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#city rubber stamp
nonooddo · 2 months
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Oddo OK’d & Oddo OK’d & Oddo OK’d …
Following the latest Olathe City Hall approval of yet another of Oddo’s plans for world domination - one small Midwest city at a time - rumors are rife that our town is about to be renamed - “Oddosville”…
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Olathe Monopoly Apartments - Fun for all the Oddo Family. Watch Daddy Oddo race round the board using ALL the playing pieces - stomping on locals with his Old Boot, racing through one gateway to Cedar Creek after another in the Racing Car - all while wearing his C19th capitalist’s Top Hat. (Dogs are no longer allowed — these are monopoly APARTMENTS after all!)
The object of the game is to try to get in or out of Cedar Creek WITHOUT passing Go Go Oddo (I.e. an Oddo development. (Playing tip - you can’t! The man has a MONOPOLY …!)
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Oddo just put another Cedar Creek gateway (College) into his big bag of “Approved”…! This follows an earlier Oddo OK on Valley and of course the Oddo OK in Lenexa and.. you get it, right?
For sure they are gonna be ditching the name Cedar Creek - that’s becoming Oddo Creek. (Or maybe Cedar Rick!) Either way that goes to a ‘vote’ of the planning commission sometime soon - but the result of the vote has already been released: “Approved”!
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After all - when College Blvd AND Valley Parkway are BOTH now under the shadow of Oddo “Approved” plans - why would we still be stuck with the old Cedar Creek name? Didn’t Potter gain control everything in ‘Its a Wonderful Life’ and then the town was eponymously renamed…? “A great movie” the young Rick Oddo was once heard to say, adding: “pity the ending went all wrong…! But when I grow up…”
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And now that he is all grow’d up - he never forgot his boyhood dream ‘I’ll own everything - and be happy…’!
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And doesn’t he look Happy…!!
Valley Pkwy
College Boulevard
Cedar Creek Parkway
WHY MUST ALL 3 ROADS IN AND OUT OF CEDAR CREEK HAVE CITY APPROVED ‘ODDO APARTMENT COMPLEXES’? WHY OLATHE…? WHY, MAYOR BACON…? Ask Him: Mayor Bacon, City of Olathe, City Hall - 100 E Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 66061
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youzicha · 8 months
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Listening to a city planning meeting on Zoom to find out what will happen to the property across from us. So far they have spent > 30 minutes discussing putting a porta-potty in a park. (“Why the light inside is blue? Well, this is a very difficult conversation to have, but”)
If I wasn’t already yimby just the boredom would be enough to make me want them to rubber stamp everything…
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footprintsinthesxnd · 2 months
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Chapter two: When the heart calls
Eugene Roe x Violet Elwood
Summary: After a successful first date, Eugene is over the moon for their second day and as the months roll by he doesn’t think things could get any more perfect. Masterlist
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June 20th 1941
Eugene groaned, stretching his legs out under the table as he watched the commotion unfold. His sisters had managed to use the family’s ‘points’ up again and so the family were left to wait until next month for some more. Eugene felt partly responsible, he should have been more cautious of what his sisters were using their stamps for but he’d been too preoccupied by Violet's presence to realise.
“You’re lucky the garden is doing well otherwise we’d be living on scraps,” his mother sighed, exasperated and waved his older sister away, who sulked up the stairs.
Turning to Eugene she smiled, “Gene, would you be able to catch a lift with the Johnsons and take those tyres along to be repaired this afternoon?”
“Course Ma,” Eugene smiled, squeezing his mother's hand reassuringly to which she gave him a light smile in return. Eugene admired his mother, she was a strong woman who had to keep the whole family in line.
Making his way outside, Eugene gathered up the two spare tyres that were led on the porch and rolled them around to the front of the house. With everything on rations from gasoline and rubber to sugar and meat the community was turning into a repair and make-do environment. Everyone was pulling together, sharing lifts and establishing ways to make sustainable meals.
Eugene looked down at his watch, he’d have enough time to drop in and see Violet on his way to work if he hurried, although looking down at his ripped work trousers he decided against it. Maybe he could see her in the afternoon.
It had been a week since their first date and Eugene could barely contain his excitement at the prospect of their next date on Saturday. Violet seemed to consume his every waking thought and as he began his long walk home after work he couldn’t help the images of her building in his mind.
“Earth to Gene? Hey Buddy, what’s got you so preoccupied? Did you hear anything I just said?” Eugene’s best friend Henry spoke up, prodding him in the ribs playfully. “You aren’t thinking of your girl again, are ya?”
Eugene blushed furiously, shielding his face with his hand, “No… no I-I’m just…”
“It’s okay, Gene. I know you’ve got it bad for her. Hey, when do I get to meet your future wife?” It was Henry’s turn to shy away now as Eugene jabbed his finger into the other man’s ribs.
“Will ya give it a rest? We’ve only had one date.”
Henry just grinned, “One date and you’re already besotted with her, whatever next.”
The pair continued their walk towards the Roe residence, Henry was going to catch a ride home with his family when they came to give Gene a lift to drop off the tyres later that afternoon.
The sun was hanging low in the sky, throwing its golden rays over Morgan City as the two boys followed their way to Eugene’s house. Eugene felt his heartbeat quicken when a familiar blonde figure appeared outside the front of her parent's store, her yellow dress flowing around her legs as she moved.
Violet must have noticed Eugene too because she raised her hand, waving at him.
“Who’s that?” Henry asked, glancing at Eugene to see if he had any recollection of who this person was.
“That’s Violet,” Eugene couldn’t contain the smile that spread across his lips, his footsteps quickening against the tarmac.
“Well, I wasn’t expectin’ to see ya today but it’s certainly a pleasant surprise,” she grinned, giving Eugene a sweet hug that had him blushing furiously. She smiled kindly at Henry who introduced himself. Eugene could barely concentrate on what his friend was saying, too consumed as he watched the wide grin spread across Violet’s lips, her blonde curls bouncing around her as she moved.
“Hey Gene, ya gonna stop staring at the poor girl. I know you’re besotted but…” Eugene snapped out of his daze, blushing as he ducked his head low, avoiding Violet’s eye and mentally cursing Henry for his big mouth.
Violet stepped from foot to foot before leaning forward, pressing a little kiss to Eugene’s cheek before whispering, “I don’t mind you staring.”
Eugene didn’t think he could blush anymore but his face burned like the hot summer sun under her gaze.
“We should be headin’ back. Was nice meetin’ ya Violet,” Henry chimed in, pushing a rather red Eugene away, and waving at Violet who just giggled, shaking her head fondly at Eugene’s awkwardness.
“When can I see you again?” Violet called out, causing Eugene to turn around, thinking quickly.
“Umm… well… I-I’m free tomorrow… all day,” stumbling over his words, his mind racing at the endless possibilities of what they could do.
“Well, I’ll see ya tomorrow then. I’ll bring some lunch,” Violet waved them goodbye and Henry threw his arm around his shoulder, chuckling as Eugene's cheeks flushed even more.
“Oh ya poor boy Gene, you are done for,” he chuckled. “So, what do ya have planned for ya second date?”
“I have no idea,” Eugen moaned, burying his head in his hands. He felt even more nervous than he did for their first date.
“Ya better get thinkin’ then, Gene.” Yes, he’d better.
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Wrapping his knuckles against Elwood’s front door, Eugene took a deep breath, calming the nerves that had been building in his stomach since he bumped into Violet the previous afternoon. Violet threw open the door, her bright smile greeting him as she gave him a quick kiss on the cheek.
“Good morning Eugene. Here, could you take this for me?” She thrust the picnic hamper into his hand, before she turned, shouting goodbye to her family before closing the door behind her. She quickly linked her arm with his, pulling him away from the house.
“Shouldn’t I say good mornin’ to ya family?” Eugene asked awkwardly, glancing back at the house but Violet just laughed.
“Do ya really wanna be interrogated again?” She grinned at him, “Come on, let’s go. Where’d ya wanna go?”
“Well, I did have one place in mind.”
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The lake had always been a special place to Gene. It was secluded away from the town, surrounded by trees and lay in a sun trap where the warm summer sun shone down, warming the water to a comfortable temperature. Violet laid out the picnic blanket by the edge of the lake, sitting neatly in the blanket while Eugene began laying out the few sandwiches, some fruit and lemonade, pouring them both a glass.
“It’s homemade, I hope ya like it,” Violet commented, watching as Eugene took a long swig, smiling as the sweet drink filled his mouth.
“It’s delicious,” Eugene reassured her, grinning at her pleased expression. The way her cheeks creased when she smiled always made Gene’s heart flutter.
“So Eugene, what’s your family like?” Violet asked, biting into her sandwich and giggling awkwardly as the filling smudged at the corner of her mouth.
“Hey, you’ve gotta little somethin’,” Eugene reached over, wiping his napkin over the corner of her mouth. “There we go.”
Violet blushed, “Thank you.” Eugene smiled fondly at her, taking a bite from his sandwich as he pondered his answer.
“Well, I’ve got my Ma, she’s a good lady, she’s gotta look after my Pa and me and my siblings. She’s a kind woman and my Pa is a good man. I got my two sisters who ya met the other day. They can be a little much sometimes but they’re my family all the same. Then there’s my two little brothers, I gotta try and keep them outta trouble.”
Violet nodded, “Don’t get me started on siblings, my sisters drive me crazy sometimes but jeez you gotta love ‘em.”
Eugene nodded, “I couldn’t agree more.”
The afternoon rolled by quickly and the conversation flowed effortlessly. All too soon the sun began setting over the lake, golden rays dancing across the landscape. The orange hues caused Violet’s blonde locks to turn a golden colour and with the evening light glowing over her pale features, in Eugene’s eyes she resembled an angel.
Violet glanced over at him, catching his gaze and grinning when she noticed the blush forming on his handsome features. Eugene moved his eyes over the lake, ignoring the shuffling beside him until Violet’s head fell into his lap, her hair spilling across his lap as she gazed up at him, her blue orbs sparkling as she spoke.
“I had a nice day today, Gene,” she admitted, reaching up and brushing her fingers softly over his cheek. Eugene smiled softly, repeating her action and carding his fingers through her hair.
“I had a real good day too,” Eugene replied, looking back out across the lake, mesmerised by the ripples dancing over the surface as he stroked Violet’s hair. She hummed contently, snuggling further into Eugene so she too could look out over the beautiful landscape.
Eugene didn’t think he could feel any happier than he did at this very moment. Somehow he’d only met her a few times and he already never wanted to spend a day apart from her.
“Eugene?” Violet asked, looking up at him with a soft smile on her lips. Eugene nodded, waiting patiently for her response.
“You can kiss me… if you’d like to,” Violet bit her lip anxiously, cautiously sitting up from Eugene’s lap.
Eugene froze, swallowing hard as he tried to control the rush of emotions that flooded him and she watched him worriedly.
“You don’t have to…” Violet was cut off as Eugene pressed his lips against hers, moulding easily together as they moved in sync. Violet’s fingers wove into his hair, while his own hands came to rest upon her hips. The kiss was beautiful, passionate and romantic and caused Eugene’s heart to pound in his chest.
When they pulled away both of them were breathless and Violet placed her hand on her chest, feeling her heart beating frantically, as she tried to calm herself, taking deep breaths.
Eugene reached over, brushing her curls away from her face with a small smile, “You’re so beautiful.”
“Thank you,” Violet blushed, reaching over to place a small kiss on Eugene’s cheek. “I should probably get home. It’s gettin’ late and my Pa will start to worry.”
“Course,” Eugene jumped up, helping Violet stand beside him as they gathered up the picnic blanket and he tucked the hamper under his arm, while Violet held his other arm. Violet began humming a sweet tune as they walked back to town and Eugene found himself wondering how many perfect days like this they could have over the whole summer.
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July 11th 1941
On quiet evenings like this one, Eugene would normally be sitting on the porch with his family, either reading, playing cards, or listening to his sisters gossiping about something they had heard. Eugene never expected to be sitting watching his girlfriend sewing with his mother while laughing at his father's jokes. Yet here she was. They had been stepping out for a month now and Eugene couldn’t remember a time when his life felt as perfect as it did when he was with Violet. He saw her nearly every day, and even if it was for only the briefest moment, she brought a smile to his face.
Eugene spent most of his free time on weekends when he wasn’t working or helping his family with Violet. He’d been to dinner at Violet's house and she could often be found at the Roe residence even when Gene wasn’t home. His mother had grown very fond of her. Even now Eugene watched his mother laughing joyfully at something Violet had said. His heart swelled with pride when he saw her with his family, she was like the missing piece that hadn’t realised they needed.
As the evening drew to a close Eugene offered to walk Violet home, enjoying the peaceful evening and some time alone. Arm in arm, Eugene couldn’t help the way his heart skipped a beat every time she spoke, pointing out the colour the setting sun had caused the sky to turn, or the way she smiled at him.
“You’re so beautiful,” he mumbled under his breath, just loud enough for Violet to hear him. She grinned, leaning up to press her lips to his cheek.
“Thank you,” she whispered back, leaning her head against his neck as they continued their walk towards Violet’s house. The hill was steep and while Eugene was taking it in long strides, Violet began to lag behind.
“Hey, G-Gene, wait up,” she panted, catching up with Eugene slowly.
“Are you alright?” He asked worriedly, his hand clasping hers quickly and he pulled her in to lean on him.
“Y-yeah, just a steep hill,” she defended but Eugene couldn’t help the niggling feeling that it was more than that. He lay the back of his palm against her forehead but she shrugged him away, placing her hand against her chest with a wince.
“Violet, are you sure you’re okay?” Eugene’s worry-stricken face watched her as she recovered, her breathing returning to normal until she could smile at him.
“Eugene, I’m fine. I promise the hill is just steep,” she still looked a little pale, her skin clammy but she was smiling now. Maybe it was just a steep hill.
Linking her hand with his, Violet began to lead the way up the remainder of the hill, dragging Eugene along after her, while he continued to overthink the situation.
The remainder of the walk went by in awkward silence, Eugene’s mind preoccupied with worry, while he chewed his lip thoughtfully.
“Eugene, please don’t worry. I’m fine, okay. I promise,” Violet stopped him in his tracks, pulling him around to face her.
Eugene smiled weakly at her, brushing her blonde curls behind her ear, “M’kay, as long as you’re sure.”
“I’m very sure,” she grinned at him, “Come along.” Eugene obediently followed, jogging behind her until he was close enough to wrap his arm around her shoulder.
“I really like your family,” Violet looked up at him, “I think your Ma likes me too.” Eugene chuckled, nodding in agreement, before planting a kiss on her hairline.
“She sure does.”
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July 19th 1941
“Come on Gene, Violet. Hurry up!” Henry called out, already stripped down to his boxers and dancing around on the edge of the bank, hollering loudly.
Eugene laughed, watching as Violet hurried up the small hill to join him.
They had been to church in the morning, before having a joint dinner with Eugene and Violet’s family, and of course, Henry was invited to. His mother and Violet’s mother clicked instantly, falling into conversation like old friends, while Gene’s sisters quickly began gossiping with Violet’s sisters. Their fathers had sat out on the porch after lunch, a drink in one hand and a cigarette in the other, reminiscing on the old days. Eugene’s brothers had been causing havoc and Henry was playing with them in the garden until it was time for Violet’s family to go home.
They had been planning a trip to the lake for a while and so after lunch, the three friends packed up some towels and made their way over there. While Eugene and Violet had already visited the lake for a picnic on the southern side of the lake, the north side of the lake had a rope swing that Eugene and Henry had erected last summer.
When Eugene got to the top of the small hill that lay next to the lake, he dropped the towels down in a pile, laying one out so they could sit down should they wish to. He pulled his shirt over his head, folding it neatly and leaving it in a pile beside his shoes, socks and trousers.
Eugene turned to catch Violet folding her dress neatly at the other end of the towel and blushed furiously when he noticed she was just dressed in her swimsuit. Eugene wasn’t sure what he expected considering they planned to go swimming, and the suit was very modest, all in one with short-style bottoms. It was a baby blue colour and it matched Violet’s eyes. Lowering his eyes to avoid her gaze he blushed furiously, seemingly unable to even look her in the eye.
Luckily Henry got the message and with a great cry threw himself onto the rope swing and out across the lake where he landed with an almighty splash.
“Come on you too, the waters real warm.”
Violet giggled, making her way over to the swing. “Here, let me help you.” Eugene held it steady so that she could sit on the wooden plank used as a seat. “Are you ready?”
Violet pulled her bottom lip between her teeth, looking at him thoughtfully before leaning forward and placing a quick kiss on his cheek.
“I’m ready.”
Eugene felt hot as his face and neck flushed and he released the swing, watching nervously as Violet flew through the air, jumping off into the water with an excited scream. When she came to the surface she was shouting joyfully for him to join them. Well, that was all it took and soon all three of them were splashing around in the clear blue pool, swimming, throwing water at each other and floating around until the sun began to set behind the trees, casting an amber glow across the lake.
Henry left shortly after the sun began setting, wanting to get home before it was dark, but Violet and Eugene stayed a little longer. They climbed up the bank, Eugene helping her as she struggled a little with the steep incline. He’d noticed that she’d struggled a little with the swimming too, quickly becoming out of breath but not letting it stop her having fun.
“You alright?” He asked, draping one of the towels around her shoulders and pulling her flush to him, rubbing the fabric up and down her arms to help dry her off.
“Yes I’m fine, thank you,” she smiled sweetly at him, “I had a great time. We should definitely do this again soon.” Eugene nodded happily, pleased that she’d had as much fun as he had.
Eugene held another towel up to shield her from view, averting his gaze across the lake while Violet dried off and changed out of her wet swimsuit and back into her dress. Violet seemed oblivious to him even being there, stripping off quickly and Eugene couldn’t help the way his eyes moved to catch a glimpse of her, berating himself as soon as he did. ‘She trusted him, don’t do something stupid to break that trust.’
Despite only a glance the image of her stayed in his mind as he quickly undressed himself, changing back into his clothes before falling on the dry towel beside Violet. The way her blonde curls had fallen down her bare back, or the way her round breasts peaked out when she raised her arms to put her dress on. He blushed deeply just at the thought. What Eugene didn’t know was that Violet too had caught a glimpse of him changing and she too couldn’t get the image of him from her mind.
Violet moved to lean against him, her head flat in his lap so he could smooth his fingers through her hair. She clutched his other hand, grasping it between hers and bringing it to her lips before moving the clasped hands to her chest, holding them just above her heart. Eugene could feel the rhythmic beating beneath his fingers, her heart rate galloping before slowing and then galloping again. He wasn’t sure if that was normal but had never noticed that pattern of his own, but Violet seemed settled, lying quietly in his lap and so he chose to ignore it. Life couldn’t get any better than this.
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aegor-bamfsteel · 1 year
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ppl give jaehaerys shit for the way he treats his daughters but imo he's overrated in general. He built roads which is good but that was it for his legacy.
Well, when the legacy of the other kings consists of:
Conquering most of a continent; building a Smelly City; causing mass destruction resulting in loss of a dragon because you couldn’t stand having other rulers in Westeros (Aegon I)
Being so bad at ruling that 4 rebellions broke out against you in the span of a season (Aenys)
Building an Evil Castle, then killing everybody involved in its construction; basically killing everybody who didn’t bend over backwards to appease you; getting shanked on your own throne (Maegor)
Inheriting the most prosperous realm ever, then leaving it on the brink of the bloodiest civil war due to crap family planning (Viserys I)
Being such a tyrannical ruler the people of the Smelly City chased you out in 6 months (Rhaenyra)
Being such a tyrannical ruler you allegedly got poisoned by your own men in 6 months (Aegon II)
Idk…being traumatized because you saw your mother eaten by a dragon, and also the dragons died (Aegon III)
Starting a bloody conquest war that ended in 60000 of your own men dead, that didn’t even stick (Daeron I)
Building a Women’s Prison in the Evil Castle so you can lock your sisters up for no good reason; building a Great Sept in the Smelly City named after yourself and moving your Rubber Stamp Popes (including an 8 year old and an illiterate stonemason) there (Baelor)
Idk…getting poisoned after a year? (Viserys II)
Raping women; trying to start unprovoked wars; unjust executions and land theft (Aegon IV)
Building a pleasure palace in a notorious war zone for your family; probably completing the Great Sept; being so bad at negotiating and family planning half the realm turned against you; harshly punishing even the children of those who turned against you (Daeron II)
Being so bad at ruling you’d rather read about prophecies, leaving a tyrant to preside over the worst humanitarian crises (drought and Great Spring Sickness) and yet more rebellions, thus creating an authoritarian police state (Aerys I)
Idk…keeping said tyrant as Hand despite him proving to be an incompetent ruler; also getting killed by a falling rock (Maekar)
Letting your kids marry “for love” causing rebellions; being unable to get your reforms for the peasants passed peacefully; resorting to trying to bring back dragons and getting yourself and half your family blown up at Pleasure Palace (Aegon V)
Idk…ordering the invasion of a sellsword kingdom on another continent due to generational paranoia; ruling for three years; demanding your kids wed because of a prophecy (Jaehaerys II)
Unjustly executing noblemen by burning them alive; calling for the executions of their families just for their blood relation, causing most of the realm to turn against you; planning to blow up the Smelly City before your teenage body guard shanked you, thus finally bringing your failure dynasty’s rulership to an end (Aerys II)
…measured against the other Targ kings, Jaehaerys’ legacy of building a six-kingdoms long road looks pretty good, considering most of the Targs’ own building projects were for themselves (Summerhall, Maegor’s Holdfast, the f—king Maidenvault) or localized in the Smelly City (Great Sept). Then Septon Barth and Alysanne had some good ideas about cleaning up the city water supply, helping fund the Night’s Watch, some laws allegedly protecting women, and then Florence Fossoway kept the kingdoms financially profitable, which I guess adds to J1’s prestige. Tbh I consider J1’s 2 wars against Dorne to also be a mark against him, and I’m annoyed that F&B added the detail that the Dornish allegedly mourned the guy who along with his sons burned hundreds of them alive on dragon back. Same with the Doctrine of Exceptionalism, and basically turning the High Septon into a rubber stamp when before the Faith had been a reliable anti-Targ faction that demonstrated some care for the smallfolk. In addition to mistreating his daughters, in a way that goes beyond politics and escalates into spite (though he’s hardly alone in that, with how Alysanne treated Viserra).
Really, I don’t see why GRRM can call Robert Baratheon “a terrible king”, when compared to the Targs he’s above average, and actually better than some of their best kings in some regards (when he pardoned those who rebelled against him with few exceptions).
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beansprean · 2 years
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TATTOO AU PUNK SLUT ARTIST LUCIUSSS! city boyyyy I love youuuuu aaaaaa
ID under cut bc I describe every single tattoo oh no
[ID: 1. full body of modern lucius as a punk tattoo artist standing with thumbs in his pockets, grinning off to the side. He is wearing a black tank top that says “if you seek Amy” under a long sleeve mesh top, studded leather collar with a gold charm imitating his canon kerchief, a studded belt, and long black smash mouth shorts with silver hoops down the sides. He has a leather cuff, black rubber bracelets, and several rings on his right hand and a modern prosthetic finger with glove on his left. He has medium sized gauges, two studs in his left cartilage, two hoops in his right, a stud in his left nostril, and two cheek piercings. His tattoos include: a Celtic knot ring and teardrop on his right ring finger, safe for work Sasuke on his right forearm, an Allen Ginsberg quote “The weight of the world is love. /Under the burden of solitude, /under the burden of dissatisfaction /the weight, the weight we carry /is love” on his inner right arm, a heart containing a hairy man’s ass in a jockstrap on his right shoulder, Roman numerals 13.3.14 (date of same sex marriage legalization in the UK) on his right collarbone, part of an arrow sticking up from his left pec surrounded by a few blood drops disappears under his shirt, the name Pete surrounded by hearts on his left shoulder, 3 black rings around his left bicep, and a pride flag down his inner left forearm, the colors dissolving together like light on water as it goes down his wrist. Text next to him points to his back and says “has an ‘abandon hope all ye who enter here’ tramp stamp.” His nails, including the top of his prosthetic, are painted black. 2a. Close up of Lucius with one hand dramatically poised on his cheek, holding up his left hand with the prosthetic to stare at it in a fakey “woe-is-me” way. He tearfully says, “I was an artist…until a client bit my finger off.” 2b. Zoom out, Lucius is making a cutesy cat grin and wiggles both hands in the air, saying, “jk I’m ambidextrous.” Fang, dressed in a floral short-sleeved collared shirt, pink polka dot headband, and green apron with the logo for Queen Anne’s flowershop, smiles at him indulgently and replies “that’s what’s up bro, love who you love!” A tattoo on his bicep says “I heart Tulips”. /end ID]
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warmfigure · 7 months
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Hi! Hope you're well! In a recent ask you said you had some nyc recs so I was wondering whether you could maybe share your fav east village spots? 🥺❤️‍🩹 would be much appreciated!!!
hi! yes of course! here are some of my favs:
to eat:
la cabra - try their iced chai and cardamom bun
smør - really great breakfast
red gate bakery - technically in LES but my top fav (try the banana bread)
daveys ice cream
cafe mogador
ho foods
to shop:
jane cookshop - maybe my favorite store in the city
niconeco zakaya - cute japanese stationery
east village postal - jane’s sister shop, mostly stationery and other little home items
caseys rubber stamps
printed matter - rare / highly curated book shop
mast books
lmk if you want anything more specific!!
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Trans state representative banned from state house for simply being trans. Nobody even cares. Did the tv press even mention it? Only a few left-leaning print/websites covered it. Red states are the majority now (even though a numerical minority reside there). Soon they will hold a Constitutional Convention to write a new fascist leaning constitution and we will all suffer. The Koch and Walton families have been buying state legislatures for decades while we ignored them.
Their fascist lawyers have been actively planning and drafting copies of a new corporate/Christo/fascist constitution. They will deliver it through a red state stooge like Rafael “Ted” Cruz. They will make a call for a convention where red state lawmakers will rubber stamp it and America the land of the free will be ended. They are only a few red states away from this. They are already speaking openly of returning to the old selection method of choosing the president to the House of Representatives where they will be able to ignore the voices of the people.
Cruz, Gosar, Boebert, Gaetz, Jordan’s, Greene, etc aren’t just kooks spouting nonsense. They are the harbingers of the oligarchs who are floating trial balloons and prepping the base for the oligarch takeover. They may seem comical with their clumsy ham fisted deliveries but they are spewing the talking points and desires of the right-wing oligarchs.
For years I’ve been delivering warnings and all those warnings have either come true or are about to. Many of you follow this as closely as I do and know what’s going on behind the Republikkkan curtain and who’s pulling the strings. The problem is that the general public has little idea of the Republikkkan end game. This isn’t something cyclical that will resolve itself. Never in history has there been such a tidal wave of anti-democratic legislation being passed so broadly and do rapidly. They’re not playing games or biding their time anymore. They are making their move to seize control of American government and make it a tool of the right-wing billionaire oligarchs and their corporations.
Guns, religion, and culture wars, are the tools they are using to radicalize the poor southerners, westerners, and rural folk to vote against their own best interests. It’s the French Revolution in reverse, where the poor have been conditioned to support the tyrannical aristocracy (kleptocracy). It’s about money and control over government to foster a society where businesses can run rampant while the citizens are stripped of all basic rights and forced into favelas like in Brazil. Favelas being the slums for the poor/working class on the edges of cities where there are little to no government services and crime and disease run rampant. Fascist militias (private paramilitary armies) will become death squads exacting revenge on progressives and executing anyone who demands reform. Militarized police will maintain order and protect business at all costs. The actual military will fight wars for oil and invade nations for other resources.
It shouldn’t sound dramatic it has been happening all around us as authoritarianism has been sweeping the globe. Escape from this along with climate change is what is driving so many migrants to our borders. Do something to stand up to the right-wing while you still can, before you have to live through an actual “ Purge” night.
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witchern · 18 days
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just got done seeing the re-release of sam raimi's spider-man on the big screen and now y'all are gonna hear my thoughts whether you like it or not:
the danny elfman music kicked on during the opening credits and i had full-body goosebumps before the marvel logo even came up on screen because i'm a fucking loser.
speaking of opening credits, remember when movies used to have those? i miss it. bring them back.
the upside-down kiss remains the greatest cinematic kiss of all time. don't argue with me when i'm right.
the setup and repetition of "don't tell harry." fantastique.
the cinematographyyyy. bitch. the way the camera follows spider-man swinging through traffic, up and around buildings, across the city…..i just don't get the same feeling of movement in either of the reboots. they're too clean. they're like iphone commercials. they're gross.
speaking of iphones, during the festival scene in times square there was a billboard ad for cingular and i thought about how i used to have a cingular phone and i almost committed suicide in the theater. i'm so old.
everyone calls her "aunt may" – including norman osborn, a grown-ass man. 'twas adorable.
"and i know i'm not your father—" "then stop pretending to be!" maybe i WILL kill myself in this alamo drafthouse.
watching this made me miss having regular-degular goons and scumbags in comic book movies. i'm tired of the "i want to rule the world, i want all the power" schtick. rob a bank. hijack a train. kidnap the mayor. have fun with it. you're in a comic book movie, for fuck's sake.
the balance between campy fun superhero stuff and earnest, genuine emotion was better than i remembered – and one never came at the expense of the other.
jk simmons. nothing else to add here – i just wanna remind people that he fucking crushed this role and burned it down and nobody has been able to touch it since.
on a similar note: willem dafoe. he didn't just chew the scenery – he had a fucking feast. fuck, man. he's great.
unrelated to the film-making itself, but....what exactly is the military purpose of a glider where the pilot is completely exposed? and why did it already look like a halloween machine before osborn becomes the goblin? questions i ask.
anyway, i realize you could hand-wave a lot of this as me falling for the nostalgia of it all (which i absolutely am), but also...i dunno. there's an undercurrent of sincerity to this movie that i just don't really feel in comic book movies anymore. that's probably because the current spate of comic book movies aren't even really movies anymore – they're products. they're vacuum-sealed, rubber-stamped, climate-controlled products to sell you a disney+ subscription or whatever the fuck the warner bros equivalent is (is it max? i think it's max). and every movie has an ending setup that tries to sell you on the next product, and the next, and the next...
anyway. with this first spider-man, yes it's silly at times, but this movie embraces it, warts and all. there's a well-balanced mix of goofy dialogue ("are you in or are you out?" "it's you who's out, gobbie – out of your mind!") and heartfelt moments (i mean, do i even need to say it? "with great power comes great responsibility"). i know it's a hack thing to say "they don't make movies like they used to" but.....man, they REALLY don't make movies like they used to.
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neostriatum · 19 days
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To Commit An Act of God
[Dreamwidth] [SquidgeWorld]
-
Chance was, statistically speaking, a calculable, inevitable event. He supposed he should have seen this one coming.
-
He's listening with one ear to everyone in the lab, a bustle and background noise that hums along with his thoughts in synchronicity. It's not something he'd ever tell anyone, but the abstract chaos is comforting, and one of the only reasons he'll linger at a table in the communal labs rather than the one designated for his personal use as head of the division. Silence is useful when he needs to bend his nose to the grindstone, but it can make the static of roiling background thoughts too overwhelming with nothing to temper it from outside his head.
Turning the slim, pen-like device over in his hands, he wonders - not for the first time - how the Ancients contrived so many various pieces of technology. With the amount of labs and experiments paused in situ around the city, the power draw must have been enormous. Surely they had some means of regularly maintaining the ZPMs, and he frowned into the middle distance, trying once again to parse the delicate presuppositions of ideas about how this was accomplished.
It was his responsibility to make sure the city stayed afloat, and literally so. He tapped the device against the table, the sound lost among the myriad patter of movement around him. Surely there's some sort of maintenance code? He blinked a few times, letting his vision filter back to the screen in front of him, still paused on a spreadsheet tracking the projects in each department. Columns of numbers greeted him, completely arbitrary in their reflection of progress, the process rubber-stamped by the IOA despite being a galaxy and then some away. Something… something in the numbers. Has to be.
Everyone knew better than to interrupt him when he was off taking a mental walk like this, too used to how his innocuous process of thinking produced results. He brings up another window, remembering at the last minute that the over-engineered soldering pen he had been fiddling with was still Ancient technology and thus not advised for normal interaction, setting it down above the function buttons on his keyboard to prevent it from rolling away. The file directory stared back at him, impassive as he drummed his fingers over the keys in thought.
Re-tracing his whisper of a thought took a bit of effort, but when he did, he mumbled an 'aha!' to himself, locating the root directory mirroring what they had been able to compile from the main Ancient database. It was a beautiful application of colour-coding, if he did say so himself, articulatable to himself unto a fairly steep exercise in exhaustion - his normal state of mind when rescuing everyone from the inanities of a ten thousand year old creaking structure that some days seemed hellbent on killing them all out of sheer decrepitude.
Sorry, he thought anyway, refraining from patting his keyboard, and by extension Atlantis, in apology. Picking up the pen-thing again, he resumed rolling the cool metal around his fingers, mind once again sinking back into the currents of one of the many background problems he toiled with when there was time. If the crystals can be modified for different circuitry layouts, then that presumes the transistors contain different permutations of use…
He walked himself through the argument, muttering pertinent facets under his breath. If you convert the gate of a diode on the third level of circuitry, then the flow is redirected based upon the direction of the other levels, he frowns, tapping the pen against the table, If you have opposing factors in the directions, then the energy flow is based upon the resistance of alloys along the stream.
Not for the first time, he wondered how the Ancients had figured out how to convert a connection to subspace to electricity. It was scarcely the same thing, too many factors at play for physics to catch up. But it did - obviously so, if they were sitting in a ship full of proof. Staring at the pen, he held it between both hands, contemplating it.
An electric flow is dependent upon the magnetization of materials and thus its quantum state, he thinks, Energy is the transfer of matter, and can be modified based on its state.
But how did they connect? He frowned, thinking back to some of the basic schematics he had been able to pull from Earth's ZPM. They were the same technology as Atlantis', of course, so the principles carried over, but the way they interfaced with Earth's stargate and Atlantis itself was a branch or two off of similarity, enough to puzzle over its differences. What he learned there was almost useless here.
He sighed, nearly silent in comparison to the cacophony of his thoughts. State-dependent modifications rely upon sufficient energy to transition to a new form. To alter the path on a crystal, one must modify multiple states at once in order to achieve proper transmission flow. Impediments would be-
"Would be what?" He mutters to himself, staring at the monitor. The root directory told him little, only that power flowed out of the ZPM and to different parts of the city like snowmelt running down the crevices of a mountain - a source from a different system, distributed with the same force but not the same volume.
… A logic gate is transformed upon the basis of individual changes on multiple levels, at different points in the system.
The pen feels all at once too heavy and too light in his hands, drooping in his shock-loosened grip. His mind was flitting ahead, the conclusion almost in his reach. Habit, absently, had him reaching toward it, silence filling his ears.
To adjust for different phase states, one must precipitate a change in the path at multiple points in the system.
It- it explained everything. His mind buzzed at the epiphany, and he couldn't help his fascination leaking forth in one, unprompted, "Oh."
The pen clanks against the edge of the table, falling to the floor with a clatter in the afterimage of gold dust floating away.
-
When he next blinks, it isn't to a monitor or his thoughts or his realization at all. Instead, it's to midday light, something not visible from the main labs due to the obvious lack of windows. Gold is filtering out of his view, a pretty wave of light that he understands intuitively is the play of photons around him.
He blinks again, scattering the vestiges with bemusement.
"Sir?" A woman's voice sounds from off to his side, sounding as if she's said it more than once, and a bit odd in the manner of hearing two things at once. It occurs to him that he's hearing English, even if that might not be what she's speaking. He blinks again, turning his head toward the voice - a waitress, smiling at him patiently, "Might I take your order?"
"Uh," And damn if that isn't an articulate answer. He flushes, trying not to squirm in place in embarrassment and realizing abruptly that the distinctive twinge in his back was no longer there. Too discombobulated to think about that for too long, he shakes his head, "I'm sorry, who are you?"
The waitress' smile neither dims nor grows, but maintains its placid patience. He can't help but think the overall effect is calming, if nevertheless disorienting - he hasn't met a single waitress that can keep their keel so evenly.
"I'm here to take your order," She says, this time with a hint of humor as she tilts her notepad toward him, "Do you something in mind?"
"Um, uh-" He shakes his head, trying to put two and two together. The memory is a bit blurred, but he retains that distinct feeling of being at work, and then all of a sudden, poof. Nothing after that.
"He'll have something off the breakfast menu," Another voice interjects, familiar enough to draw his attention. His brow furrows at the man smiling across from him in the other booth, too sly to be anything other than real. A hand extends toward him over the table, "You should remember me, Rodney - Daniel?"
"Jackson," He breathes, the dots finally settling into place at seeing the SGC-rumored Mister Ascended himself talking to him. The expected kick of panic at the knowledge of his death never comes, and he exhales in a whoosh, shaking the other man's hand, "What is this place?"
Daniel smirks, albeit in a wholly good-natured manner that he feels should irritate him on principle, the man slouching back into his seat like he was moulded from it, "Oh, take your pick- most people call this the afterlife. You ascended."
"Huh," He looks back up at the waitress, who seemed to be lingering rather than stuck in some freeze-frame out of the Matrix, and then out the window, which held nothing in particular at all unless he concentrated on a specific sight, "Okay, I'll accept that. How did I get here? I mean- ascending, obviously, but-"
Snorting, Daniel shook his head, looking much younger than he remembered him from last meeting, "I'm sure you'll figure it out, if you want to remember it."
"What does that mean?" He asked, frowning, "Am I not supposed to remember, or- Or is there something I am supposed to remember, and-"
"Rodney," Daniel interjected, shaking his head. The smile on the man's face wasn't as reassuring as he probably thought it was, and he said as much, "It's fine. Sometimes you'll want to know, sometimes you won't - it's all up to you."
He watched the flicker of emotions cross Daniel's face, and thought about all the ways that, up until now, he could have died from. A shudder rippled through him, remembering all the mundane and terrifying things he could recall - and recall in perfect, painstaking clarity, "Point taken. But… why now? I could have ascended before, with that- that machine, but this is. This is completely arbitrary, I didn't even plan this."
Daniel raised an eyebrow, an echo of his own death reverberating between them in tangible detail, making him bite back a grimace at the shared memory of radiation eating away at flesh and bone long past what medicine could alleviate. It combined with a faint stretch of precognition, layers of possibilities where that was his own predicated fate among many other routes that led right back to this diner.
They stared at each other for a moment, sharing the mental travelling of what could be, what will be. When he clenched his hands into fists on the table, feeling the emotional burn of nausea if not the physical, Daniel asked, "Would you want to?"
"Plan this?" He asked, then shook his head instinctively, answering his own question, "I mean, I'm sure all of this has its merits - but believe me, those windows are creeping me out, it feels like a bunch of TV screens if I'm not making it stay in place - but… No. Not yet, at least."
With those nightmare-inducing ideas now floating around his head, a thought suddenly occurred to him, "Are you dead, too? Like at the same time?"
"Am I?" Daniel extended his arms, encompassing the table, "Or does a drop of water hold both the salt of a rock and the cold of a cloud?"
"Linguists," He mutters in good-natured disgust, shaking his head.
Daniel laughed, rising from the table, "I recommend the pancakes."
"Of course you do," He replies, but Daniel's already gone, whisked away who knows where. Sighing, he looks at the waitress, still patiently existing for him to revisit her point in time, "Ah, I suppose pancakes will do. Do you have them in chocolate chip?"
The waitress smiles as she copies down the order, whatever she's writing with bafflingly indistinct and definitely not transcribing in English. Huh. "Of course. Did you want anything else?"
He pauses, thinking for a moment before shrugging, "Hell, I'm apparently dead, anyway. I am dead here, right?"
"A pot of water boils when there is a necessity for it," The waitress responds, and he should have figured he was surrounded by Ancients.
Sighing, he consigns himself to an innumerable and apparently eternal amount of superbly bad puns, "A cup of coffee, then, if this is what I'm gonna have to listen to. With cream and sugar," He pauses, hesitant, "And a, uh, a glass of lemonade. Please?"
Smiling serenely, the waitress nods, "Your order will be ready shortly."
Wishing he had nerves to shake out, he only mumbles something on rote, unsurprised when there was yet another Ancient sitting across from him where Daniel had been sitting just a moment prior, "Uh. Hello?"
"Hello," The woman says, and god, what a beautiful woman, too. Her smile only grows wider, in what he assumes is some preternatural ability to read his thoughts, which really falls in line with this whole instinctive multi-lingual thing death had, "No, Doctor McKay, I am merely happy to see you."
He frowns, "Do I know you? I feel like I'd remember someone, uh, someone like you."
The woman shakes her head, laughing. It's all so unoffensive, though, he can't help but feel a laugh bubble up with her, "Doctor McKay. You have seen my Dan'yel, yes?"
The name doesn't ring a bell until a his order is being set down in front of him, somehow a similar order being placed in front of the woman. Grits aren't really his taste, but the way this stranger delicately heaps more food into the bowl and eats a large spoonful makes it look appetizing. He grabs his coffee on instinct, pleased to realize it was precisely the right temperature despite the steam wafting out of the cup.
"Daniel Jackson, you mean?" He asks, smearing the pat of butter plopped on top of the short stack with a distracted swipe of his knife. The smell was superb, making his mouth water, "I, uh, I just saw him. Did you see him leave?"
The woman shakes her head, somehow looking unruffled despite the news, "I will see him again. But, Doctor McKay, I would like you to speak to him."
He blinked around a forkful of pancake, "Uh? I suppose they don't do letters here, do they?"
The pancake was delicious enough that he was almost too distracted to hear the woman's next words, and he chewed quickly, swallowing the bite to make room for another sip of coffee.
"It is alright," The woman soothed, her smile undimmed by his accidentally piecemeal attention, "But you will see him again. I miss my Dan'yel, I wish him to know all is well."
He pauses over his contemplation of the lemonade, familiar trepidation marred by curiosity over the distinct smell that usually makes his stomach roil. Settling for a halfway point of putting the glass down in between him and his pancakes, mildly disturbed at himself with how easy it was to calculate the exact triangulation of objects in doing so, he asked, "What do you mean?"
The woman nods at his juice with a bizarrely patient look of affection, "Drink that, you will like it."
Grumbling, he accepts the non-sequitur, hesitating for a moment at the familiar smell that usually heralded agony for him before taking a small, minuscule, truly tentative sip. There was no burning sensation, no heart palpitations that promised an allergic reaction that would have been doubled by sheer anxiety, no swelling of throat or fading of vision. He tightened his grip on the glass, taking another small taste of the drink.
"Oh," He says, marvelling, "Tangy. This is delicious."
The woman smiles, watching as he takes a more confident drink. He could see why so many people associated lemons with summer, now, it was almost… almost a joyful flavour. Wiggling in his seat at the revelation, it was a short order to drink the rest of it, taking the time to savour the different aspects of acid and sweetness and complete and utter lack of life-threatening reaction.
"Wow," He murmurs, tilting the glass to get a last drop, "I really have been missing out, huh?"
"You are quite brave," The woman says, tilting an eyebrow in a manner that reminds him of Teyla, if Teyla was as naturally demure as this woman. He accepts the hand laid over his own, loosening the grip on his fork, "Doctor McKay, there are many things for you to know."
He shakes his head, pragmatism too engrained for him to abide by that compliment, "I've learned quite enough, haven't I? I'm here, that- that does mean I learned enough."
The woman merely allowed her smile to blend into a different mood, "My name is Sha're. You are much like Dan'yel - always seeking, always helping."
"You are-" His voice strangles on the concept, "You are quite kind. Uh. Thank you? I think."
"You do help," She says, the words strengthened by her obvious conviction, "There are many who are helped. No path is clear, but walk along it knowing the fog of the morning will dissipate."
"And here we are on garden paths," He mutters, but the words click together nevertheless, "You- I recognize you. Your name. Sha're of- of Abydos?"
The woman nods, emphatic, "Yes. A pebble in a stream can branch into a river."
He squeezes her hand back, feeling discombobulated but also at ease. It was funny how epiphanies did that, "I think I'll finish my pancakes first, though, if you don't mind?"
Sha're laughs, her voice tinkling with delight.
-
Bracing himself to enter his own quarters in a deserted hallway is ridiculous even for him, but the sweet, ready way Atlantis opens his door is reassuring. He's still wrapping that sense of familiarity around him when the volume of people's raised voices registers, halting him with barely two steps through the door that closed with a subtle swoosh.
"What the hell is going on here," Rodney shouts, horrified, derailing three different arguments by force of presence alone. He puts his hands on his hips, muttering to himself, "I'm gone for five minutes-"
"Rodney!"
"Yes, what-"
He's not prepared for the way Sheppard vaults over the bins and boxes and tackles him, his breath thumped out of him with the gesture. The grip on him is tight, and he can swear his newly re-formed bones are creaking with the pressure, so he struggles to get his arms out from under Sheppard's grip to whack at the man's back, "Let me go!"
Sheppard does, but not before he flatly picks him up, like some deranged rendition of a teddy bear, swaying him around a little for emphasis. The smile on the colonel's face is broader than anything he's ever seen - a part of him wants to be spooked by it, the sight so unusual for a typically taciturn person. He's left flailing for the correct response when Sheppard grabs his face with both hands and presses a deep, impulsive kiss onto his lips.
"Hngh?" He can practically feel his brain rewire itself on the surprise dose of endorphins, which he doesn't presently have the wherewithal to deliberate on whether that's a good thing. It's apparently an adequate amount of time for Sheppard to decide to kiss him again, and he can feel himself melt into it, "Mmm. Ah."
He can still feel the imprint of Sheppard's uniform under his hands when the kiss peters off, briefly distracted by the way the other man's lips slide against his own. A part of him wants to lean back in, tilt his head up, but the shocked silence convinces him that he at least needs to table that particular discussion for later.
"Um," He says, blinking a few times and feeling rueful that, once again, his mind is going faster than the rest of him, "Hi."
Sheppard grins down at him, all soft and fond and other gooey emotions he can feel behind his eyes, "Hi."
"So I might have…" He shrugs, swallows loosely and feels himself flush at the way Sheppard's eyes track his throat, "Accidentally ascended?"
"Accidentally?!" Radek shouts in bewildered disbelief, "You- you- 'accidentally', můj prdel-"
"I heard that," He says automatically, still too used to the auto-translate that being ostensibly non-corporeal had granted him. Radek sputters to a stop, gaping at him. He winces, "Uh. Sorry. About that."
"Sorry about what?" Sheppard asks, and he hasn't let go yet, but nobody's making him. The slide of a thumb against the back of his neck makes his eyes flutter, Sheppard's breath stuttering as he does so.
"Mmm," He sighs, letting himself be held. It felt like an eternity since the last time he had experienced such a luxury, "Leaving. Understanding. Whole lot. Take your pick."
Sheppard huffs out a relieved laugh, pulling him closer in a protective grip, one hand still cupping the back of his head, "Apology accepted."
He's still adjusting to the waves of affection coming from Sheppard, threatening to knock his knees out from under him and turn him into a cooked noodle of appreciation, so the non-Sheppard hand tentatively touching his arm is surprising. Sheppard briefly tightens his grip, but now that he can recognize an anxious Teyla - and really, what did happen, she's the least anxious person he knows, a complete opposite of him - he slides out of Sheppard's hold with a faint sense of reluctance.
"Rodney," Teyla is looking at him searchingly, reflexively gripping his forearm, "I- is that truly you?"
Speaking feels utterly trite at the moment, much as he does, sometimes, love to hear himself talk. What he does instead is envelope Teyla in a hug, squishing her against him the same way he remembered doing with Jeannie when she was young, too afraid from a nightmare to seek anyone else out. It's definitely the correct choice, because she hugs him back with a tinge of desperation, tucking her head under his chin with a wobbly breath.
"Shh," He murmurs, making sure he doesn't let go until Teyla wants to, listening to her unsteady breathing. The words that come to mind are old, disused, but he dusts them off because Teyla needs them, "Everything's alright, I'm here. Shh, shh, it's okay."
He'd always known he was one of the oldest by a thin margin, but in the little group of friends and colleagues he's made in Atlantis he'd never felt it - not for real - until just now, feeling the tension in the room go down by proxy as Teyla calmed down with his hushing. It made his heart ache, remembering the way Daniel had smiled when they talked, the shared acknowledgment that knowledge was not always a blessing.
Teyla's hair was soft under his hand, smelling faintly of the bleach and hair dye some of the women had convinced her to use. It was one of her few indulgences with her appearance, and he felt an incongruous twitch of his lips that she still stuck with an element of Earth-based fashion. He found himself reassured by this - Teyla adapted to anything in front of her, so easily he was often awed by her ability to blend in to new crowds. Whatever happened, there Teyla would be.
Swaying together echoed all the times he had done so with Jeannie, before things inevitably deteriorated. He was grateful Sheppard had found a way to patch things between them, and it compelled him to squeeze Teyla tightly, listening to her startle with amusement, "C'mon. Better?"
He felt her nod against his shoulder, the way she bolstered herself before withdrawing. The tilt of her head was expected, and he leaned his forehead against hers, soaking up the feeling of strength she seemed to derive from the gesture. When she looked up, her eyes were red-rimmed, and he brushed away a stray tear track.
"I missed you," He said, because Teyla was rarely anything but honest, and also because it was true. She smiled at him, bright and reassured, "It really was an accident."
Teyla's smile managed to get even brighter, almost on par with Sheppard's, and god, they had missed him back, hadn't they? He had known the truth, in that makeshift highway diner, but being confronted with it was another thing entirely.
"I believe you," She replied, sounding happy, in that way that was stripped of bitter undertones, only joy left over. He couldn't help but grin back, pulling her into a quick hug just to contain the emotion better.
Sheppard was lingering at his back, protective and watchful. It allowed him to look around the room, the way Ronon and Radek were still holding some hastily-constructed cardboard box between them like he'd interrupted their tug-of-war. A scatter of scientists mixed with a handful of soldiers, making his quarters feel like a public common rather than the one place he wasn't required to share.
Letting his hands fall from Teyla's arms, he gestured at the paused cacophony, "Y'know, when I said throw me a party, I didn't mean a riot."
A slew of abashed faces met him. Ronon still took the time to scowl at Radek, yanking the box away. He felt like he was probably going to need to take the box away from Ronon, and what would those two even be arguing over, anyway?
Sheppard had shifted closer, hands ghosting along his sides, telegraphing the intent to resume cosseting him but refraining by a hair. The murmur brushing by his ear made him shiver, Sheppard's lips forming a smirk, "It's more of a custody fight."
"Get a lawyer," He said automatically, then blinked, "Actually. Sam. Is she here?"
He had meant in the general sense of Atlantis, because he didn't actually know how long he'd been gone, but it seemed to have been interpreted in such a way that everyone reflexively looked around them, as if the woman would pop out of the woodwork. Rolling his eyes, he thought, I've got my work cut out for me.
One hand reached to tap his ear, but found that while the Ancients were nice enough to let him de-ascend with memories, clothes, and motor skills intact, an earpiece had been considered optional. He made an annoyed sound, spinning on one heel to look for the closest replacement.
Sheppard blinked at him bemusedly when he leaned forward and plucked the device out of the man's ear, but he had no time for frivolities like that, "McKay to Carter."
If Sam was still the way he remembered, she was probably awake for longer hours than him, and always available in an emergency. Being right was gratifying, and so was listening to her sharp inhale, "Rodney?"
"Hi," He said summarily, "I'm told you know a Sha're? She says hello."
Sam floundering over her words was unusual, but he leaned absently into the hand Sheppard pressed against his back, letting the other take his weight as Sam worked her way through the conundrum, "Rodney, what the fuck."
He grinned, "So that means you do."
"Of course I do," She barked, bewilderment drawing her out of the habitual placidity she wore around him in Atlantis, "What- how- you ascended. She ascended?"
"I also talked to Daniel," He confirmed, humming thoughtfully, "Though I don't think we were there at coinciding times. You get me?"
There was a lot of muttering on the other end of the line, and he split his attention to the way everyone slowly decompressed around him. Huh, he thought, I'm not sure whether to be flattered.
"You're writing a report," Sam eventually demanded, when her self-solved revelations petered off. He smirked, which Sam seemed to have a sixth sense for, "Don't even make that face. Also, Rodney?"
"…Yes?" He hazarded, the hand at his back pressing closer in response.
Sam's smile was obvious in her exhale, "Welcome back."
-
The whole to-do about coming back over the next couple of weeks was both over- and under-whelming, if anyone asked him. Even if he were still as oblivious as before - and that particular self-reflection had been cringe-worthy to discover, something that had been meticulously gone over in the therapy sessions he was herded into - he would have been able to pick up on the way everyone was tightly wound-up in his absence.
"You know," He said absently over his chocolate pudding, feeling the bizarre need to apologize, "I really, really didn't do it on purpose."
Ronon made a disagreeing sound, which Sheppard copied with a nod, "You do have a habit of doing things accidentally, buddy."
He grimaced, remembering all of those particular flaws. Nothing better to keep himself grounded, he thought, than to remember all of the stupid shit. The pudding tasted a little less nostalgic in that particular wake, and he sighed, pushing it away and blatantly ignoring the concerned looks lasered into him from everyone at the table, "I swear I didn't do it on purpose. I just… had an epiphany."
Sheppard smirked, even if he got the bizarre feeling that the other man had to muster the energy for it, "Hazards of the job?"
"Exactly," He said, relieved, slumping into his seat, "Could happen to the best of us."
Teyla looked down at her food, a neutral expression on her face that he learned boded unknown realms of danger. It seemed to coordinate a silence around the table, unsettling him. He shifted in his seat, glancing at all of them, "What?"
Ronon gave him a frowning, narrow-eyed look, his version of a pout, if Ronon was the type to do it in his direction, "You left."
"Not on purpose," He insisted, sighing in exasperation. There was a chill from everyone, he just knew it, and he cut his losses with an aching heart, "Fine. I'll just- I have some work to do. I'll catch up later."
Nobody called him back to the table, and the taste of the pancakes he had at that ascended diner lingered in his mouth.
-
Radek was looking at him warily, but he'd had it with apologizing for something everyone presumed he had explicit control over, so he glared and pulled his attention back to his computer. Everything was, disturbingly, exactly where he had left it.
Luckily, the man was smart enough to figure out what his disgruntled mood meant, and they worked in silence for a while. There were others in the room, but they kept to themselves. Eventually the studious ambiance lulled him into something approaching normalcy. His shoulders didn't quite settle from around his ears, but he could focus better on the simulations he had left running in his absence.
Funny, he could swear the numbers made more sense before.
Swearing under his breath, he dumped the results into a spreadsheet and re-ran everything, needing the fresh start of it. Fatigue swept over him, making him wonder if he ought to get up and brave the coffee maker. He scrubbed a hand over one side of his face, sighing.
Radek hadn't committed to the clue of fucking off, but there was a cup of fresh, steaming hot coffee being pressed closer to his hand, so he figured he could forgive the transgression of encroaching on his personal space. He ignored the way Radek was staring at him, forehead obviously wrinkled in concern, focusing on taking a bracing gulp of the drink in his hand despite the way it burned his tongue.
It even had just the right amount of cream and sugar in it. My god, he thought in frank, despondent realization, Things must have really fallen apart.
"How many things am I fixing?" He asked, peering down at his cup in suspicion, "Nobody ever makes me a perfect cup of coffee, what did all of you do?"
"A perfect cup, you say?" Radek smiled.
"Oh, fuck off," He grumped, feeling better when Radek just grinned at him in that typical insouciant, Czech manner.
Radek switched his attention to his monitors, peering at them, "Did you not already get the results on these?"
"Bad data," He muttered, taking an obscuring sip of coffee, "Had to re-run it."
Disconcertingly, Radek merely shrugged, "Perhaps not bad data, but bad interpretation."
He squinted at the other man, wondering which entendre he was going to be wrangling today. Radek merely looked back at him in a crap interpretation of innocence, "Those glasses only make you look bug-eyed, you know."
"And your insistence on regretting de-ascending is demoralizing everyone," Radek shot back immediately.
"Wh- I am not," He protested, putting his cup down. His stomach cramped, and he told himself it was because the coffee had been too hot, not because Radek had hit the mark, "Where are you getting these ridiculous ideas?"
Radek gave him a hard stare, then turned to grab his mouse, shutting down the simulations over his protests. There was a brief - very brief - moment where he debated wrestling the mouse and keyboard away from the bastard, but in the end he just sighed, slumping on his stool. Everyone else was pointedly normal, providing an adequate smokescreen of plausible deniability.
"You," Radek pointed a finger at him, pulling his hand back to shake it in futility, looking away, "You must stop this. You are here, be here."
"I am here," He said quietly, resisting the urge to rub at his sternum, if only to feel his heartbeat for himself, "It doesn't- doesn't feel like it."
Radek put his hand on the edge of the table, tilting his head at him with a potent frown, "How do you mean?"
And this was better than having the therapist sicced on him - none of them could quite do the whole deduction thing like another professional in the hard sciences. And, he thought to himself, an engineer like Radek, who wouldn't let shit go even if you gave him the opportunity.
He shrugged, "I don't know. Just… it felt real there, too."
The way Radek looked at him, all wide-eyed and upset, made him cross his arms. He hadn't expected to be weighed down with this sort of world-weariness, and wondered idly if Daniel had felt the same way. And good god, that man had done this multiple times. No wonder the archaeologist was such an incongruous nut, sometimes.
"Come," Radek announced, "I have a jumper that needs repairing, and you must tell me how I fucked up the crystals again."
"Well," He said, grabbing his coffee as he stood, "If you insist."
-
Who gave a shit what anyone else thought, doing banal repair work was the best sort of meditation. Radek handed him a toolkit and promptly disappeared to his own corner of the jumper. If he concentrated, he could hear the faint litany of swearing in Czech, therapeutic in its regularity.
He was barely concentrating on his task - some hotwiring at the front to try and coax the jumper's system to let them in to more areas. It was just annoying enough in its aberrations that he couldn't lose himself, and he could let himself wander and process things in the background of the work.
However much amount of time had passed, it was enough to startle him when a foot kicked his own, the thump of some wrapped food landing on his stomach almost making him drop his pliers on his face, "Ow! Oh hey, tuna."
"Tuna lookalike," Radek corrected him with a smile, sitting next to him, shoulders resting against the edge of the copilot seat, "New shipment this morning."
"Ah," He sniffed the sandwich, "That smoked stuff from Ilriga?"
Radek nodded, already tucking into his sandwich. They ate quietly together, and he couldn't help but notice the way Radek was doing that thing people do, where they pretend they're not checking up on you but really are. He was disappointed that he could recognize the look, now, having spent too much time in and out of the infirmary for various reasons.
A stale bag of chips was produced out of thin air, and they passed it between themselves, the hum of the jumper's idling systems a pleasant mental counterpoint.
"I had chocolate chip pancakes," He said, breaking the assiduously-applied silence Radek had gifted him with, "With a cup of coffee. And some lemonade."
"Lemonade?" Radek asked, raising an eyebrow.
He shrugged, "I had never gotten the opportunity to try it out without, you know, asphyxiating. Tasted pretty good."
"It does," Radek agreed, swiping one of the smaller rounds of a chip and offering him the bag with its sundry broken bits. He huffed, taking the bag and letting the chips fall into his mouth with a practiced pour.
"It was…" How could he explain it? The vast, intimate stretch of infinity, its nexus where you could look at galaxies through the diner window if you wanted, or a specific, constrained scene. In a way, it had felt a bit like a truck stop, a place you could always visit, but never the same way twice.
Radek shifted in place, his head now resting against the seat. It made him look attentive, if disheveled, washing away some of the weariness he had spotted upon his return and letting natural curiosity shine through. He felt himself mimicking the posture, twisting himself against the console and feeling the pointed edge of metal dig into his back.
It was reassuring, this discomfort, "There was no pain."
"No?"
He stared past Radek, to the open back door of the jumper but also into his memories, "No. I didn't realize how much of a pain in the ass getting older was until I had a mortal body again," He pursed his lips, "That sounded weird, didn't it?"
Radek shrugged, "One of my great-grandmothers had a stroke once, we think. She laid in bed for days. Woke up, told my grandfather the strangest thing."
"Yeah?" He felt like he would be able to see it, if he pushed himself. It scared him, a little, how relative everything was - the pinch of aligning two different points in space time, just with the thought of it.
He was apparently transparent, as well, because Radek laid a leg over the two of his own. The warmth, human warmth, one that came with its own composite package of memories and thoughts, made him sigh, sinking into the grounding sensation. The look Radek sent him was understanding and chiding all at once.
"She had told him that death was final, but mortality was confining," Radek continued, "None of us could ever understand what she had meant with that."
Humming, he nodded, "She was right."
"Was she?" Radek asked, still sprawled out and looking unlikely to move any time soon.
He quirked a smile, remembering his disorientation in the diner, and how it had felt like a different sort of disorientation putting himself bodily in this plane of existence. It felt bittersweet, now, rather than the pervasive vertigo of waking from a dream.
Picking up the empty bag of chips, he wrapped it in the plastic wrap the sandwich had come in. He could still taste the saltiness of the chips, and the fatty smokiness of the fish that the mayonnaise couldn't disguise. It made him smile, and he felt the way it relaxed Radek, whatever the other man was perceiving.
"Mortality has its perks," He admitted, "Even if you need some Tylenol for it."
Radek laughed, groaning as his leg was shoved back, "Hear, hear."
-
Things seemed a little more real after that. In comparison, he could see how other people had been concerned - now that he had the benefit of perspective, he hadn't been quite connected, drifting around like some ghost that was confused where it was.
Teyla had been perfectly happy to take him up on a bantos lesson when he had asked, her smile wider than normal even as she gave him a few good whacks that would probably bruise through the padding of his training gear. Still, it was good, spending time with her as he futzed his way through the beginner's forms.
"You seem…" She tilted her head, "More settled. All is well?"
"All's well," He promised, parrying the obvious strike she made. It was drawing their lesson out, but he found himself the calmer for it, letting her dictate their interaction.
"I had worried," She confessed, pushing him through the steps of a kata that still didn't have a concrete name in English. Teyla was nice about it, though, letting him avoid the rolled ankle that most people got caught in part-way through by pushing rather than batting at his elbow when he turned.
"I'm sorry."
Teyla shrugged, a rolling motion of her shoulders he had always admired. Everything was always so well-controlled with her, and it made him sharply miss Elizabeth with how similar the two women were. Are. His stomach swooped, an intuition about Elizabeth he wasn't sure he wanted to acknowledge.
He must have made a face, because Teyla stopped, placing a hand on his arm in concern. She drew him into a head-touch, and he lingered there, using the sensation to ward off the roiling, metaphorical pitch of his stomach. Feeling it with your gut, ha.
Eventually they found themselves in a hug. He didn't think he had hugged so often in his life, and certainly not here on Atlantis, despite how tactile people in the Pegasus galaxy could be to reassure themselves of their humanity. Approximate humanity at least, he thought, mind unerringly flitting back to the Replicators.
"Rodney?" Teyla brushed a thumb over his shoulder, coaxing a sigh out of him.
"I miss Elizabeth," He said, "And I've got just- this is going to sound weird, alright? I have this feeling about her."
Teyla disentangled herself from him enough to look up at him. Her gaze was speculative, and he hated the gleam of hope in them, putting faith where he didn't want it to be warranted, "What sort of feeling?"
"I don't know," He muttered, "And I don't want to look too closely at it."
"That is understandable," Teyla said, even if he didn't quite believe the veracity of her reassurance. It was a tightly-controlled excitement lurking underneath her calm, but it was there, nevertheless, making him feel like an ass.
He bit his lip, trying to figure out the conflicting emotions that just barely reached where he could grab them, knowing instinctively at the same time it was one of those side effects of ascending that he was still trying to avoid. One personal prophecy was enough for him.
Teyla squeezed his arm, speaking quietly, "I am sorry. This must be very disturbing for you."
"Yeah, that's one way of putting it," He replied, rummaging up a smile even as he gave her the quick bow all students gave her after a lesson. She reciprocated, accepting the bantos rods he held out for her, "Teyla, I- thank you, for, well-"
"Being here?" She asked, looking fondly amused. It was an expression he hadn't realized he had missed, and he returned her smile a little more naturally.
"Yeah," He said, relieved that she was still there, and he was still Rodney, "I'm gonna, uh, catch up with you later?"
"I will see you later, Rodney," Teyla replied, warm enough that he could still feel it all the way to the transporter.
-
Sheppard was still lurking just out of reach, but he figured his ambling around the city would lead him somewhere.
That somewhere ended up being in Ronon's way, a close shave compared to the way others in the city alternately looked spooked at his presence or ready to hound him for their deepest confessions of questions. It was frankly relieving the way that Ronon stared in gruff silence at him, and he clutched literally at that, startling his team mate.
"Oh thank god," He breathed, already tugging Ronon down a corridor, "A normal person. And I don't say that typically, mind you, but I really think it's pertinent in this case."
Ronon's eyebrows scrunched together, still following him despite shaking off his grip, "What?"
He waved a hand, "You- you- you're not staring at me like I'm some, I don't know, revenant? Honestly, if I see one more person cross themselves-"
Ronon made a bemused noise, "I was wondering what that was about."
"Remind me to fetch you one of the great fictions known as a bible one of these days," He muttered, "You'd think they'd realize I'm me and get over themselves, but no- it was more gratifying when they were terrified because I called them morons, not because of some inexplicable mortal phenomenon."
Listening to Ronon grunting in disinterest was reassuring. All was well with the world, because the big man couldn't give a shit at the new weirdness of the day. He flustered out a sigh, herding his friend to a transporter a little quicker than he liked, but almost quick enough to avoid the people turning the corner.
Ronon raised an eyebrow at him, leaning against the wall of the transporter and watching him run a hand through his hair and debate which section of the map to press.
"You're like one big lion, you know," He muttered, eventually picking some place on a pier that he presumed would be a short walk and probably uninhabited at this hour, "All staring and leaning."
"Isn't that Sheppard?" Ronon asked with a smile.
He snorted, not entirely certain where his next words came from, but they felt appropriate to the subject, "Sheppard's like a bunch of cooked spaghetti. … Don't tell anyone I said that."
"Sure," Ronon agreed amiably, following him out of the transporter when the doors opened.
Fresh air, that was what he needed. He couldn't believe he let himself be cooped up indoors for this long, running hither and thither catching up on things that had screwed up while he had a brief bout of death. The smell of the ocean air was just as invigorating as it ever was, and he took in a deep, bracing breath.
Ronon easily kept pace with him, for a while keeping shoulder to shoulder as they strolled the deck. The usual thread of anxiety that would have him checking for emergencies was there, but not so overwhelming that he felt the urge to turn right back around. He stuck his hands in his pockets, letting the late afternoon sunshine warm his face.
As they walked, he found himself appreciating that Ronon had different qualities of silence. It wasn't the same as Sheppard and Teyla, of course, prone to mischief in a way that reminded him of a younger brother. None of that was here, at least for the moment, only the quiet enjoyment of each other's company.
If given the opportunity, Ronon would never speak first, or rarely so. He drifted into Ronon's side, gently shoulder-checking the other man and letting Ronon push him back.
"Radek was pissed at me," He said, watching a bird soar in the distance, not quite close enough for them to hear its call. They gathered to a pause, watching it ride the eddies of the wind, looping around a few times.
The ability to calculate its speed by sight alone, and the angle of its turns, was still there, but he didn't feel the urge to reach out and grasp the knowledge of its data points. Reducing a phenomenon of happenstance to a series of numbers, like he easily could when he was ascended, didn't have the same luster or scope.
He shook off the thought and its accompanying moroseness, shrugging limply when Ronon made a questioning noise, "Nothing. Just… thinking."
"You do that a lot," Ronon replied, turning his head down to watch him instead of the bird that crossed their paths. They weren't arranged in line of the sunlight, but the slow degree of its setting nevertheless added shadows to the man's face.
It made the faint line of accusation deeper. He frowned at it, uncertain how to assuage that.
"I feel like I'm doing things in reverse," He confessed, blinking and looking out across the pier. Ronon grunted, pushing him to continue, "Usually the dying do all the motions of comforting before they die. Here I am, doing the opposite."
Ronon laid a hand on his shoulder, gripping it firmly and turning him around. His friend had a complicated expression on his face, lips twisted in a blend of amusement and unhappiness. It was a similar enough face that people had been making at him the past few days that he reflexively sighed, shoulders slumping despite the way Ronon clasped his other shoulder, holding him upright under the misery.
"You do your best," Ronon said seriously, pressing his thumbs into the hollows of his shoulder, as if to impress the gravity of the words, "When it counts. You always do."
He sighed wearily, "But?"
"But," Ronon rumbled, drawing him in. The hug was encapsulating - they didn't often hug, and usually only after a life-or-death situation, but it was difficult not to appreciate the way Ronon committed to it the same way he committed to everything else in life, "What you think of as giving your best is giving too much of yourself."
"I-"
Ronon squeezed his arms, silencing him without a word, "You're my friend, McKay. My team mate. Don't go marching off too soon."
"Big words," He sniffled, letting himself twist his hands in Ronon's tunic, unable to forget the brief glimpse Daniel had allowed him to witness of his own life. There were many futures, that was true, but once you knew the variables, you could calculate the equation. 'Soon' was merely a matter of perspective, "For someone that thinks with his gun."
"It's a cool gun," Ronon rebutted gently.
"It is," He agreed, letting Ronon change the subject, swallowing some of the last vestiges of his grief, "If you'd only let me attempt to replicate it…"
"Not a chance," Ronon chuckled, running a rough hand down his back before releasing him.
He quirked a smile, scrubbing at his face when Ronon took the opportunity to glance down the pier, "I'll convince you one of these days."
Ronon smirked, "I'm sure you will."
-
Considering that he was the one who ascended, he did feel a little ridiculous that he was one of the ones experiencing an emotional reaction about it, annoyed about having disproved the peace and presumed quiet of an afterlife. The mess was perturbingly nice to him about the whole affair, and he gave one of the soldiers on KP duty a gimlet eye when a substantial helping of baked chicken and lookalike rice was heaped onto his plate.
The soldier merely gave him the well-trained blank face of innocence, handing his plate back to him.
He huffed, grabbing the plate back and wondering when he could get back to his regularly-scheduled bitching about whether or not he was going to be accidentally poisoned by cross-contamination. Not a single bit of citrus! For days! If Sam somehow managed to have something to do with it, he was going to find himself rather cross with her.
Still, he grabbed one of the multitudes of stacked cups, filling it with some infirmary-approved concoction botany quite literally cooked up. It reminded him a bit of V8, but reliably tasted like a disappointing tomato and was never formulated with any allergen he could think of.
Adding it to his tray, he found a spot open on Sam's table. She was busy with a power lunch, scrolling through a tablet with one hand while she absently speared a bit of chicken with her fork. It was probably something from one of his departments, because Sheppard rarely ever submitted so substantial a report that it needed close attention.
Well, He thought, setting his tray down with a quiet clack and sitting catty-corner to Sam. She gave him a brief glance and a grunt of acknowledgment, finally eating her bite of chicken and summarily ignoring him for her reading material, At least it won't be boring.
The peace and quiet Sam exuded by dint of being a very busy expedition leader that rarely appreciated interruptions extended over to him, and he took advantage of that to eat undisturbed. It gave him time to actually taste his food, and he thought wistfully that chicken probably wasn't going to taste this good for a while.
Eventually, though, all good things came to an end. Sam clicked off the screen of her tablet, tucking into her meal for a moment before leaning back in her chair, "So."
He sighed.
Sam ignored that, giving him an assessing smile, "How are you holding up? Re-acclimating well?"
"You're much more attractive when you aren't being all leader-y," He groused, spearing one of the salad vegetables on his plate and eating it with exaggerated chewing motions.
She had obviously been inured to his indubitable charms, merely raising an amused eyebrow while she waited him out. He parried the look by continuing to eat, knowing she had the same squeamishness of talking with one's mouth full as Sheppard. Both of them would eventually have to get back to work, and he reckoned she would need to cut the conversation to the end before he would.
"'Leader-y'?" She asked coyly, when he had eaten through the last turnip-fennel thing, smiling in that way he knew he shouldn't have complimented her on.
He took a vindictive sip of his juice, internally bemoaning that he was back to a strict no-citrus life even as he could, in fact, admit the tomatoes weren't as bad as they could be, "Oh, shut up. You know what I mean."
Sam must have been affected by some enormous level of grief-driven insanity as many others in the city, because all she did was laugh, "I do, yes."
"Why does everyone keep asking me that?" He complained, waving his fork at her when she raised her eyebrow, "That! That- that thing. I hate it."
She continued to raise her eyebrow, pushing her tablet to one side and re-settling in her chair in the same way their resident psychotherapist had done during his mandated therapy sessions. He frowned at her, hoping to ward off whatever it was she was going to say, but she only glanced casually around the mess before speaking, "We didn't have any idea what happened, Rodney. It's going to take everyone a bit to realize you're here to stay."
"What does that-" He swallowed, throat drying at her implications, "What does that even mean?"
"It means, Rodney," Sam said, leaning toward him, firmly compassionate, "That once we realized you ascended, we believed it had been on purpose. You came back right after the paperwork had been filed to clear your quarters."
"Is that what that was about," He muttered to himself, shaking his head, "Anyway, why would I do that? I have too much- I actually like being here. All the insanity with the Wraith and everything else is, surprisingly, not as much of a deterrent as it could be."
Sam peered at him. It had the effect of pinning him in place, all gentle and caring and those other nice adjectives he tried not to think too hard about in conjunction with Sam, lest he be somehow thwarted by it and end up in some remote outpost doing back-burner work. She raised her eyebrows at him, obviously catching some facial expression he didn't hide fast enough.
"That's good to hear," She said seriously, subtly letting him out of her verbal grip, "And I believe you have someone to talk to about that."
"I've been talking non-stop," He said, setting his fork down with an aggrieved clang.
"Rodney."
He sighed, "Yes, I know."
Sam pursed her lips, "I expect you to get on that."
"O wise leader," He replied, only half in jest. Sam was right, and they both knew it. Gathering up his things, he said, "Fine, alright. But that's the last of it, understand?"
She gave him a winning smile, sweet and what he now realized as, for him, only objectively attractive. It made her look years younger, making him realize that his absence had in fact been noted. He felt himself smile in return, shaking his head as he gathered up his tray.
-
'Last one' ended up, naturally, being Sheppard. He licked his lips, unaccountably nervous, remembering the tingle of them after Sheppard had kissed him. Clearing up that contemporaneous situation of his living quarters had been the most he'd actually seen the man, their shared meals as a team often cut short by one thing or another.
His time on enforced recuperation despite his obviously good health - recuperating the nerves of the medical staff, more likely - seemed to only prolong how much work he had to put into fixing the odds and ends of his division. If it wasn't paperwork, it was questioning the sanity of everyone's decisions while he had been gone.
It hadn't been a picnic, and he had found himself wishing he could merely tap his comm and chat with Sheppard. There had been something preventing the notion, though, probably his newly-found good sense that he would be intruding. On what, he didn't know for sure.
But with Sam's orders bolstering his nerves, he found himself at Sheppard's door, wondering briefly if the man was even in his room at this time of day. He sucked in a breath, waving his hand over the lock, anyway, letting the doorbell ring.
He waited impatiently, and just as he was about to talk himself out of this and make his excuses to Sam, the door slid open. Sheppard looked just as surprised, hair ruffled and a stylus in one hand.
"Sheppard," He greeted, shoving his hands in his pockets and rolling on his feet nervously. There was a flutter in his stomach that felt like more than just his own emotions, but that couldn't possibly be true, not with the way his friend continued to stare at him blankly, "Can I, uh, come in?"
"Oh," Sheppard said, blinking. It looked like he realized what was going on, shaking his head and stepping off to one side, "Yeah, yeah of course."
They stood awkwardly on the same side of the door, listening to it slide shut with a quiet sshk. Sheppard looked harried, like he hadn't been sleeping well, and his heart skipped a beat at the beginning of bags under the other's eyes.
"Are you-" He said, not entirely certain what question to ask, blurting out the first thing that made it to speech, "Okay? Are you okay?"
"Rodney," Sheppard sighed, and he felt himself blink, expecting McKay, instead.
"No, really, are you?" He asked, gaining momentum as he waved a hand around, "Because I haven't seen you in ages, not really, and I- I just. Wanted to know."
Sheppard looked at him from under his bangs, the sight an odd one given that even with the hang-dog look Sheppard shouldn't be able to pull off as the technically taller person, "You tell me, Rodney."
"Tell you-" His brain hit a snag at that, "Do you not know?"
"I've been here," Sheppard shrugged, looking almost listless, "You're here."
Oh. The realization hit him like a lightning bolt, a sensation he now had an equivalent experience for, his conversation with Sam making much more sense in retrospect. He felt his mouth drop open in surprise, automatically reaching a hand out to Sheppard.
If there was any reason to suspect something was wrong, it was that Sheppard allowed the touch, slouching into it in the barest of fractions. He gripped harder, feeling Sheppard sway into his hand.
"I'm right here," He murmured, the realizations slotting into place like Tetris pieces, the gaping space it created making him lean equally as much into Sheppard's space, "I'm not going anywhere."
He couldn't bring himself to tell Sheppard a timeline of relevancy, even as it burned his tongue to say. It was more feasible to quench his fears by pressing his lips to Sheppard's, listening to the clatter of the stylus falling to the floor as hands pressed into his waist.
For a pair of people that could, if they felt like it, converse without a single word, it felt less ambiguous to communicate this way. It felt like terabytes of information was being conveyed this way, listening to Sheppard's sighs and pushing away the burgeoning ability to listen in on what must have been instinctual thoughts.
"John," He sighed, pressing the man's name into his skin, rubbing a thumb along a stubbled jaw.
"Don' need to talk," John murmured, tilting his head to allow contemplative kisses to be trailed down the length of his neck.
"Mmm."
And that was a wonderful idea, if technically betraying the spirit of Sam's tacit orders. He felt it was the better interpretation of things, at any rate, continuing on his way of pressing reassurances and comforts into John's skin in lieu of speaking them.
Their method of communication required no appendices, John taking and interpreting what he intended flawlessly, melting into him with drifting, clutching hands. It felt a little bit like the closest he would get to that liminal place he had tripped into, only circling back home by an act of faith in his own self.
He leaned into John, skimming a hand up the man's side and feeling the shiver reverberate back onto him. Lifting his head from where he had been preoccupied with tasting the quiet, barely-there moans John had kept trapped in his throat, he gathered John closer with a hand on his back, "Hey."
John's eyes were still closed, and he was absently brushing their cheeks together, the rasp of daytime stubble brushing warmth into him. He hummed, turning his head to catch John's mouth for a kiss that was barely more than an indulgent slide of lips. They stayed like that for a moment, breathing in each other's air.
"I'm here," He said, pressing the words into John's mouth like a vow, feeling like he had to cradle this flickering, uncertain light close, the sight nearly visible behind his half-lidded eyes, "I'm here, I'm not leaving."
"Promise?"
He shuddered himself, feeling all the strings attached that Daniel and Sha're and death had unearthed to him, lines in the sand that he could cross at any moment. If he wanted. And with some of them, he did want - or would, if the right circumstances aligned. It was string theory, in a tangible, personal way, hitting one note and listening to its echo in a silent chamber hall until it faded out of existence.
The pause seemed nearly enough to undo John entirely, a hitch of breath that would precipitate misery, tearful and messy. He could feel those calloused hands grip him close, as if the act alone could keep him tethered in this plane of existence.
"Rodney," John begged, for multiple things, for a singular thing. Stay.
It was the one thing he knew John would nearly never ask for, too well-trained to protest loss hammering him into the thinnest of sheet metal, until it warped and bent him beyond usefulness. He pressed a slow, careful kiss to John's mouth, mapping the grief that had been allowed to settle into the crevices for too long.
His heart thumped to say it, distracting himself with John reviving in achingly cautious measures under his touch, "I promise."
The shudder rippling across John's crumple zones let him know the weight of his own words, sealed by the choked noise John made as he kissed him back, pressing a tongue past his lips with desperation. He let it happen, soaking up the way John needed him, wondering if this was what the Ascended meant, with their ability to touch a soul.
Coaxing John to bed was easier when it clicked that he wasn't being pushed away, endless murmurs pressed into the other man's skin. The grief was slow to slake, only now truly visible to him when that the reflexive veneer of relieved joy had worn off. He took his time with the way his hands travelled over John, pushing and tugging at fabric to signal his intentions to get closer.
John was still endearingly quick-witted, squirming against him once the tacit request had been registered and shucking his shirt, fingers stumbling on the myriad clasps that were fastened to his pants. He hushed him with a smiling kiss, drawing a bite out against John's lower lip as he ran soothing hands over the other's chest.
"Hngh, Rodney-"
"Shh," He promised, finding the belt buckle by touch, "I've got you."
And he did, unequivocally. John's head thumped back onto the bed, missing the pillow by a hair. It was an easily-followed urge to press a kiss above the top of John's pants, the stiff material of the uniform brushing against his throat as he felt the reflexive ripple of John's stomach under his mouth.
The snap of the buckle being undone was loud in the lull between them. He let his hands linger, tracing as he found his way to the holster. It was tempting to follow it with his mouth, if only to feel the strength of John's thigh so intimately, but John was clutching at the sheets and he was disinclined to make him wait any longer.
He set the sidearm, holster and all, on the side table. John was quick to cling to him as he stretched over to reach the table, eagerly rucking up his shirt. Grinning, he pressed into the hands that groped and skimmed over his body, relishing that this bit of mortality he was still able to enjoy.
It was a catching expression, John's smile luminescent as his hands slowed, mapping new territory with a possessive touch. He sighed, letting his weight sink down onto John, both of them sliding into another kiss.
Time rather melted away after that, the afternoon sunshine making its slow mark on the shadows in the room their only subtle indicator that they were crossing time with languid, heated touches. Maybe it was only a few minutes, but he couldn't be bothered to pull away to check, reveling that he was too absorbed in John to keep track of the ticking of seconds.
He sighed, coaxing John to switch their places with a murmur and cupping John's ass with one hand, tasting the moan as he gave it a squeeze. The press of John's chest bearing down against his, sweat-slicked and solid, was as heady as it was reassuring of the man's presence.
"I would never be able to forget you, you know," He said quietly, easing off from their kissing just enough to speak. There was just enough of a tremble to John's lips to indicate words being perched there, and he brushed them off with a quick swipe of his lips, "I couldn't. Not ever."
John seemed to know, though, the foundation upon which they knew each other set deep into their bones. He felt the nod made against him, John hiding his face against his own even as he tentatively rolled his hips, muscles in his ass tightening under his palm.
He encouraged John with a moan, rucking the man up against the thigh he had wedged at some point between John's own with a firm hand. The jump of a cock against his own, muffled only barely by the fabric between them, made him lose his mind a little.
"C'mon," He breathed, pressing a quick, dirty kiss into John's mouth, twisting so he could get his other hand on John's ass.
John moaned into the kiss, hands clutching at him as if he needed the support. He coaxed the man into straddling his hips, taking John's weight as his hands fluttered over the button and zip of the other's pants. It was more difficult by the way John couldn't help but shove into his hands, making needy sounds and overall just inhibiting what they both wanted.
He gripped John's hips, forcing them to still with an amused huff, "Stay still," He said, voice having dropped low and rough. It made John heave, wild-eyed but obedient, and he couldn't help but dig his fingers in a little deeper, "Let me take care of you."
The nod John gave him was instinctive but tremulous, head dropping into a bobble of agreement that made him look, abruptly, an aching sort of vulnerable that had his own heart skipping a beat. He gentled his touch, smoothing his hands up John's side and over his chest, feeling the thunder of the man's heart as he circled the tight nipples under his touch, "Will you let me?"
"Y-" John swallowed, arching into his hands, "Yeah."
"Okay," He murmured, letting his hands drag down with the barest touch of nails, imagining the welts he might leave there at a later date. The shiver and pant was satisfying, however, and he let his fingers dip beneath the waistline of John's pants in a tease, letting a thumb circle over the button the way he wanted to do to John's cock.
It was tempting to draw things out, but he felt like both of them have been craving this for far too long. He popped the button open, hearing John's shivery moan, letting his finger dip underneath the flap to trace the zipper before undoing that, too.
John rolled his hips into his hands, eyes having fallen shut and the man's own hands reaching behind him to grip his legs. It painted an attractive picture, all wanton offering with cock peeking out over the rumple of BDUs, and he took a moment to run his hands over John from hips to knees and up to ribs with a heavy, promising touch.
He felt when John shuddered, body relaxing and legs sliding further open to sit more heavily in his grasp, head lolling in pleasure. It seemed like the words would be on repeat, murmured as he tucked his fingers under the fabric of John's clothes, unwrapping John like an unforeseen present, and framing John's cock in the crook between thumb and forefinger with his palm flat on John's skin, "I've got you, I've got you."
"You do," John gasped, just from that simple touch alone. The helpless way John rolled his hips, shifting the hard line of his cock against his hand, as if that alone would make his palm leave the warm skin of John's groin.
Raking his fingers through the hair scattered on John's skin, he listened to the drawn-out groan as he wrapped his hand around John's cock in a long, leisurely pull. John was already wet for him, leaking in unsteady spurts that dribbled over his hand, and he pumped John's cock, watching how John fell apart for him.
The other man stayed still for him, though, restricting his own movements and going with the flow of this nonverbal conversation. It made him lick his lips, compiling a wish list of things he wanted to do - later, though, too busy easing his hand over John's cock and coaxing the other's pants lower so he could get a better grip of John's ass with his other hand.
"You'll come when I say so, won't you," He murmured, listening to the way John panted as he twitched between the dual pressures on him. His cock was aching in his own pants, and he shifted his legs, pulling on John's cock and pressing with his other hand so John curled over him, rolling his hips just to hear John's whine near his ear, "Look at you. You're beautiful, do you know that?"
John was shaking his head, far too quickly to be anything other than instinctive denial, and he wasn't having any of that. He cupped John's ass, massaging it with a wide-fingered grip and a thumb sweeping over the top of the curve.
"You are," He insisted roughly, pressing a kiss to the side of John's head, the only part he could reach without removing his hands from where they were, "You are, and I'll keep telling you. Every day, if I must."
"Don't," John choked out, shuddering in his grip, "'M not-"
He slowed his hand on John's cock, making his touch delicate as he played with the tip of John's cock, fingers sliding from frenulum to slit and back, a circular loop around the top that had John leaking over his hand with a sob, "I love you," He said firmly, the words a rebuttal to John's insecurities, so visible he almost felt angry at it, using the truth of his own self as a balm to that wound,
"You're the most beautiful person I've ever seen. God, do you even know-"
John was trembling in his arms, helplessly grinding into his hand, trying to draw out roughness from him. He refused, not wanting John to use him to smother himself, to hide away the way he had been doing since he had returned from that little diner on the way through to death.
"You don't get to do that," He swore, mouthing kisses along John's jaw, rough bites that would bruise later in contrast to the gentle, gentle way he traced John's leaking cock, "Not with me, understand? None of that."
"Rodney," John clutched at his shoulders with both hands, frantic as the man held on to him, "Rodney, you died, you left, you-"
"I'm here," He said, dipping a finger in the curve of John's ass, circling the tight entrance there with the same understanding of fragility as he was with John's cock, feeling the twitch and warmth of muscle, "I'm here, I'm back. I'm not leaving."
John rocked into his touch, moaning and wet-faced with a grief that was shattering. He murmured nonsensical things, keeping John grounded with his touch, arcing that pleasure between ass and cock with a careful balance. Slowly, the spasms rippling across John began to increase, accepting the uncoordinated kiss John laid upon his mouth as he coaxed that crescendo tighter.
He felt when John began to open at his touch, just enough for him to press the tip of his finger against the rim, a promise imprinted with the way he circled and dipped his finger, an inverse echo to what his hand was doing on John's cock.
Pressing a kiss against John's jaw, he murmured, "I want you to come for me."
And John did, wonderfully so, collapsing against him so he could grind on his stomach, smearing come between them and letting him feel the way John's ass fluttered against his finger. The aftershocks rolled through John, pulsing heat that made him moan against John's cheek, moving his hand to grab John's ass so he could roll his cloth-trapped cock up against him.
John pressed back against him, letting that finger slip momentarily deeper past the threshold. They both groaned at that, and he pushed John higher up so he could unbutton and shuck his own pants down far enough, cock rubbing against the cleft of John's ass.
It was a momentary disappointment to withdraw his hand from that warmth, but John was apparently more than willing to let him get off like that, pressing against sweat-dampened skin. He could taste the way John gasped into his mouth, feeling a little breathless himself at the way John rolled his ass back against him.
Coming was almost an afterthought, absorbed as he was in their synchronous motion. He shuddered, thoughts hazy as he felt hands pressing against his chest and shoulders in warming, repetitive motions.
"Mmm," He shifted, taking more of John's weight even as he huffed at the way the man slumped on top of him, "John."
The only response was garbled sentence squished into the side of his neck. He smiled, dancing the fingers of one hand up John's side, soothing the instinctive twitch with his palm, "Much as I enjoy having you naked, I would like to put my pants back on."
John grumbled, "Only sorta naked."
He skimmed his hands over the crease of John's ass, smirking at the shiver, "It's the thought that counts."
They righted themselves with reluctance, sacrificing John's shirt to clean off the worst of it - laughing when John subtly flexed his muscles as he got out of bed, enjoying the view and kissing the pout off with a firm press of lips.
Swinging his legs over the side of John's bed, he paused, thinking, "Shower?"
John tilted his head from side to side, giving him a once-over, "Could do."
He couldn't help his smile, shaking his head fondly at John's beaming smile. Pressing his side against John's, he leaned up for another kiss, listening to the way John breathed out a contented sigh, "Come on. Lunch break's almost over."
-
It turned out that they had wildly overshot the lunch hour, but nobody had gone looking for them, anyway. John had been much buoyed by more kisses, soaking up the inherent affection of being held when the anxiety of approaching the door made his shoulders tense up. The sight wasn't the first time a deep pensiveness had reared its head, but it was a nebulous feeling to actually act upon it for once, making him sigh as he pressed his head into John's shoulder.
The inherent protectiveness emanating from the way John ran his hands down his back was easy to settle into, something he had missed deeply and unintentionally. It had that tinge of tacit territoriality, making him clench his arms around John tighter, taking in the smell of freshly-laundered clothing and soap from their joint shower.
"What's up?" John murmured into his hair, matching his reluctance to leave the bubble of the room, voice still retaining a hint of that deep pitch from earlier.
He shivered, rubbing his cheek against the BDU jacket, "Hmm. Nothing much, I suppose."
And it was true, for a given value. It would be far too easy to slip into an awareness of this bubble of time, the consequences of popping it and leaving it in the past - a linearity that was relative, true, but only making him all the more aware of the finite amount of instances. But the knowledge was a background sort, still tasting like a wax seal broken off as its lid was cracked open, flavouring everything else with its presence.
"We don't have to go," John said, sounding as if he was split on the temptations, "Could call in, make some excuses."
He sighed, shaking his head and reaching up for another kiss, lingering over the way John's mouth moulded to his with a simple press, "We'd never leave, probably."
"Hmm," John nosed at his jaw, skimming his lips over the soft edge with a façade of thoughtfulness, "Probably, yeah."
Groaning, he made himself push John away, unable to help the smile tugging at his lips as John made to mosey closer, "Really, though. I need to head back to the labs, repair some of the equipment brought back from the last mission."
John sighed, letting them disengage and opening the door with the faint pressure of thought. It still gave him a little shiver of intellectual curiosity that he could sense the edges of that, and he followed the other man through the mostly-deserted corridor back to the main areas of the city.
"Can't you get someone else to do that?" John asked, tilting a brow at him.
"Not unless you want some mystery soldering and parts from the wrong rummage bin," He replied dryly, "Most everyone is still on inventorying - a few people started up projects without Sam's explicit permission, and I'm still hunting down all the parts that were allocated to more important things."
"Things like…?"
He huffed, swiping the button for the transporter, "Oh, jumper maintenance, that transporter in one of the residential halls that still puts you to a pier one out of five requests, the like."
John nodded slowly, that innocent look pasted onto his face that stopped working on him except for special occasions, "The jumpers are important, yeah."
"And so is everything else," He shook his head, amused, "It's mostly the geological team complaining about it, since I put everyone together by department. You wouldn't happen to know anything about why that happens, would you?"
"Nnnno, absolutely not," John rocked up on his toes, keeping deliberate attention on the doors as they opened.
He snorted, shaking his head, "I don't even want to know."
John grinned, gesturing for him to leave the transporter first, "All's well that ends well."
"Like I haven't heard that before," He rolled his eyes, pausing with a small shuffle of his steps where he knew they would have to split paths. John was likewise lingering, a wistful look to his face that wasn't quite as patted down into inscrutability as the man probably thought, "I'll, uh, see you at dinner? All of you?"
Waiting for John to melt into a slow, reassuring smile did little for his nerves - nor did the cognizant inability to settle himself with one last, lingering kiss like they had done in John's quarters. Nevertheless, it seemed his thoughts were recognized, John leaning marginally forward into his space, "Yeah. Don't get too caught up, okay?"
Feeling breathless from that little bit of proximity, he nodded faintly, "Yeah."
Heedless of the tacitly curious looks thrown their way, John winked and strode off with a swing in his step. My god, he thought faintly, No wonder the women keep fawning over him.
Catching the quizzical look one of the soft scientists - P-something, he believed - threw his way, he touched the side of his cheek, realizing he had a smile firmly affixed onto his face. What a strange sight he must have made, staring after the colonel like that.
Lips unable to fall back into their usual resting state, he thought, Mine, though.
-
Whatever his mood was, it made his minions all the more biddable when he walked into one of the main labs, and he would take the stretch of luck as far as it would run.
"You," He snapped his fingers at Kusanagi, "Have you found all the scrap alloy O'Brennon and his roving horde of miscreants squirreled away?"
She smiled, cheeks dimpling under her glasses, "Yes, Doctor McKay. I have informed them to return everything to a new bin for your inspection and filled with its own catalogue."
He beamed at her, "Excellent. Make sure you get those meteorological analytics in to the marine biologists, Sam wants them to make sure we have clear weather for a research team on that new island chain we found."
Kusanagi nodded, still having that polite grin on her face as she returned to her computer. He wanted to harrumph, but frankly it was reassuring to have that same dubiously perpetual ray of sunshine around to witness, undaunted by his brief, unintentional respite in the so-called afterlife. Pausing briefly over his keyboard, he wondered whether she ought to be given more responsibilities because of that.
Hmm. Opening up the notepad on his computer, he typed in a quick note to assess her workload and if she would benefit from some training in additional areas. Radek would probably know.
And speak of the devil, Radek rapped his knuckles on the edge of the table, announcing his presence, "Alo. Are you done sight-seeing?"
"Hmph," He responded, turning his stool around so he could grab the stack of LSDs that AR-5 had zapped. It was busy work, because he knew as well as Radek did that there were plenty of people who could solder a few chips together, but he quietly appreciated the banality to give himself an opportunity to rest the still-turbulent nature of his thoughts, "What have you got?"
Radek raised an eyebrow at him, "Rumors that you are in a good mood. I am glad to hear they are false, for otherwise I will need to train in another boss."
"Har-har," He rolled his eyes in response, "I still sign all of the paperwork you foist off on me so you can stare down a microscope, don't forget that."
"Ah, yes, that is true," Radek nodded thoughtfully, sliding onto a stool on the other side of the table, logging into his tablet with a quick set of swipes on the screen, "It is good for me, no? You would not look as handsome in glasses. Best to save that dilemma for me."
He grumbled good-naturedly, opening up his email, "To have the disconcerting appeal of a moth in daylight? You have the market cornered."
Radek waggled his eyebrows, "All the better to track down filaments for our gravity simulators, no?"
Blinking, he tore his attention away from the molecular models of some prototype drug the medical department CCed him on, leaning around his monitor, "Did you really?"
Grinning, Radek tapped his nose, "I may have found an alloy we can synthesize, but it will take much work to test whether it will work in different gravities."
"You are the best," He breathed, scooting off the stool in excitement, roundly ignoring the way Radek perked up with a smug look, "Gimme. Where is it?"
"Ah, ah, what do you say?" Radek asked with a grin.
He arched a brow, "Uh, now? So I can figure out how to fix the simulators below our waterline? Where we've been wanting to renovate for extra storage in the accessed labs we've cleared out?"
Radek rolled his eyes, huffing and waving a hand to the corner of the lab where some of the employee lockers were. They had some unlocked ones to store the smaller odds and ends they found while exploring the city, if it wasn't filled with motherboards and other spare parts. He couldn't find it in himself to be more than superficially annoyed, doing his best to restrain himself from skipping over to the locker with glee.
There was indeed a little plastic bin, neatly labeled with some masking tape and marker in Radek's obscure handwriting. Do not touch! Rodney's work was scribbled onto it, and he popped off the lid with the same enthusiasm as he would a box of the fancy TV dinners.
"Oh my," He murmured to himself, delicately tracing the iridescent metal. There wasn't very much of it, and they had yet to actually work out the production process to duplicate it in the amounts they needed to truly repair all the damaged sectors in the city, but seeing the neatly-coiled amount nestled in some tissue paper from the chemists' lab was enough to catch his breath, "Radek, this-"
"Might actually be enough to test?" Radek completed his thoughts, smiling, "Yes, it is possible. I have submitted a proposal for testing with one of the smaller superconductors, but it will need your signature as well as Colonel Carter's."
He carefully replaced the lid, clutching the tub close, "Absolutely. Is this already emailed?"
Radek waved a hand at his computer, making him hustle himself back to his seat, typing with one hand as he searched through his email. When he spotted the correct subject line, his eyes caught on the timestamp, "Radek-"
"Ano," Radek replied simply, looking at him over the rim of his glasses while he worked on his tablet.
"I-" How could he explain what he thought, the proof that this was idling in his inbox during his absence, when there had been no known possibility that it would only have been temporary? Looking helplessly at the way Radek was calmly writing something on his tablet with a stylus, he clutched the tub closer, feeling overwhelmed.
"Is nothing," Radek said, expression kind, "I knew you were looking for it."
And the thought of this little tie to mundanity, that Radek considered it more important than his own ascension - purposefully or accidental, something none of them here would be able to tell apart - was a startling level of consideration. He wetted his lips, wondering what to say as he blinked a few times, "Thank you. I'll- I'll sign off on that, tell Sam to."
Radek relaxed in his seat, looking relieved, "Yes. Be sure to review proposal, as well? I do not want any surprises during testing."
He found himself smiling, tremulous as it was, "Of course. I'll get on that right away."
Nodding, Radek returned to his work, the air between them and the lab at large losing that unfounded edge of anxiety. He felt that sharpness ease within himself, too, and looked at his screen, deciding on the spot that this was a subject better hashed out in person, "Actually, you know what, I'll just- I'll be right back."
Radek glanced up at him, "Of course."
He nodded a couple of times, "Yes. Yes, of course." Patting the container, he walked toward the door, tapping his comm and feeling everything settle into place, "McKay to Sheppard. Hey- Radek found something, you'll never guess what it is-"
-
Author's Notes
Ascension is… an odd concept. It seems a little odd that Ancients - or Alterans, for the broader scope across the Stargate canon - would spend so much time developing so much technology across multiple galaxies, just to have one of their most memorable points as a society be a prettily-worded death cult. What would be the point of all that technology? So… mathematics, and its applications in the sciences, as a form of philosophy that reflects back onto ascension. And for someone like Rodney, who not only had one confirmed brush with ascending (Tao of Rodney), but an unconfirmed one (The Shrine - same technological basis as in Tao of Rodney) as well, on top of multiple near-death experiences - something in his hind brain has got to be percolating that during a fair amount of the show.
I realized about partway through that the control crystals for Atlantis tech show nearly identical circuitry patterns, which I understand would have made it easier for audiences to figure out that it was Technology TM and provide a bridging point, but I kind of threw it out and substituted my own headcanon that's visible through Rodney's internal monologue in the beginning scene.
There's a background fix-it in terms of Sha're ascending, mostly because I thought her death was nonsense and also I like the idea of her and Rodney being in the same room. As for that little diner, it fits a lot of themes and motifs in other media (that I don't remember at the moment) of being a transition point between living and death, and indicative of Rodney being indecisive about actually being dead - an opposite end of that subject is discussed via Campfire Stories. This also takes place before This Mortal Coil, where Replicator!Elizabeth visits Atlantis, and after Miller's Crossing, where Rodney and Jeannie were abducted for evil plot reasons. Can't imagine anyone really dealing with Rodney's ascension all that well, in that context.
Over the course of canon, also, I've noticed Rodney has displayed some… let's call it awareness of plot-related events. He's a main character, sure, so his plot armor means death won't stick, and the writers have an interesting way of dancing around their plotholes sometimes, but somehow or another it ends up being conveyed as prescience of critical changes in a situation (Rodney picking what ultimately ended up being the correct door in Trio, for example). I wanted to convey that as a sort of quantum physics problem - Schroedinger's cat, almost, in that what could be will be and always is (a multiplicity of states, aka the quantum superposition principle). Some of this was also discussed via Interface- an effect once observed and all that, and rather fitting given Rodney's specialties.
I wanted to lean into these concepts, and go "What if Rodney ascended?", with an added dose of making it accidental because Rodney is noticeable prone to being able to come up with solutions out of thin air, and what is ascension but another revelation? It seems very in character for him, I think.
Also meet the new OC, scientist O'Brennon - he's a mechanical engineer, probably.
Czech translations:
Ano - yes
můj prdel - my ass
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elmaestrostan · 5 months
Text
In the refurbished gym at Aston Villa’s training ground, players are regularly put through their paces, spend time building up their strength and flexibility and develop the team bond that is such a key part of their incredible current form.
Another regular sight in the gym has been head coach Unai Emery putting in the miles on the treadmill. But unlike most people, who listen to music or a podcast while working out, the man behind one of the biggest turnarounds in recent Premier League history uses the time to watch recordings of their upcoming opponents’ games.
He’s looking for patterns, for holes, for weaknesses for Villa to exploit.
Paywall jump under the ✂️🫡
Emery then relays his findings and key messages to the players in lengthy video analysis sessions, which have been known to run up to an hour and fifteen minutes.
Focusing on and improving the small details has been the underlying theme of the 13 months since Emery’s appointment, with Villa now a club transformed. Beating champions Manchester City and their title rivals Arsenal back-to-back in the space of four days this week is a period that rubber-stamps their progress.
This is how Villa turned their form and fortunes around, including how:
Emery warned players to never make the same mistakes after previous Arsenal defeat
He compiled a dossier on each player before joining, calling on his backroom staff to put together clips
Players noted a transformation between training under previous boss Steven Gerrard and Emery
The squad were pushed through pain barriers in pre-season
A ‘best-in-class’ mentality has emerged throughout the club
Co-owner Nassef Sawiris was recently pitchside and clapped every player off the pitch
Emery takes training ground staff out for meals
Villa’s overall infrastructure has been improved.
Seconds away from becoming the only manager in Villa’s 149-year history to win 15 successive home league games, Emery raised both hands in the air and outwards, cranking the crowd’s volume even higher.
It was apt that Villa crossed into unprecedented territory against Arsenal. Ten months ago, the Gunners were the previous Premier League visitors to leave the stadium with three points.
Since then, West Midlands walls have been fortified. The successive 1-0 victories inside four days over the sides to finish first (City) and second (Arsenal) in the 2022-23 Premier League and are likely to contest the title again this season — described as “the most difficult week” by Emery — were taxing, but ultimately ended in glory.
Fortress Villa Park has proven the symbol of the club’s remarkable resurgence, establishing them as one of the Premier League’s best and most effectively-run football clubs.
The improvement from the final days of predecessor Gerrard — where only goal difference kept them out of the top flight’s relegation places — is as drastic as it is exceptional, with Villa now firmly in the hunt for a Champions League spot next season and perhaps even more, with Pep Guardiola endorsing their title credentials only last week.
Emery regarded February’s 4-2 home defeat against Arsenal as a turning point. Irrespective of what he said publicly, that showdown with his old club was one he was desperate to win. So he was consequently infuriated with his side’s manner of collapse after the scores were level until the final minutes. Post-match and across several meetings, he told his players, in no uncertain terms, that such errors could not be repeated.
Emery remarked that they had kicked the ball long on too many occasions, with his defensive players continuing to clear to safety, as opposed to retaining possession and stamping their authority on the game. He preached that seizing control would lead to the concession of fewer goals. Even after the wins against City and Arsenal this week, Emery recalled that painful loss to the latter, unprompted, in his press conferences.
“The players are more united with each other, this is their primary strength,” says one source close to the dressing room who, like others in this piece, spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships.
That match almost 10 months ago was the last time Villa lost at home, and marked the start of a shift in mentality. Their performance against City on Wednesday was one for the ages and underlined just how far many of those same players who faced Arsenal in February have come in terms of composure, organisation and general quality.
Final preparations for City’s visit had been different to the usual routines.
Emery wanted his players to train on the morning of the game, keen to drill extra detail. The session he conducted was low-intensity, chiefly working on various patterns of play and team shape, ensuring the starting XI knew how to exploit the areas Emery’s analysis had told him City were vulnerable in.
A fluid, spinning midfield four overloaded City in central areas and provided additional passing lanes when playing out from the back. This proved essential in victory and highlighted the forensic lengths Emery and his coaching staff go to.
Before his official switch from La Liga side Villarreal late last October, Emery compiled detailed dossiers of each player from his home in Spain. He called on the backroom staff who would be joining him in England to put together footage of previous games and clips of individual players. He swiftly recognised the blindspots in the team he was inheriting from Gerrard, with defence a particular issue — Tyrone Mings, Ezri Konsa and Matty Cash were all concerns.
Elsewhere, Emery knew his methodology would enable specific plans for his attackers, but felt more firepower was needed. Contrary to reports regarding Moussa Diaby being his top target, Athletic Bilbao winger Nico Williams was the player Emery initially wanted.
“With Gerrard, training was just training,” says a source close to a Villa player. “But Emery is so detailed, as he was at Arsenal. He coached them (the players) and continues to coach them in every facet of football every single day, and regularly reinforces good habits on the training ground — until the point where it starts working on the pitch. The players then believe in his methods and start doing exactly what he’s asking them to do every game — confidence and belief then kick in — and this is the result.”
This included the development of first-choice centre-backs Mings and Konsa. Emery wanted both to become better on the ball and protect their zones defensively. Through detailed coaching in what Emery expected from the pair in their parts of the pitch, greater clarity and confidence have been provided.
Players noted an immediate contrast in training between Gerrard and Emery, with the content of sessions transformed overnight. It tied in with the notion that there was a completely different level of leadership between the two coaches — Emery knew exactly what he wanted, while Gerrard, in comparison, was seen to be looking for a “moment of magic” from an individual player.
Gerrard sat, a broken man, alongside assistant Gary McAllister towards the end of a 3-0 defeat away to Fulham in October last year, with neither man, realising they had reached the end at Villa, offering little direction to the players. The lack of communication became so bad that striker Ollie Watkins — usually a reserved, quiet character — took it upon himself to organise a huddle on the Craven Cottage pitch in a bid to restore some semblance of order.
By contrast, Emery is a constant presence up on the touchline, instructing his team through every passage of play. Figures close to Villa say it is a small window into his all-consuming personality, where those in his inner circle describe him as “obsessive” in wanting to extract each possible marginal gain.
In his early days at Villa, Emery would work on at Bodymoor Heath, Villa’s training ground, until as late as 10pm. His close friend, and now the club’s director of football, Damian Vidagany accompanied him and joked how their nocturnal habits would drive security staff, desperately hoping for sleep, to despair. While those hours have now slightly reduced (Emery tends to work 7am-7pm these days, but is prone to staying later to study for the next game) his intensity has not.
Emery’s exhaustive methods meant getting results quickly was important in terms of getting senior players onside. Players subsequently saw purpose in his prolonged preparations and have continued to adhere to his plans. “He’s naturally confident but he loves Emery,” said a source close to one key player. “The coach always asks him never to be afraid to play.”
The first pre-season under Emery this summer was energy-sapping. Lots of travel (including a three-game U.S. tour) with lots of warm-up matches afforded little opportunity for downtime and pushed players, in terms of physical exertion, far more than they experienced in their one pre-season under Gerrard. There were aches and pains before the final friendly away to another of Emery’s former Spanish clubs Valencia but, among players and staff, there remained total buy-in.
Pushing through physical barriers was illustrated once more in Emery opting to go with an unchanged side on Saturday, less than 72 hours after the final whistle against City. “I was thinking about changing the starting XI,” he said, “but yesterday every player said they were perfect to play.”
Emery wanted to build a best-in-class mentality throughout the club. Senior figures involved in non-related footballing matters at Villa say other aspects are having to play catch-up in matching the progress shown under Emery’s leadership. This was also reflected in Villa’s recruitment, where Emery and Vidagany made concerted efforts not to be content with signing “second-rate” players for the sake of it.
In January, Emery’s first window with the club, Villa wanted to give him one new player and sanctioned the Spaniard’s priority target — experienced Real Betis full-back Alex Moreno. With Emery having no prior knowledge of Jhon Duran and despite Villa being far down the line towards his signing from MLS side Chicago Fire — a deal pushed by their then sporting director Johan Lange — the transfer was only finalised once he’d watched footage of the teenage forward and agreed there was potential that could be refined under his coaching.
Emery’s sacking from Arsenal in November 2019 hurt him deeply, given it was a development he did not see coming. He felt blindsided by the collapse of faith in his project after only 18 months.
Therefore, in his second crack at the Premier League, Emery intended to build a structure around him that was robust enough to withstand dips in form and, more significantly, to forge the club he joined in his image. Both he and Vidagany share the viewpoint that a settled environment is more important than having money to spend.
Co-owners Sawiris and Wes Edens were enthused by Project Emery and wanted to deliver a supportive network. And having watched him guide Villa from the relegation candidates he inherited to Europa Conference League qualifiers in less than a full season, they gave Emery greater autonomy in bringing aboard more Spanish-speaking staff, including president of football operations Monchi.
On Saturday, Emery thanked Edens and Sawiris for their contributions to Villa’s historic run of home form.
The new coach’s influence became increasingly tangible in recruitment and contracts, where he pushed a new deal for Mings, having been won over by the England international after his early reservations. This was the first sign of chief executive Christian Purslow becoming sidelined, and he left the club in the summer.
Similarly, Lange moved away from the day-to-day running of the club to assist the owners in their plans to build a multi-club stable before leaving Villa to join fellow Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur in October. Although he helped to develop Villa following his appointment in the summer of 2020, current staff are so confident in Emery’s project and their standing that Lange’s exit has not been a cause for concern.
Before Emery, neither of Edens and Sawiris attended many Villa fixtures. This changed, however, because of their extremely strong affection for him and because they see a team who are winning. After a recent match, Sawiris was pitchside and clapped every player off the pitch and during the November international break, Emery, Vidagany and Monchi attended a Milwaukee Bucks game, the NBA basketball team co-owned by Edens.
In their desire to give Emery what he wants, Edens and Sawiris’ holding company, V Sports, announced a partnership with lower-league Spanish club Real Union last month. In June, Emery and his brother, Igor, acquired a controlling stake in the club from their native Basque region, who their grandfather and father both played for. Strengthening ties improves Real Union’s footballing set-up, with Villa now in a position to share ideas, including coaching and data — something that naturally appealed to Emery.
Even though there are concerns externally as to whether Villa’s owners are giving too much power to Emery and his Spanish appointments, their unwavering view is that he will succeed and will not be leaving.
“You don’t know how lucky Aston Villa are to have these owners,” said Vidagany. “Coming from a traditional club in Spain to Aston Villa, which is self-proud and has a very big history, the owners understand. This is not easy because the interest of investors sometimes is bigger than the understanding of the club.
“What we found here are owners who are committed financially and embrace Villa’s heritage. We knew from the first moment we were not going to be Manchester City or Manchester United, but we knew that if we are professional and explain the plan, the owners will be committed to the plan.”
One of the first phone calls Emery made before joining Villa was to Vidagany, who initially came with him as his personal assistant. Vidagany is tasked with handling the aspects of management away from the training pitch, connecting multiple departments at the club and ensuring alignment throughout. After the subsequent arrival of former Sevilla colleague Monchi, he and Vidagany take care of transfer negotiations and act as sounding boards for any queries.
Vidagany is a transparent and frank communicator in his dealings with players and agents, informing them via email and in meetings if they should seek another club. This summer, he told certain players they could leave provided they came to Villa with a buyer, outlining the sort of fees the club were looking for in each case.
Emery, Vidagany and Monchi have formed a ‘triangle of power’, and are charged with making the key football-related decisions. They have a close relationship, eating breakfast together and working from a shared office that is split into three rooms. The trio travel to games together on the team coach and although Emery will not make such statements publicly, there is a belief between the club’s three main decision-makers that Villa can be contenders, even if there is a disparity in resources between them and the domestic elite.
Emery has hired several Spanish-speaking staff whom he trusts implicitly, including assistant Pako Ayestaran, who had worked in the Premier League before, under Rafa Benitez at Liverpool from 2004-07 — when they won the Champions League. Ayestaran’s appointment is being regarded as one of Emery’s shrewdest decisions, with his experience adding an alternative voice to other trusted assistants.
Another relied-upon staff member is goalkeeping coach Javi Garcia. While first-choice ’keeper Emiliano Martinez had a close relationship with the role’s previous occupant Neil Cutler, it is understood he is working with Garcia even more. Martinez invited Garcia to the recent Ballon D’or ceremony where he was named the world’s best goalkeeper. Garcia is open to using different technologies and data to vary training and achieve marginal gains in Martinez’s shot-stopping and distribution.
Emery likes to take staff who work at the Bodymoor Heath training ground out for lunch and dinner, which has helped to foster a spirit of unity at the team’s day-to-day home on the northern outskirts of Birmingham.
The support network away from the training pitch has also been crucial in the club providing a stable base for Emery.
Phil Roscoe, who leads the player care department, is well-liked among the squad and their families and is available to help at any hour. Sofia Allen, Villa’s player care officer, speaks multiple languages and has helped new signings from overseas settle in. Diego Carlos, for instance, knew little English when he joined from Sevilla under Gerrard in the 2022 pre-season. The Brazilian centre-back then sustained a significant injury (a ruptured Achilles tendon) in just his second appearance for the club in the August, while having to help his family settle after the move from Spain and find schools for his children. But Villa were on hand to help and subsequently eased the transition.
There is a sense among senior contacts that Villa, in regards to infrastructure, have seriously got their act together in the past year, coinciding with Emery’s arrival. The club now boast a refurbished, state-of-the-art training facility, have an operational inner-city academy complex — though it’s not yet open to the public — and are pressing ahead with plans to increase Villa Park’s 42,000 capacity to 50,000.
Such growth might have not been quite as swift if Villa had been unable to offer the level of stability given to Emery, with observers close to the situation pointing to the current dysfunction elsewhere in the Premier League at Chelsea and Manchester United.
The players were given two days off in the afterglow of their record 15th straight home league win.
That historic feat is another sign of new ground being broken and of the progress being made under Emery and throughout the club.
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sergeantsporks · 11 months
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I mean, you could make arguments for/explain away all of those (Insert character got away with having no identification when that really should've been a problem for them) situations.
Principal Bump allowed Luz to enroll at Hexside in-exchange for Eda doing that laundry list of tasks for him.
King seemed to dismissed as Eda's pet by most people, plus he was never really placed in a situation where a lack of identification presented a problem. (He was never enrolled in school/got a library card/etc.)
As for how he got his paws on those adoption papers... Eh, I'm sure Eda knows a guy who could forge that kind of stuff. King being her son, he would probably be aware of that kind of criminal contact. Hell, Lilith is a former government official! She probably knows a guy who would rubber stamp adoption papers, no questions asked. King could've asked her for help.
Eda's library card could stem from when she was a child.
Hunter not having any official documents despite being the Golden Guard can be handwaved away as Belos wanting to isolate him from the outside world/make it hard for him to leave him.
The GG get up is distinct enough to serve as an ID to Coven Scouts and other Coven officials, he only ran into problems once he was out of uniform. His Coven sigil was only dismissed as a fake because of his young age. Hell, later on, he is recognized out of uniform by layperson Coven Scouts and he was actually trying to be in disguise there.
During Hunter's "infiltration" of Hexside, he seemed to fly under the radar because it was some sort of club day. The only adult he encountered then was Willow’s old Abomination Magic teacher, who seemed preoccupied with besting Willow/Emerald Entrails, not wondering where one of their players (Who was seemingly from a Magic Track that he played no role in teaching) came from.
It just strikes me as a bit... odd that Belos wouldn't insist on there being official records for every citizen of the Boiling Isles. He's trying to kill everyone, surely it would be helpful to know who every person is IMHO.
And I have used similar arguments and explanations to explain away why Caleb and Evelyn have library cards, titan bless <3
There probably ARE birth certificates. I won't deny that it's SOMEWHAT tracked; it most likely is! But it's probably not failproof and I think, whatever it is BELOS wants, the actual citizenry of the Isles, who are the ones keeping the records and giving out library cards, may be more lax.
The Empire's only been there fifty years. People are alive that remember a time BEFORE the Empire, and they may or may not have identification themselves because they were born before the system was in place (so no birth certificate). If they hadn't gotten to registering somewhere or were comfortable/established where they were, registration might not have been forced because it would cause unrest (and is that really a battle you want to pick anyway? They might be DEAD by the time the DoU rolls around).
The system itself definitely still has bugs that need to be ironed out at this point; it's still a baby government. Between grandfathering people in and a general lack of total control all over the isles (Eda says they don't have much influence outside the cities), I'm willing to bet that while there may be some form of identification/population tracking, it's not super set in stone and you can get by without "proper" registration relatively easily because people will make allowances without much fuss.
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timetrek24 · 3 months
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🇺🇲 In 1892 Robert Hawley and Charles Henry Ingersoll laid the foundation for The Ingersoll Watch Company. Born out of a humble mail order business in New York City in 1882, the company initially dealt in low-cost items like rubber stamps. However, their journey was destined for greater horizons.
⏱️ In 1896, Ingersoll revolutionized the watch industry by introducing the first-ever dollar watch – the "Yankee." Priced at a mere $1, it became an instant sensation, marking a significant milestone as the most affordable timepiece of its time. By 1899, an astonishing 8,000 watches were churned out daily, fueling the brand's exponential growth.
📊 Вy 1910, Ingersoll had become a household name, with over 10,000 dealers worldwide carrying their iconic timepieces. The dollar watch became synonymous with accessibility, democratizing timekeeping for people from all walks of life.
💰 Ingersoll's commitment to affordability and quality resonated with millions, with nearly 40 million dollar watches sold within two decades. Their impact was so profound that even president Theodore Roosevelt, during his African expedition, was recognized as "the man from the country where Ingersoll was produced."
💯 Ingersoll's legacy transcended mere timepieces; it became a cultural phenomenon. Their famous tagline, "The watch that made the dollar famous!" echoed across generations, cementing their place in horological history.
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bellygunnr · 8 months
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Sawhorse and Firewall sheltering from a solar storm under the cut!
The shelter was hot, crowded, and loud, fit to bursting. High concrete walls kept everyone in, too collectively nervous to shy away from the screens that displayed the city and a timer to the end of the storm. Others took up corners to play games, or told stories, or badgered the current-volunteers for this or that. A pair of sparklings collected empty energon rations to listlessly build towers with.
You had no idea the apartment building had this many residents. Or maybe it didn't, and its underground bunker held mechs from the surrounding area. If they were able to get there in time, anyway.
An alarm bleeped once. The timer flashed, stamped a longer countdown. You rolled your neck and shoulders, cut a long look at your buddy, Sawhorse.
"We're fucked," you said.
He nodded. "Eh, maybe. Storm probably fried the sensors. I'd give it twelve hours."
Twelve hours. The clock said two days, give or take some change.
"Where'd your roommates go?" You ask instead.
Sawhorse hummed, a subsonic buzz. "Half of'em work for the city. Blink's at work at some country refinery, though. She should be okay."
Oh. You frowned. The temperature ticked a little higher so your internal fans clicked on.
"I can't remember the last time I had to shelter for a storm," you admitted. "Or, well..."
Delta, as the capitol, had the infrastructure to survive minor solar storms. When they did occur, the underground oval tracks opened up to the public and teams got some free testing in. Alpha only had a few circuits, all above ground. You weren't allowed in any of them.
Sawhorse pinged you a two-way comm session. You accepted it instantly, only to frown at the proposal.
"...Sawzer. Where the hell do you get this stuff?"
"Look, Omni Medical offers these up for free. And they pass the time!"
"We could watch a real show or something instead? I'll even watch ER Horror Stories--"
You loved Sawhorse, really. Even if his fascination with surgery training vods was weird. He was too good at his job for you to deride him for it.
Sawhorse puffed up slightly. You tweaked one of his rubber-coated cheeks, noted the faint cracking in the left bulge. Automatically, you pulled out a bottle of nanite-laced filler while he loaded up an episode of some medical show.
The video played between your processors while you pinned him down and cleaned up his finish.
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todaysdocument · 1 year
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Complaint, Ludtke v Kuhn, 12/29/1977. 
Journalist Melissa Ludtke sued MLB commissioner Bowie Kuhn over the Yankees’ policy of banning female reporters from the locker room. The Court found that the policy violated the equal protection and due process clause of the 14th Amendment. 
Record Group 21: Records of District Courts of the United States
Series: Civil Case Files
File Unit: [Melissa Ludtke and Time, Incorporated v. Bowie Kuhn, Commissioner of Baseball, et al.]
Transcription:
[on top right side, rubber stamps,
first stamp; "77 CIV. 6301"
second stamp; "U.S. DISTRICT COURT, FILED DEC 29 1977. S. D. OF N. Y."
third stamp; "COMPLAINT JUDGE MOTLEY"]
[on top right side, handwritten, "1", circled.
handwritten inside of second stamp, under date, "12:01"]
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
-----------------------------------------
MELISSA LUDTKE and TIME, INCORPORATED,
Plaintiffs,
-against-
BOWIE KUHN, Commissioner of Baseball,
LELAND MacPHAIL, President of the
American League of Professional
Baseball Clubs, THE NEW YORK YANKEES
PARTNERSHIP, ABRAHAM BEAME, Mayor of
the City of New York, JOSEPH
DAVIDSON, Commissioner of Parks and
Recreation for the City of New York,
and DENNIS ALLEE, Director of the
Economic Development Administration
of the City of New York,
Defendants.
-----------------------------------------
[underlined] Jurisdiction
1. Jurisdiction of the Court is invoked pur-
suant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the United
States Constitution, and by reason of the doctrine of pendent
jurisdiction.
2. The amount in controversy exceeds $10,000,
exclusive of interests and costs.
[underlined] Parties
3. Plaintiff Melissa Ludtke is a woman employed
[on bottom right of page, handwritten "1", circled]
[page 2]
time high of 40,781,061.
18. Time publications reflect the great public interest in baseball by devoting substantial editorial resources and news coverage to baseball.
19. The public interest in professional baseball extends far beyond the results or play-by-play descriptions of the games. For example, sports fans want to know how the players think how they played in a particular game, how the players relate to one another and to their owners, coaches and manager and, in general, what the players are like as human beings.
20. In response to that public interest and to increase fan interest and attendance, defendants Kuhn, MacPhail and the New York Yankees encourage and, together with the City, profit from news coverage going beyond the mere results of the games. Accordingly, they have permitted reporters access to players in the clubhouses of major league baseball teams immediately after professional baseball games.
21. Access to the clubhouses of major league baseball teams immediately after games, however, has been and continues to be limited to male reporters. Accredited female reporters, including plaintiff Ludtke, have been and continue to be barred from such access solely because of their sex.
-8-
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aegor-bamfsteel · 1 year
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Do you think Cersei and Lysa could have escaped their abusive marriages without killing their husbands? I feel bad for them being stuck in these marriage with no respite.
Technically yes, but I think neither of them were in a position (or willing characterization wise) to do it.
Divorce/annulment is theoretically possible (there are wives who ask for annulment, or fathers who get an annulment for their son), as is joining a religious order (the Silent Sisters at least seem to cancel marriage vows). We see couples who are unofficially divorced like Jorah Mormont/Lynesse Hightower, Doran Martell/Mellario of Norvos, or Viserys II/Larra Rogare; the woman has left her husband and is either living with a new man in Essos or returning to her Essosi homeland. Ned warned Cersei once he’d discovered the truth to take her children and flee to Essos, which would’ve presumably undone the marriage.
However, all of these options would’ve been social disaster for them, and would block their overall goals. Cersei enjoys being queen and mother to kings, and she’s not giving that up to live anonymously in Essos; she tells Jaime that there’s no way they could love openly and still maintain support. As for Lysa, I’m sure if Petyr had asked her to, she would’ve tried to run away with him to the Free Cities…but he never would because he’s vengeful and ambitious, so she agreed to use her status as Lady Arryn to help him socially advance. Joining a religious order would prevent them from having a lover and generally remove themselves from the status marriage gave them. And asking for an annulment (on what grounds? Nonconsummation? That’s not true. Abandonment? Not technically true. Consanguinity? Hardly. Mental cruelty? If that was grounds for annulment the story would be very different) where the High Septon is basically the King’s rubber stamp is unlikely to be granted, not to mention would put their children’s legitimacy into question, essentially making the hardship they went through in marriage moot. So while there were options to end their marriages, it’s easy to see why Cersei and Lysa didn’t take advantage of any of them.
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aria-i-adagio · 4 months
Text
WIP Whenever
Tagged by @atypicalacademic Tagging: @motherofqups, @hoochieblues
Been using my snow days to play Baldur's Gate, but maybe I should work a bit on the ol'WIPs.
Anyway, here's part of a scene I wrote this week.
---
Sindre scanned the shelves of books. Evyn didn't seem to mind his interest in the collection, even if the book of maps had disappeared after he had paged through it.. Presumably, anything else he didn't want Sindre to find had been hidden away at the same time. There was just enough light to find one with a title stamped on the binding in a language Sindre thought he could read: Legends and Romances of [geographic region]. He pulled it from the shelf with care and sat down in the chair nearest the window.
Sindre whispered the sounds of the letters as quietly as he could while still hearing the words they formed. He'd never picked up the knack for reading silently. Everyone he knew was content enough to listen to him reading aloud the latest book which he’d acquired before he got it to his ama, or anything Asdi had let his son borrow from his ever growing collection. When Sindre was fifteen, he'd built Asdi a case of shelves, with decoratively carved doors as a solstice gift. He’d made a matching one six years later over a winter when Synnove allowed him to remain at home, and it was overflowing now. Who knew when he'd manage to make him a third.
“You read?”
Sindre shut the book reflexively as he looked up. Evyn leaned on the doorframe of his bedchamber, yawning. The rubber wrapped around him was loosely tied, falling open enough to reveal his smooth chest and a thin chain around his neck with several charms. Surprisingly, Sindre recognized his own amulet of carved bone among them.
Evyn twisted his arms behind his back stretching his shoulders. “Sorry. That sounded rude. I think.” Another yawn interrupted the apology. “I just didn't realize.”
“It's... Not common on the islands.”
Humming sleepily, Evyn ran his hands through his hair, which only served to make the loose curls wilder. “Should still get better about making assumptions. About you anyway.”
Evyn's limp was more pronounced from the lingering stiffness of sleep. He took a chair near Sindre. For a moment he just let the sunlight bathe his face, then with a sigh, he bent over and pushed aside the fold of his robe to rub his left calf. There was a gnarled scar, pink and new, about a hand below his knee where the bone had torn through the flesh. With a frown, he lifted his foot, stretched his ankles, and wiggled his toes. “How much shorter did it heal back?”
“I'm sorry?”
“I can tell it's a bit off, even if Brida didn't say anything. I can't imagine she missed it though. And I expect she told you.”
Sindre held up his hand and indicated the length Brida had reported. A little over half his thumb. Evyn nodded grimly, then yawned and flopped back in the chair. The pose exposed his neck and hid his face. “Well, that isn't so bad, I guess. And I still have a leg.”
“You’re alright?”
“One of my teachers in [city] ran a public hospital and kept up with all the data. He wouldn't have hesitated to amputate a complex fracture like that one.” Evyn's passionless tone didn't match the statement. “The survival rate was nearly twice as high. The amputation wound is easier to manage than splintered bone. And waiting for infection to set in before amputating resulted in losing more of the limb. Assuming they didn't go septic. Can't remember the exact numbers right now, but I have them written down somewhere.”
Sindre hadn’t the damnedest idea how to respond to him. “Um, I trust you.”
“Anyway, tell Brida she doesn't need to hide things like that from me.”
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