear to hunt, whether his prey is a rabbit, or a deer, or an orc, or a man.

Or an elf.

They whisper of the rites he performs in the woods, when he returns with dried blood crusted under his nails and his eyes bright and burning. He still burns the offerings of the old world, and whispers fey prayers in an ancient tongue, and they shiver, and say he is invoking his old friend, the Huntsman.

But he is of the Seven Dispossessed, the Irreverent, they who recognize no gods, no over-lords, no Valar…

It is not homage. It is respect. 

It is habit.

It is not worship.

(It is worship, a little.)

Do you think the Huntsman still hears him?

Well, has he ever missed a kill?

He hasn’t.

Celegorm the Fey, who whispers dark things in the ears of picketed horses and laughs to see them pull up their lines and flee.

He likes his fun, says his brother, the crafty one, the shade of the Spirit of Fire, his eyes like flint and his tone dismissive. Pay it no heed. (It is not a suggestion, but a command.)

Celegorm the Damned, who fears nothing in the dark forest, for there is nothing more terrifying than he. Celegorm the Blood-Soaked, Celegorm the Merciless, Celegorm who paints himself with blood for battle, who tattoos thorns beneath his skin, who dresses his pale hair with pretty beads, made of bone; brilliant gems, grinning death-heads.

Celegorm the Fair, aye, fair indeed. Fairest of the monsters. 

Fics Masterlist

beauty-grace-outer-space:

beauty-grace-outer-space:

I decided to make a masterlist of my fics in chronological order. My fics, while being stand alone pieces, are all tied together with small details here and there, and do follow the canonical AOS timeline. 

Academy Era: 

You’re a Casualty I Can’t Forget (Learn to Trust Me)

Summary: Jim has wormed his way into Len’s life after that fateful shuttle ride and a few shared drinks. He also hates doctors. Len doesn’t quite know why. One accident, two injuries, and an involuntary confinement later, he finds out. Mentions of Tarsus, mentions of past abuse, minor descriptions of medical treatment. 

If You Need a Place to Crash (Let Me Catch You When You Fall)

Summary: Jim’s roommate is a dick. Bones is there to help. Close quarters means finding out stuff about the other person, and not all of it pleasant. Jim doesn’t sleep on his back for a reason. Mentions of past abuse, canon character death. 

You’re One of Us (You’re Here To Stay)

Summary: Thanksgiving at the McCoy house, complete with Len, JoJo, Mama Bones and Jim. There’s food, and pie, and with a kid and a bigger, older kid (Jim) running around, something was bound to get broken eventually. Jim’s not used to normal family dynamics, and overreacts a little. Mentions of past abuse, minor medical treatment. 

Star Trek 2009:

These Ghosts Are Not My Own

Summary: 

Post-Narada and Jim isn’t coping. He hasn’t eaten or slept, he’s beat all to hell and his head is full of memories that he’s pretty sure aren’t his. He’s pretty sure he’s having a panic attack, and he can’t seem to breath. Of course Bones is here to witness it all. Wonderful. Mentions of Tarsus, mentions of past abuse.

And It’s Never Enough (But God Knows I Tried)

Summary: Jim doesn’t feel like he did enough to prevent the aftermath of Nero’s devastation. Awaiting Starfleet’s decision about his probation, he sits alone watching the news and drinking. They’re spouting the same old stuff: hero of the federation, golden boy of Starfleet. He thinks it’s all a bunch of bullshit. Bones thinks otherwise. Can be read as an interlude between chapters 2 and 3 of “These Ghosts…”

Star Trek 2009- Pre Into Darkness: 

By Any Other Name (The Man is Still the Same) 

Summary: Spock does not understand. Kirk has been, thus far, immensely successful as captain, well liked and respected by the crew, despite his multiple ongoing breaches of Starfleet protocol. He simply refused to call anyone by their proper title, and it perplexed Spock to no end. Minor violence, mentions of past abuse. 

How Jim Learned to Keep a Shirt On

Summary: A sunburn can really teach one a lot of things. For example, Jim is pretty sure he’s dying. Bones does not seem to agree. This has taught Jim that Bones clearly doesn’t know what he’s talking about, medical degrees or no. Mentions of past abuse. 

Post Into Darkness: 

If He Should Die Before He Wakes (I Pray the Lord My Soul to Take)

Summary: Bones sits at Jim’s bedside after the events of Khan and the warp core. Jim won’t wake up. Bones needs him to. Mentions of past abuse, minor medical treatment.

Resurrection: The Year After

Summary:
Post-Into Darkness. Jim has a long recovery period ahead of him. Coming
back from the dead ain’t easy, and putting someone back together after a
trauma like that is no walk in the park. Thankfully, he has a pretty
amazing crew to help him through it. My NaNoWriMo contribution for 2017.

Mentions of past abuse, Tarsus IV, medical treatment, PTSD, depression, grieving and disordered eating.

Just Leave Your Problems On the Shelf (We’ll Be Alright)

Summary: A few months into the 5 year mission, Jim, in a fit of frustration, says something insensitive. Bones doesn’t react well, and a long overdue conversation is had. Discussion of canon character death. 

Figured I should add Resurrection to this mess.

Going Down In Flames

lady–of–greenwood:

The war had been devastating. Valar and Maiar, Elves and Men, taking up arms against the forces of Melkor – Morgoth as the children of Eru had named him – and these powers clashing had torn the realm asunder.

But even all the death and destruction raging around them, it could not compare to what happened when Manwë struck the final blow against his brother, binding him in Angainor, the old chain.

The capture of a Valar as powerful as Melkor – one who was so entwined with Beleriand as he –  echoed across the fabric of the world, creating fissures where none should be, and Eönwë would feel Arda shake beneath his feet.

The remains of the two armies froze as Melkor’s was dragged away, standing still for but a moment before his influence was torn away.

And then, Beleriand buckled one last time…and it broke. The shadows so closely entwined with the land were ripped out, great chasms opening where they had been and lava too hot even for Aulë and his children came to air as the sea rose to swallow what broke away from the rest of Middle-earth.

Eönwë sprang away from a spout of lava, taking to the air but lost hold of the helmet with the Silmarils his Lord had entrusted to him in the progress. Around him Maiar gathered the survivors of their own armies and brought them to safety as Melkor’s creations fled from the battlefield, the helmet lost in the chaos.

He saw Balrogs, trying to reach the molten rock that spilled out over dead earth, swallowed by sudden waters that perhaps even Ulmo could not control. Their large, flaming bodies died in clouds of steam that rose to the skies, mingled with the shadows that had yet to disperse and turned to acrid smoke that burned Eonwë’s lungs like poison.

He ducked down below the cover of steel grey clouds, searching the shifting, breaking, sinking, ground for familiar faces.

He spied the remaining sons of Fëanor disappear beyond the horizon, saw Curumo and Olórin support each other onto backs of eagles as they fled, orcs and wolves who possessed neither magic nor the love of Eru sink into lava or drown in icy waves. Where the flood came from suddenly he could not tell but it washed away the stench of evil and the blood of Ancalagon as it began to flood into ruined Angband.

He could feel Yavanna’s powers flow into the root of every tree and flower, coaxing them to support Beleriand long enough for the Host of the West to retreat but even her powers were not enough against the force tearing the already dying land apart.

A flash of red caught his attention out of the corner of his eye and he swerved, dodging around a slab of rock that shot into the air to sink like a damaged ship, and his gaze fell upon–

“Mairon,” he breathed. His former friend had fought his way through the fleeing masses and now knelt over his Master’s discarded helm. How he had found it was a mystery he had no mind to solve so Eönwë beat his wings and sped towards him. His feet touched ground just as a terrible cry wrenched itself from Mairon’s throat. The broken voice pierced through him like ice.

Never had he known Mairon to be anything but completely controlled, no matter the circumstances. Even when Manwë had questioned him about possible traitors among the Maiar he had been calm and collected, no shred of emotion he did not want revealed forthcoming.

But now, his armour gone, his hair loose and eyes brimming with tears, Eönwë looked at his friend and, for the first time, saw a stranger.

“Mairon,” he whispered carefully, casting a quick look around them. Lava and sea were closing in rapidly, two mighty waves ready to clash where they now stood. “We have to go.” Mairon ignored him or was unable to hear him.

“We cannot remain here!” Eonwë tried, louder this time. “I will drag you away if I must!“

Once again, Mairon did not react. Instead, he sank low, his head falling to his knees. His shoulders shook, the helmet with the Silmarils forgotten in the dirt beside him.

Eönwë looked around again – the two waves were too close already – and quickly came to a conclusion.

He unfolded his wings and took off. With one great swoop he wound his arm around Mairon’s waist and snatched the helmet up before rising high, high into the burning smoke as below them elements crashed and mingled, pulling the remains of Beleriand down with them.

Mairon was limp in his hold, unmoving as a corpse, and Eönwë sighed as he carried him away to the new and jagged coast of Middle-earth.

There he set Mairon down, watched as his friend fell to his knees and did not rise. He looked so small, vulnerable. It crushed Eonwë’s heart.

He looked down at the helmet still held in his other hand and plucked a feather from his wing, using the sharp point to pry the Silmarils out of their sockets.

As soon as he was done Mairon lunged at him, a clumsy movement very unlike his usual grace, taking the helmet and hugging it close to his chest.

For a moment, there was silence, the only sound the steady pling of tears hitting black steel.

Eönwë sighed. “I’m sorry.” Mairon sobbed once and fell silent again, not speaking. “I wasn’t aware he meant this much to you.”

Mairon snorted, half incredulous and half disgusted, yet he did not raise his head to look at Eonwë. “Doesn’t matter now, does it?” he said, a rough edge to his voice. The tears had stopped. “Since your Master will kill him.”

Eönwë closed his eyes for a moment, sighing through his nose. “I know.”

Mairon hugged the helmet closer to him still, his shoulder hunched. “What happens now?”

“Lord Manwë did not say,” Eönwë answered. “The goal was to…defeat Melkor and his armies.” He paused. “You are defeated.”

“Really? I hadn’t noticed.” Eönwë would have been relieved to hear his friend’s clever tongue return, had it not been for the bitter, hollow tone of his voice. Eönwë took a breath to reply something when Mairon’s voice interrupted him, so small he almost missed them. “If I surrender here, what would become of me?”

Before Eönwë could reply he felt an insistent tugging upon the bond he shared with his Master. Manwë’s gentle worry and calming light flooded his mind, accompanied by a question of his whereabouts. Eönwë replied the same way, told him quickly of what had happened and asked the same question Mairon had.

Dimly, he could feel Mairon attempting something similar, reaching across the bond towards his own Master. Whatever the answer was, it made him crumble further over the helmet.

“They order you back,” Eönwë relayed Manwë’s words. “You shall receive your punishment alongside your Master.”

Mairon nodded slowly. “I see,” he said tonelessly. “So I am to be killed as well?”

Eönwë recoiled in shock. “No!” he exclaimed. “My Lord would not do such a thing! You will be punished but you will receive a second chance, free of his influence. I am sure of it.”

Mairon finally raised his head to fix eyes like golden flame on him, though their glow was muted with grief. “Can you promise that?” he asked. “Can you, a lowly Maia, promise the Valar will be merciful?”

For a long moment, no words came to Eonwë. He could not, he knew, promise such a thing. It was not in his power to promise forgiveness or pardons, only to follow the Valar’s orders. He had not to power to reassure Mairon of anything.

Mairon, it seemed, already knew the answer for he chuckled without mirth and slowly pushed to his feet. He was unsteady, the strength of his fire sapped away by the knowledge of what awaited his Master. “Then I shall graciously refuse your offer.” He spat out the last word like a nasty curse.

“But,” Eönwë said, taking a step towards his former friend, “you were ordered to return, Mairon. You cannot refuse a direct order!”

Mairon rolled his eyes and gnawed on his lower lip, shifting his weight from one foot to another. “True,” he said. “But I am not. My orders say that I must live. And so I shall.”

“But Lord Manwë–”

“I do not care in any way what your Lord Manwë has to say!” Mairon barked, his eyes flashing. “I only take orders from one Vala and his orders are clear. I cannot return with you.”

Mairon…” Eönwë tried reaching out for one trembling shoulder but Mairon snatched his wrist, searing Eonwë’s skin with the intensity of the fire coursing through his veins. The contrast between Mairon’s pale and Eonwë’s warm rosewood tones was jarring, like a visual representation of the difference between them. Once upon a time they had joked about their differences, now it shook Eönwë to his core.

“I will not crawl back to them, I will not be humiliated by them, I will remain alive and free just as Melkor wished for me and nothing you say or do will change my mind,” Mairon hissed, his fingers a vice Eönwë could not break.

“Who are you?” Eönwë breathed, feeling the sting to his heart more keenly than his burning flesh. “You are not the Mairon I once knew.”

Mairon paused, a sneer pulling at his lips. “The Mairon you knew was never real,” he said. “I am the true Mairon, free of your inane desire for superficial peace. I am no longer a slave to your precious Valar, I belong only to myself and my Lord. And you took him from me.” His voice fell dangerously low, bottomless rage and hatred in his eyes, a note of madness in his words.

Eönwë could not help his tears now, his voice lost between emotions. When his wrist was abruptly released he stumbled back, Silmarils clutched in his hands hard enough he could feel every cut Fëanor had ever made upon them.

“Do not look for me,” Mairon said, suddenly calm. “All you will find is your death.” And then, in a flash of flame and shadows, he was gone.

Eönwë could not tell how long he stood there, unmoving, before Manwë’s voice calling him home broke through the ringing in his ears. When he returned, judgement had already been passed.

Melkor was no more.


“Live on, my love, and never forget that out of all the treasures I possessed, you were the greatest.”

The words were a hollow comfort, echoing through his mind like the drums on the battlefield, beating against the inside of his skull until he thought he would go mad. Or perhaps he already had, it was hard to tell.

He lay curled up on his side, the helmet clutched to his chest, on the floor of a cave he had found in the mountains. Mairon did not know how long he had been here, with his eyes closed, holding onto the bright thread of Melkor in his mind until it felt as if it was all there was. His wounds did not matter, his needs were unimportant, the war they had lost forgotten.

He could no longer hear Melkor’s voice, the Valar’s powers weakening their bond so far it was hard to even find Melkor on the other end, but his presence was still there.

Until it wasn’t.

When he finally felt the bond break, a final burst of warmth and affection his only warning, his mind did the same.

The Maia Mairon truly died that night, and Sauron rose up to replace him.

accio-shitpost:

after the battle of hogwarts, but before the new school year began, dumbledore’s pensieve was to be found standing in the hogwarts courtyard. harry and mcgonagall had agreed on it between themselves. it was protected against everything they could think of; offensive magic, physical attack, the weather. hogwarts extended its protections to cover it, and so it stood there, glowing invitingly, the memories flowing inside its bowl.

over the summer, they had discreetly invited as many people as they could think of to add their memories to the swirling mass. at first, it was just the people who had lost a family member – the weasleys, dennis creevey, tonks’ parents, aberforth dumbledore, lavender brown’s family. but others came, people who weren’t related to the dead but still held their memories, and the pensieve welcomed them.

those who visited the pensieve in that first year usually did with a person in mind. it wasn’t just hogwarts students, either – people made the journey by special permission of the headmistress, and were let in to see it for themselves. the same memories were replayed, over and over. fred grinning as he watched a first-year’s face break out into boils. dumbledore’s eyes twinkling as he addressed the great hall. dobby’s face lighting up as ron gifted him those mismatched socks. colin snapping pictures of harry and plastering them up around gryffindor tower. tonks making everyone laugh at the dinner table as she changed her nose into a pig snout. that first practical lesson with lupin, when they learned how to fight boggarts. lavender checking a star chart in divination. cedric and cho dancing at the yule ball. sirius feeding buckbeak in 12 grimmauld place. lily and james kissing at their wedding.

it wasn’t just harry’s friends. people harry had never heard of added their contributions for those he hadn’t known. a sixth year ravenclaw who had fallen whom harry had seen briefly before the fight, a seventh year hufflepuff who had vocally supported harry but whose name he couldn’t recall. one day crabbe’s mother appeared with a small silver bottle of her own, and they let her add her memories of a laughing baby boy among the rest. molly weasley arrived one day with two vials, one for each of her brothers. 

some people, they had no memories for. harry wished sorely that someone would come forward with memories of regulus black. all of the marauders’ school days were gone, at least as they saw them. people who had been the last survivors of their families and friends, up to the battle of hogwarts. their names were all that was left of them, and the deeds they left behind.

after a while, it wasn’t just the good memories. harry remembered seeing his father and snape, remembered how it had hurt – but also the satisfaction, in the end, of knowing that his father wasn’t a saint, that he was a person with flaws and failings as much as any. he looked at teddy lupin, who was just beginning to walk, and decided he had a right to know the whole truth, when he chose to see it.

harry confronting lupin in grimmauld place. sirius talking to kreacher. dumbledore turning away from harry. james and snape. all of this went into the mix, a record of lives that were complicated, of people who did things that were both for good and for ill.

this is who they were, the pensieve was there to say. this is who we were. remember us like this, those who are blessed to have any memories of us at all. we were people, all of us. remember us in our triumphs and our joys; remember us in our sorrows and our heartbreaks. look upon our deeds and judge us by them, if you will, but remember we were only human. keep this little part of us with you as you go about your days. we are gone, but you are not. so remember our lives.

simaethae:

In Angband, Maedhros had learned a great deal about testing
the limits of one’s bonds. Physical, or otherwise – manacles that could be
slipped, if one did not mind dislocating a joint or two; commands that could be
either defied, or followed with dumb literalism, wilfully taken to the wrong
ends.

He had been punished, but also, sometimes, rewarded. If he
amused. If he could sneak disobedience through, in the crack between word and
meaning, between his chains and the mountain wall.

“Please,” he said, begging, as he had not, upon
Thangorodrim, not until Fingon came. “Please, I don’t want to do this – “

The Havens of Sirion had no cliffs, were wet mud and tangled
reeds. Blood puddled, thin tendrils infiltrating through the silt, wavering on
the surface of the river.

A woman of his own people spat at him, as she died, before
the light still gleaming in her eyes went out. It wrenched at him, reminding
him.

This swear we all –

It was an oath to wriggle through, to break and crack and
evade. Fëanáro’s kin, he thought, and
was she not their kin, through her husband, of Turgon’s line – death will we deal him, but she was no him, she was neither Maia nor Elda nor
Aftercomer –

“Elwing!” he called, fighting through the rough dwellings
rising from the marshes, at the edge of the sea. There were guards, soldiers,
but the fearful remnants of the hidden kingdoms, of Doriath and Gondolin, were
little match for the Fëanorian veterans. Some had been only children when they
fled.

“Elwing, listen to me! We don’t want to do this!”

There were still children, even now, their screams high and
thin amid the clash of battle and the smoke coming up from the reeds.

Please,” he
called, following the light, cutting through a guard’s chest with a single
sword-blow, the blade grating on a rib as he tugged it back, to catch and parry
with the backswing, another trying to come up at his side. He surged forward,
momentum carrying him to crush the man’s face with the edge of his shield, in a
crunch of blood and splintering bone.

The Oath caught at his limbs, when he would have stood, and
let the blows land, and led him on: thinking, all this could stop, if she just gave us the Silmaril, I wouldn’t have
to –

One thing Maedhros had never learned was surrender. He went
on, and watched the light fading into the sea; then turned back, to his brothers,
and the dead.

hinsabbies:

Quick space husbands rec for some fabulous fics I’ve read recently and felt like sharing, this list will probably continue to be updated quite a bit and I’ll link it to my blog if anyone wishes to reference it

image

Animus by littlebirdtold (aos) | rate nc-17 | word count – 36,300

“Spock is well aware that he is an outsider on the Enterprise: he is intensely disliked by the crew, not to mention that he and Kirk detest each other. Spock is considering applying for a transfer when Starfleet announces that a tournament will be held between four starships on a planet that is rumored to be magical.”

Formalities by obstinatrix (tos) | rate – pg-13 

“McCoy hates formal dinners, he hates his dress shirt, and his life basically sucks enough as it is, without him having to deal with Kirk and Spock dancing in their bathroom, thank youvery much.”

How High The Moon by kyliselle (aos) | rate nc-17 | length – 38,500

“After the destruction of Vulcan, Spock shielded his mind to protect it from his broken bond with T’Pring. Little did he know another bond had already formed in its place.“ 

The Cold by TheProblematique (aos) | rate – fiction T | word count – 7,157 

“Spock is cold. Jim wants to help.”

The Hot by  TheProblematique (aos) | rate – fiction m | word count – 8,522

“Jim is cold. Spock is hot. Temperature-hot, of course.”

Lend Me Your Ears by  (aos) | rate – mature 

“An ear kink can go both ways, you know.”

Things We Don’t Say by garryowen | rate – nc-17 | length – 2,300

“Jim and Spock go winter camping during shore leave.”

Valens by Trista_zevkia (tos) | rate – R | length – 7,000

“Reverse kind of AU where St. Valentine’s Day does absolutely not exist on Earth; February 14th is a very normal day and there’s no other holiday that compensate for it, the concept of a day to celebrate love had simply never occurred to humanity.”

 Veritas by TheProblematique (aos) | rate – nc-17 | word count – 186,080 

“Captain James T. Kirk and Lieutenant Commander Spock are hereby charged with negligence and wanton misconduct due to their emotional compromise with each other.”

Unintended by  (tos) | rate – mature | word count – 33,723 

“‘You don’t know what happens in a marriage ceremony – we could’ve done it, unintentionally.’”

Almost Domestic by barrowjane | rate – pg-13

“’I think we need to set up some guidelines for shore leave,” Jim says, speaking mostly to the off-white ceiling. “You know, ground rules. A design schematic for having fun.‘”

A Level Course and True by brighteyed_jill (aos) | rate – nc-17 

“Spock is experiencing an unsettling emotional response in the wake recent events, but the very last thing that could possibly improve the situation is a late-night confrontation with James T. Kirk.”

Break Down and Tell by betweenthebliss (aos)| rate – pg-13 | word count – 4,450-ish

prompt – “Kirk’s angsting over his desire for Spock and hiding/avoiding the issue by doing as much work as possible – spock is clueless at first, but catches on, and making out ensues against a wall somewhere. or over a desk, if you’d prefer.”

Black Tie by TheProblematique (aos) | fiction T | word count – 11,078

“Spock is wearing a tuxedo without a tie. Where is it? Only Jim knows, and he’s not telling.”

Devil’s Bargain by  (tos) | rate – explicit | word count – 17,410

“Set after TMP. Spock’s impending pon farr makes him wary of agreeing to a second five-year mission, so Kirk agrees to lend a hand (so to speak) should the situation arise. What could possibly go wrong?”

A Dance In Shadow And Silence by  (tos) | rate – mature | word count – 15,158

“A shuttle crash leaves Spock, Sulu and Chekov adrift on a deserted ocean world. As Chekov fights for his life and Sulu tries desperately to save him, Spock reflects on the strong bond that exists between the two men and starts to wonder what it is he’s really afraid of in his friendship with Kirk…”

Every Hug by TheProblematique (aos) | word count – 50,295

“’The first time was involuntary, I am certain. He did not walk toward me so much as fall against me, body crumpling in a graceful arch. I remained still, unsure of how to proceed. "You’re alive” he breathed, so softly that only I could have heard him.’“

Faded Thoughts by Alice Aurelius (aos) | word count – 10,62 

"This was it. It was his last chance to say it.

‘I need you to know why I couldn’t let you die. Why I went back for you.’

Kirk and Spock’s thoughts during Kirk’s death scene.”

Textual Attraction by lalazee (aos) | Length – 15,900

“Valentine’s Day does not bring up pleasant memories for Cadet Kirk. But the serendipitous switch-up of his cell phone with a particular Vulcan professor’s will make his day far more interesting –and romantic. Perhaps some new memories can be made!”

For Today by Kembas (tos) | word count – 40,107 

“Yet another pon farr story (can there ever be enough?)”

Interruptions by  (aos) | rate – explicit | word count – 3,396

“Arriving late at his apartment, Commander Spock is greeted by a rather disgruntled lover. A few kisses and all is forgiven, however, as things gets hot and heavy the pair is interrupted. Jim is not pleased, but he rolls well with the punches.”

Baseball’s Golden Boys– And Their Shocking Affair! – Haberdashette – ダイヤのA | Daiya no A | Ace of Diamond [Archive of Our Own]

haberdashette:

“Did you know we’ve been lovers since high school?” Kazuya notes.
“Honestly, Sawamura, you owe me a decade’s worth of anniversary gifts.
You’re a terrible boyfriend.”

Baseball’s Golden Boys– And Their Shocking Affair! – Haberdashette – ダイヤのA | Daiya no A | Ace of Diamond [Archive of Our Own]