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madboiissy · 5 months
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◤✞ 𝕯𝖚𝖘𝖐𝖋𝖆𝖑𝖑 ✞◥
Act One to Five:
(Featuring)
Danielle in Act I and Ii
Tamiko and Aiko in Act III
Iris and Luna in Act IV
Estrella in Act V
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uesp · 2 years
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Did You Know: Haj Uxith was an Argonian city that fled to Coldharbour, the Oblivion Plane of Molag Bal, to escape Duskfall?
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As sad and... annoying as deleting and deactivating everything I’ve had on dA since forever was, it somehow gave me the urge to draw for myself again. Sadly, I do think I may have overworked this piece a little, but c’est la vie. The linework is better, at least. Alexa is an oc of mine from an old project called Beta Test/Duskfall.
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mustafizauthor · 1 year
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Dusk is falling in Rupsa... 🌥️🌥️️️.🌥 #dusk #duskfall #ture https://www.instagram.com/p/CmyfPBcPpvr/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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midnyte-muses · 3 days
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Someone asked for this to go up on spotify and all the other streaming platforms - We weren't sure about it, and again LMAO - normally we don't promo our music on our RP blog, but this was inspired by our Angel Dust alter & Muse <3
It drops May 5th, and it's on pre-save & pre order via the link above!
We don't expect it to hit the spoofy 1k threshhold any time soon, so it's not like we're going to make any money off it - but hey a system can dream no?
IF you're missing out cause it's SPOOFY ETC: it's still up on youtube:
youtube
Yes, we poorly tried to learn the tracking function in capcut. 41 fucking years old and we're brain dead at advanced editing like that.
Cover art to the single co-created by @earthnicity (WOULD IN THEORY THIS TECHNICALLY BE @capsekai because we were using photopea to finish it off? XD)
PLEASE FOR MORE MUSIC PLEASE FOLLOW OUR MAIN @duskfallcrewsys or something XD THIS IS OUR RP BLOG
= OOC=
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jeniffercheck · 3 months
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hairline fracture (is it me that you'd run after?)
shivlina oneshot: argestes, but have roman and shiv switch places -- set during 2x06 (argestes), shivlina are established affair partners, closely follows the canon of s2. CWs below the cut.
words: 9k
for @shivvroys as part of the shivcord winter fic exchange xx
read here or on ao3
cw for domestic violence & implied/referenced domestic violence. It is a prevalent theme throughout the entire fic & injuries are described quite a few times but it does not get graphic. the shown domestic violence does not stray from canon. please let me know if you think i've missed anything!
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Karolina grips her glass loosely, a lousy mix of the worst 2000s house beats and party guests shouting over the music reverberating through her ears. Shiv stares at Tom across the room, her eyes turning into something more of a scowl compared to Karolina’s entertainment.
“You’d think he’d have a little more tact than trying to get with a competitor,” Shiv says.
Shiv is obviously using a loose definition of the word competitor, the woman being some executive from a privately owned firm that Karolina can’t recall ever being involved in news or theme parks, but she laughs quietly at the comment, unable to ignore the irony in the complaint.
“The fact that he’d even consider speaking to another woman in public in a way that could even hint at a business deal—” Karolina says. “It’s horrifying.”
“Whatever,” Shiv says, taking a sip of her drink. “We’re different.”
“Because…” Karolina lets the word hang in a question, not one that she really needs an answer to, but one she’d like to indulge in anyway.
“Because, I don’t trust them,” Shiv says, finally tearing her eyes away from Tom. It’s the unsaid that Karolina revels in when she pokes and prods, this time around being that Shiv trusts her.
“Although—” Shiv starts.
“Here we go,” Karolina sighs, bracing her arms on the table for impact.
“At least Tom has the decency to laugh at everything she says,” Shiv looks over at the pair again, and Karolina follows her gaze, an animated Tom laughing obnoxiously at whatever the woman has just told him.
Karolina leans closer to Shiv and whispers delicately in her ear, “Maybe she’s just funnier than you.”
She bites back a smirk as Shiv looks at her again, eyes sharp and eyebrow quirked.
“You think I’m jealous,” she states.
Karolina shrugs. “Are you?”
“No,” Shiv says immediately. She rests an elbow on the table and leans her head into her hand, an insufferable smugness taking over her features. “There are more pressing matters in front of me.”
Karolina lets her hair fall in front of her face, if only to hide the growing redness from the eyes of the surrounding crowd. If anyone were to ask, she’d say it was the alcohol. If anyone were to know, well, they’d know that Shiv Roy has Karolina Novotney wrapped around her fucking finger; annoying conversations about her husband be damned.
“Glad you came?” Shiv asks.
While glad is certainly not the word that Karolina would use for her last-minute attendance at the Billionaire Boys Club annual reunion—waking up to the news that her employer has hundreds of accounts of heinous crimes and illegal cover-ups headed right to the press is really not her preferred way to start the work week—it’s always nice to spend time with Shiv in a place that doesn’t feel so shrouded in secrecy. Still, there’s work to do, whether she wants to have that conversation or not.
“I’ll be glad if we can make it through this panel in one piece,” she admits.
“Well,” Shiv says, suddenly agitated. “Take that up with Kendall and Roman.”
“I’ll be taking it up with all three of you tomorrow,” Karolina says. “I need you all on your best behavior.”
“Yeah, yeah, I know,” Shiv says. “Regret, responsibility, and remedy. Condemn and move on. Are we missing anything? Maybe, daughter and doormat?”
Karolina frowns. She’d assumed Shiv’s being here was something she wanted—a strategy to stay in the game, not another instance of being walked over. Karolina lowers her voice, suddenly conscious of their position in the room, a pit of wandering eyes and ears.
“Shiv, I won’t let them make you the face for this, you know that, right?” she asks. “If it all goes crashing down—”
“You wouldn’t,” Shiv says, her expression softening. “But I can think of about ten other faces who would.”
“Every one of those faces would have to go through me,” Karolina affirms.
Shiv is weary in her silence, and despite her instincts, Karolina grabs her hand from underneath the table.
“It’ll be fine,” she says. “All of them know how integral it is to have a female voice on the panel tomorrow. We can’t have Rocket Man and Rape Me fronting a situation like this, can we?”
Shiv looks down, worrying her lip slightly.
“What is it?” Karolina asks.
“It just—” Shiv shakes her head, “It feels like I’m losing favor. This can’t go wrong.”
Although Karolina’s entire job is influencing public response—she’s not entirely clairvoyant. She can’t know what people are going to think about Shiv Roy stepping into the role of the spokesperson for a company she doesn’t work for without it looking entirely pandered, and she doesn’t know how it’s going to look internally—despite the fact that nobody’s opinion below the executive floor matters much anyway—but, she does know that this is a huge deal, and huge favor, and the people who really matter shouldn’t take it lightly. Shouldn’t is always the keyword.
“You’re ready,” Karolina says. “We’re going to murder board the hell out of you three tomorrow. You’ll have a response to everything. Just stick to the script.”
“Stick to the script,” Shiv says. She leans in closer, suddenly smirking, “Got any other scripts you want to show me?”
Karolina squeezes her hand and then drops it, biting back a smile as Shiv shifts in impatience.
“If this panel goes well, I might just think of something.”
If.
“You sure there aren’t any we can workshop right now?” Shiv asks. She lowers her voice. “I’d really like to see that murder board you mentioned.”
“No,” Karolina says, though she knows she doesn’t sound confident. “We’re getting up early tomorrow.”
“Oh, come on,” Shiv says. “You really want to spend the rest of the night watching Tom cockblock himself?”
“And here I thought I was in the clear of hearing about him for the rest of the night.”
“You know he’s been talking about buying a vineyard?” Shiv asks.
Karolina downs the rest of her drink.
“If I take you to my room, can we please stop talking about Tom?”
Shiv can’t hide her smile.
“Only one way to find out.”
Karolina isn’t sure how it starts.
From her perspective, the panel goes well. It’s not entirely what they planned, what, with three conflicting personalities sharing one stage, but it worked. They got the message across: Waystar is taking the matter seriously, and they’re not leaving it in the hands of the same kinds of people who buried it under the rug all those years ago. Simple, effective. Condemn and move on. Except, if there’s one thing about the Roy family, it’s that none of them know how to fucking move on.
She’s in the corner of the room with a few members of her team, working on their rapid response plan for once word of the panel inevitably gets out. She’s only half-listening when the siblings re-enter, unsurprisingly still arguing about the events onstage. It’s the usual, Kendall mad at Shiv, and Shiv mad at Kendall, and Roman instigating so it seems like he did anything at all, the conversation not grabbing Karolina’s attention when Marcia’s voice peaks out from the group, a scolding for Shiv, of all people.
Karolina makes her way to the other side of the room, but there’s a building chaos in the short walk and she knows she’s too late to calm any of them with positive public response or statistics. It’s several voices escalating in volume until Logan’s rises above them all, and then there’s a loud crack, and suddenly Roman’s holding Kendall back, a jumble of “Don’t fucking touch her!” and “What the hell, Dad?” and Gerri’s eyes are flitting between Logan’s and Karolina’s, a frantic sort of resolve seeping out of her as she asks, “It played well, right Karolina? They’re saying it played well.”
“It played well,” Karolina automatically confirms, her heart pulsing through her throat as she shifts her eyes on Shiv, hunched over and gripping the side of her face. She doesn’t know what to do with her hands as Kendall and Tom attempt to inspect the wound, a futile effort anyway as Shiv finally regains some composure.
“It’s fine—I’m fine,” Shiv says, dodging the flurry of worried arms and voices as she escapes the room. “Someone get him a fucking Quaalude.”
Broken bits of Shiv’s, now fallen, champagne glass crackle under Tom’s steps as he trails behind her, and it’s only a few seconds between the door slamming shut and Gerri taking charge. Marcia takes Logan away—where to, Karolina doesn’t want to know—and Karolina feels a light tugging on her elbow, and suddenly Gerri’s pulling her into a corner. Gerri looks annoyed, and Karolina wonders if it’s at all similar to the seething sort of rage that’s simmering around in her at what they were just forced to witness, or if it’s closer to inconvenience—another tally on Gerri’s shit-list that she’ll never actually do anything about.
Gerri searches her eyes and under the scrutiny, Karolina crosses her arms, if only to hide the light tremble that she knows is coursing through her hands. Gerri, knowing her better than anyone, knows this as well, reaching out and gripping Karolina’s forearm. She rubs her thumb soothingly up and down, a peace offering before the barking of orders.
“I need you here,” Gerri says softly. Karolina clears her throat.
“I’m here,” she says. Gerri looks guilty for a moment after she’s said it, and Karolina can imagine why, because this isn’t the first time they’ve been in this situation—Karolina troubled by the Logan of it all and Gerri silently pleading with her to keep it together for just another hour—and it’s not unlike the other times Gerri’s sent her the same apologetic regret, as if Karolina’s career at Waystar is something she should’ve stopped all those years ago rather than encouraged. She didn’t always understand it, Gerri’s self-imposed debt felt owed to Karolina, but she thinks she’s starting to now.
Shiv never would’ve been here today if it weren’t for her. She never would’ve been on that stage, saying those things, pissing Logan off enough to do that, if it weren’t for decisions that Karolina had made, had said were good, foolproof even. She’s at fault, a backhand by proxy that she can almost feel pulsing in her own knuckles—an apology she’ll never be able to fulfill, a regret she will never live down.
“I’m here,” she says again, if only to ground herself, and Gerri looks wary, but she nods anyway.
“Okay,” Gerri says, sighing. “Okay, just—go see if Tom needs any help. He still has appearances to make if it can be helped, so—”
“I’ve got it, Gerri,” Karolina says. “Comms will get started on Logan’s statement regarding the panel, if asked. Once that’s briefed, we need everyone on the same page.”
Gerri’s visibly relieved at Karolina’s assertiveness, and she uses that reaction to anchor herself further as Gerri squeezes her arm once more and returns to the leftover crowd, giving everyone firm orders as Karolina leaves the room.
She spots Tom a few halls down, knocking repeatedly on a door that’s clearly not going to be opened.
“Tom,” Karolina says, his worried gaze meeting hers. She doesn’t know what he knows, doesn’t know what he suspects, but he doesn’t look at her with the same kind of threatening contempt he usually does. Right now, it’s just concern. Karolina speaks low, not wanting to be heard through the door. “She say anything?”
Tom shakes his head. “Hasn’t said a word.”
“Okay,” Karolina sighs. “Look—obviously this is, extenuating, but Gerri is requesting that continue the conference as planned—”
“Karolina—”
“Tom—”
“I’m her husband,” he hisses, and they both freeze. Karolina doesn’t want to say it, doesn’t have to say what she is to Shiv, because it’s her hesitation and his response to it—that flash of recognition that if it were Tom, Shiv wanted, he would’ve been through that door already. She’d almost feel bad for him if he wasn’t actively keeping her from getting Shiv help. “Just—keep me in the loop.”
She waits until he’s gone to knock on the door.
“Shiv?” she calls out. “It’s just me.”
It’s a little while before the lock clicks, and Karolina opens the door carefully, unsure of what she’ll find. It’s not entirely unexpected—bloodied towels on the counter, a disheveled Shiv going back and forth between rinsing out her mouth and attempting to apply pressure—but Karolina doesn’t think any amount of bracing could’ve prepared her for the sight anyway. She locks the door behind her.
“Here to serve the gag order?” Shiv asks, and Karolina has enough humility left in her to feel ashamed that it’s not out of the realm of possibility. Still, she doesn’t dignify the comment with a response.
“To check on you,” she corrects. Shiv pauses in front of the sink, her hands resting on the porcelain bowl. The injured side of her face is hidden from Karolina’s view, and if it weren’t for the splotchy mascara and the red tint of Shiv’s nose, Karolina might not have known anything was wrong at all.
“He meant to hit Roman,” Shiv says, as if it makes the situation any better. Karolina’s not so sure it does, but Shiv sounds sure of it, as if the knowledge that the backhand was meant for someone else can somehow absolve her of experiencing it like she’s the one who got hit. But she was.
“Okay,” Karolina says, even though she doesn’t believe her, and she’s certain Shiv doesn’t either as she turns on the faucet, eyes focused fervently on her hands as she scrubs at imaginary filth. The blood is already gone, so it must be the feeling.
Karolina makes it about fifteen seconds into Shiv’s erratic scrubbing until she can’t watch any longer.
“Shiv,” she says calmly, placing a hand on Shiv’s back. Shiv falters slightly, tensing under Karolina’s touch but not stopping, scrubbing at her nail beds as if she’d spent the entire day digging. Sometimes it’s all Shiv seems to know how to do; dig until her fingertips are raw and her head’s gone too far under far too quickly for Karolina to keep up. By the time Karolina gets there, the hole’s been filled. Whatever Shiv has buried is deep, and whatever Karolina hopes to find will take a lengthy excavation of her own, but that’s usually. This time around, Karolina doesn’t have to search for what Shiv’s trying to bury. It’s red and it’s angry and it’s in the shape of a human hand across the side of Shiv’s face, and Karolina saw it happen. Shiv knows she saw it happen.
Karolina shuts off the faucet before she even really thinks about it, and Shiv pauses, her hands still hovering in the sink. Karolina reaches around her and grabs a clean towel, drying Shiv’s hands wordlessly. She’s surprised that Shiv lets her, surprised that Shiv hasn’t run off already, adamant that she doesn’t need this, that she doesn’t need Karolina, and she’s surprised when Shiv turns around, her arms crossed and thousand-yard stare piercing the entirety of Karolina’s gut. She can see the wound in full now, harsh on Shiv’s pale skin and only getting worse by the second.
And what can she say? I’m sorry he did that. I’m sorry he used you in the face of scandal and then got mad when you tried to make it better. I’m sorry that you were only doing what you were told. I’m sorry that I’m a part of it. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m sorry.
How many times can she apologize for the things she can’t control? How many times will she have to look Shiv in the eye and apologize for being a bystander to it all anyway?
“Can I look?” she asks. She doesn’t think she has to; the sound of it was enough to know that the hit would leave a mark, and though it’s not a lot of blood, she wasn’t expecting as much as there actually is.
“Please?” she tries again, like Shiv would be doing her a favor. She thinks Shiv would be, because it’s Karolina at fault here—Karolina’s fault they said yes to the panel, her fault they even let Shiv on that stage—and Shiv lets out a deep, uneven breath and turns slightly, allowing Karolina access to the injury. She winces as Karolina pokes and prods, opens her jaw when Karolina asks her to open it, closes it when she asks her to close it. She discovers the main source of the blood—a loose molar and a chunk of skin missing from the inside of Shiv’s cheek, both of which feel terrible to call lucky, so she doesn’t call them anything at all.
She grabs the wet towel, slowly dabbing at Shiv’s face to clean the lingering mascara and blood, and Shiv closes her eyes, letting Karolina work.
“You did everything right,” Karolina eventually says, because she can’t bear to bring up blame.
“Doesn’t fucking feel like it,” Shiv mumbles.
“I know,” Karolina says. She sets the towel down, her hand coming to rest on the unharmed side of Shiv’s face, thumb grazing the soft skin lightly. Shiv opens her eyes, narrow and distant in the name of resolve, and it’s only a moment before the weight of it all catches up to her and takes her down. She drops her head into the crook of Karolina’s neck, her cries coming out like silent pleas to just make it fucking better, and Karolina doesn’t know what to do, doesn’t know how to start helping beyond the logistical mess of it all.
If they started driving now, how fast could they get back to the city? Should they charter a helicopter instead? How long before the pain sets in Shiv’s brain catches up to the loose molar? How soon could they get something heftier than extra-strength aspirin? Should she take something non-drowsy? What if she has a concussion? Can she take a fucking horse tranquilizer? Is there something that can make her forget? Something that can send them back in time and do everything differently, change whatever’s allowed them to make it to this point?
She holds Shiv tighter, like maybe the more of her that’s touching Shiv, the better she can absorb all of the hurt and replace it with something else. Dull it, at the very least. She’s still unsure of what to say, the right things all seemingly evading her. The simple ones come to the forefront, like what you’d ask a child with a freshly skinned knee, screaming their head off in the middle of the street. Are you injured or are you shocked? But Karolina’s not a mother, and nobody ever bandaged up her scrapes and bruises. It’s a level of comfort she dreads being asked of, something she and Shiv had successfully avoided throughout their entire entanglement, but Shiv didn’t ask for this, and Karolina doesn’t think she’s ever really had anyone to bandage up her bumps and bruises either, so if Karolina is the person Shiv’s letting through that locked door, she’s going to do what needs to be done.
“Does it hurt?” she asks once it seems Shiv’s calmed down a little. She’ll do the job; she just never said it wouldn’t be done poorly.
“What do you think?” Shiv says, pulling away.
Karolina sighs, pulling out her phone. “We need to get you to a dentist.”
“No,” Shiv immediately says. “No—I’m not going to some fucking hokey emergency dentist out here in Bumfuck. I’ll go to my dentist in the morning.”
Karolina doesn’t have to do the math to know that’s far too long to sit with a loose tooth without any medical intervention. Beyond the possible concussion, or jaw injury, or infection risk—
“We need to get you checked out, Shiv,” Karolina says. She must sound serious, because it’s enough for Shiv to lock eyes with her, and it takes all of Karolina’s resolve to stay calm as the tears begin to pool in Shiv’s eyes again. Somehow, she holds her gaze, ignoring the light drum in her stomach when Shiv huffs, her eyes moving to the ceiling.
“As if this isn’t already humiliating enough,” Shiv mumbles. She looks back at Karolina, a wordless sort of pleading that Karolina doesn’t know how to say no to. “I just want to go, Karolina.”
Karolina grips her phone, swallowing down her concerns. She nods, knowing it’s not the time to pick a fight.
“Do you want to see Tom first?” Karolina asks. Normally, she’d be thrilled by Shiv's response. Right now, it’s just sad.
“No,” Shiv says.
“Shiv—”
“It’s fucking embarrassing,” Shiv whispers. “Okay? I just—I just want to leave.”
It’s the unsaid that Karolina clings onto, that somehow Karolina has positioned herself in a place where Shiv is comfortable, a place where the embarrassment is dulled and she’s free to feel, despite Karolina’s perceptions of herself, despite her job, despite her role in all of this, and she won’t let Shiv down. Helicopter, she’s decided.
“I’ll go talk to him and get the flight situated,” she says, but then she stops at the door.
“Shiv—” Shiv looks at her, and Karolina doesn’t know if this is the first time this has happened, if every strike that was meant for Roman actually went to him, or if this is just another occurrence on an itemized list of occurrences, but words sit at the tip of Karolina’s tongue, things she wishes someone had been around to tell her all those years ago, things she wishes she could have understood sooner, first time or not. “It’s not humiliating. It feels that way, but—they all care about you. They do, and they don’t think any less of you.”
Karolina leaves before Shiv has to come up with a response, and she’s grateful that their exile goes smoothly. In some twist of fate, Tom still has to show face at the conference, so she lets him feel useful by having him call in an emergency fill of a narcotic for the ride. She’s hedging her bets on no concussion, supported by the fact that Shiv hasn’t had any claim of a headache and by her refusal to even stop by the summit’s medical staff for a quick check-up. Shiv’s out by the time the helicopter is in the air, and Karolina tries multiple times to get some rest herself with no success, her eyes continuously drawn to the sleeping bundle of red hair on her shoulder, not in her lap because she dazedly agreed to at least wear the seatbelt on the flight if she was going to make Karolina commit fifty other acts of negligence in one night.
Shiv wakes drowsily when they land, and she gets her way in the car when Karolina lets her forgo the seatbelt in favor of resting her head in Karolina’s lap. Karolina spends the duration of the ride brushing her fingers through Shiv’s hair, careful not to touch the swollen skin as it stares up at her. She has the driver go straight to her apartment, because she doesn’t know where to go, but Karolina’s place seems like the safer option, away from prying eyes, away from Tom.
Karolina knows they’ve been distant lately, half of her conversations with Shiv filled with verbose rants over him. If she were Tom, she’d feel pretty shitty right now, but she can’t blame Shiv. It’s hard to seek comfort from someone who’s got one hand in yours and the other in the one that hit you. She’s not entirely sure what makes her different from Tom in this case; they both know that if what happened tonight leaks it’ll be Karolina crafting the narrative, it’ll be Karolina reminding the world that Logan Roy is a tremendous father and while he’s been recovering smoothly, we’d all do well to remember what a strain the past year has been on Mr. Roy’s health.
A confused old man accidentally hits his daughter. It’s a tale so old she actually thinks it might be better for the Roy family if it did leak, tugging on the heartstrings of the American public in the midst of a scandal. See? They’re victims too. All of them. Then, the car runs over a hefty pothole just a block down from Karolina’s building and Shiv winces deeply in her half-slumber, the pads of her fingers digging lightly into Karolina’s thigh, and Karolina regrets thinking it at all.
Maybe that’s the difference; if Karolina were to dig deep, she’d be one hand in Shiv’s and one hand adjacent to Logan’s, and right now, the hand that’s adjacent to Logan is full of a shaking kind of vitriol that she doesn’t think Tom could ever stomach holding over him. Condemn and move on. How can Karolina move on from this? The thing that isn’t, finally in front of their faces, and splattered across Shiv’s in shitty red splotches.
When they pull up in front of Karolina’s building, she drags her feet waking Shiv up. Her doorman gets their bags, and she waits until she imagines he’s about halfway to her front door when she starts kneading her hand into Shiv’s arm, murmuring a soft, “We’re here,” as she does so. Shiv stirs slowly, and Karolina instantaneously feels bad as Shiv’s brows furrow, her whole body tensing up in Karolina’s lap. That means it hurts, and there’s not much else they can do about it at this hour.
“Can you make it up?” Karolina asks, silently hoping that the answer is yes, because the only other alternative is Karolina tipping her doorman to carry Shiv up, and she isn’t so sure which one of them would hate that more.
“Yeah,” Shiv says, her voice nearly sick with pain as she slowly rises from Karolina’s lap.
Karolina steps out of the car first, relieved when the change in lighting seems to have no effect on Shiv. She holds out a hand and Shiv takes it, eyes hanging low as they make their way up to Karolina’s apartment. When they get in, Shiv’s got the bathroom first, Karolina digging around in her medicine cabinet for anything they can mix with what Shiv’s already taken.
Her mind wanders to how normal it is, Shiv’s toothbrush hidden in a drawer, Shiv’s extra clothes with their own shelf in Karolina’s closet, the side of Karolina’s bed that grows colder every night she spends alone. It feels normal, except Karolina’s rummaging around in her medicine cabinet to find a suitable secondary painkiller so Shiv doesn’t spend the entire night writhing in pain because her father nearly knocked her teeth out. Karolina takes a deep breath as she pours out a dose. Her phone lights up out of the corner of her eye every few minutes, likely texts from Gerri and emails from her assistant, and she puts it in her pocket without glancing at the screen, taking the pills and a cup of water to the bathroom.
She finds Shiv with a clean face, inspecting the damage under the harsh light. She sets the water and the pills on the counter, engulfing Shiv in a hug from behind. Shiv instinctively closes her eyes, leaning some of her weight against Karolina as they stand there. Karolina finally has a better look at the fully bloomed wound as well, Shiv’s skin a myriad of different colors trailing from her jawline toward her cheekbone. The worst is on the lower half, swollen slightly, no doubt in part due to the loose tooth. Karolina wishes she were good for anything more than damage control, better at anything other than closing doors and sweeping under rugs, but reasons that’s maybe what Shiv does need—someone to help her clean up the mess.
“Take these,” Karolina says, holding the pills in front of Shiv. Shiv sighs as she grabs them from Karolina, not meeting her eyes through the mirror, and she washes them down with a wince that Karolina assumes is downplayed based on the fact that Shiv didn’t even open her jaw wide enough to let anything more than the pills in. Karolina tries not to dwell on it. She kisses Shiv’s unharmed cheek lightly, and Shiv squeezes one of Karolina’s hands before escaping the embrace to go into the bedroom.
Karolina takes her time as she cleans up, somewhat selfishly she feels as she listens to Shiv rummaging through drawers all alone in her bedroom. It’s not the violence itself that’s still making her hands a little too clammy and her heart beat a little too fast, maybe more so the reminder. It’s like you’d ask a child, are you injured or are you shocked? Karolina would venture to say shocked. Fathers hitting their daughters, a tale as old as time, but it’s not so much a tale when it’s right in front of her. And now it’s in her home. It’s snuck its way under her door frame and into her bed, and it feels somewhat like the first time, a ripe eight-years-old and powerless as her mother cries, so confused as to why any of this is happening at all and terrified to so much as make a move, might she make it all worse somehow. In this case, the only thing she can do is keep moving, keep going forward in the event that something she does can make it better.
Shiv is already in bed by the time she returns to the bedroom, drowning in one of Karolina’s old sleep shirts, and she shakes off the feeling of yet another thing being tainted—her bed, her mirror, her shirt, her pillow, her Shiv. It doesn’t feel fair to say, because Shiv has always been wounded and it’s never changed much. She’s always walked around with a gaping hole in her chest whether she ever wanted anyone to notice or not, but the difference now is that she can’t hide it, and Karolina can’t choose to not look at it.
She climbs in bed next to Shiv, careful not to disturb her too much as she settles down, unsure of how close she’s wanted, but Shiv immediately leans back into Karolina and she assumes she’s wanted plenty, dropping a light kiss to the crown of Shiv’s head.
“How does it feel?” she asks.
“It’s bearable,” Shiv says, and bearable doesn’t mean that it doesn’t hurt, so Karolina just smooths Shiv’s hair, waiting for Shiv to fall asleep.
Shiv doesn’t talk about it. Not really. She wakes up the next morning and she makes an emergency dentist appointment, and she doesn’t even ask Karolina to go with, not in those words entirely, but she does say they’ll likely have to put her under, and Karolina doesn’t have to think twice before saying that she’ll call the driver and go with, just in case.
It’s a uniquely infuriating kind of feeling, having Shiv curled up on her couch with perpetually teary eyes and an ice pack hiding a mess of bruising that had only gotten worse overnight. Karolina had felt sick when she woke up and saw it, as if she’d been tricking herself into believing it wasn’t as hard of a hit as it actually was, a lighter bruising even pooling under her eye.
Karolina’s grateful that it’s a scheduled travel day for the executive team, hoping the pseudo-day off will give her the time to figure out how she’s going to face Logan when she returns to the office. How she’s going to pretend that Shiv doesn’t mean anything to her this time around, that her loyalty is to Waystar and by extension Logan, and that his image her top priority even though every time she thinks about him the only thing she can see is her own father’s backhand racing down for a strike. She knows it’s a mess of her own making. No one gave her the handbook, but she saw the signs, and she stayed. She welcomed it into her life and made herself a part of it. She tricks herself. She lets Logan yell at her until her legs feel like Jell-O and her tongue is crawling down the inside of her own throat and then an hour later, she laughs about it by the coffee cart as if it’s just all just some small misunderstanding. They all do it, they downplay and they pretend, because it’s easier than dealing with the truth.
Even now, molar hanging on by a literal thread, any emotion Shiv’s carried over from the night previous has been replaced with an it’s fine, it’s not that bad, and Karolina knows that’s what Shiv is accustomed to. Knows that Shiv shutting her eyes tight and talking as normally as she can through a tight and swollen jaw while on the phone with Tom is all she knows how to do. To satiate everyone else completely. Forget that it’s a big deal, just move on.
Karolina doesn’t understand how not to make this a big deal, but she doesn’t want to make it more difficult for Shiv. She doesn’t shove another ice pack in Shiv’s face when she gets off the phone, doesn’t question why the pills she left out are sitting untouched on the nightstand, doesn’t even bother to tease Shiv over wearing another item of clothing from Karolina’s closet like she normally would; she barely wants to breathe, afraid to mess up whatever semblance of equilibrium is left in Shiv’s orbit in case anything at all turns out to be the last straw.
She briefly wonders if it’s worse this way, dancing around the hard truth that Shiv Roy is a human, not immune to having pierceable skin and breakable bones, but she figures this is how Shiv wants it; downplayed. If Shiv doesn’t take a pill, then Karolina doesn’t have to know that it hurts.
The only thing is that Karolina does know that it hurts. She can feel the sharp pain that splinters from the hinge of her jaw to the base of her neck. Understands the earache, the weary, tired eyes, the persistent taste of iron in her mouth, and the way that everything seems to move a little slower, feel a little less real. She knows so much yet so little, because she’s not inside Shiv’s mind and she can’t tell what Shiv’s thinking, so she doesn’t hover. She just does what she’s asked, and she does what she can, and she doesn’t pressure Shiv into doing what she can’t.
She ignores the too-pale hands that clutch around her arm on the way down to the car, doesn’t pull out her phone when it buzzes a dozen different times because she doesn’t want Shiv to see all the names of the people who have let her down in the last thirty-two years as they come up on her caller-id, and puts on her most dazzling smile inside the dentist’s office as Shiv recounts the story that’s caused her ailment; an embarrassing tumble during some turbulence on the private jet. I should’ve listened to the stewardess—guess it’s one way to make time for the dentist, right?
Karolina makes sure to write the cover story down in her notes. It’s not the first she’s ever had on file for a Roy, and it’s not even the first that’s left her feeling wrong and wondering if she’s ever had any morals to begin with, but it is the first that she can’t reason with. She can’t decipher a why she’s doing it at all, the only lingering explanation is that it’s for Shiv. She’s doing what Shiv wants. What Shiv needs. She recalls Shiv’s quiet confidence walking into the examination room with the dentist, like she hadn’t been squeezing Karolina’s hand up to the very point that the car door opened outside the building, and she wonders what else she’s missed, how many other things she’s allowed Shiv to shrug off without question.
She swallows down the thought, settling into the private waiting room that she imagines the hokey dentist in Bumfuck wouldn’t have had. She pulls out her phone, searching for one voice on the other end of the line.
“Prognosis?” Gerri asks. Karolina’s relieved to hear her voice, relieved to hear anything beyond Shiv’s pain-induced silence and her own racing thoughts. She can hear fading voices in the background of Gerri’s end, meaning they’re likely not on the road yet.
“That we don’t get paid enough,” Karolina can’t stop herself from saying, even though she knows deep down that at this point, there’s no world where her debt with Shiv requires any payment at all. Because wasn’t it just a few weeks ago that she was wiping blood from Kendall’s nose? Getting him blow because even though they all know he should be the last person contacting shareholders, she did it anyway? She’s a cacophony of transactions, but she’s losing sight of a number that excuses any of it. Gerri sighs on the other end.
“Negotiations are off,” she says.
Karolina knows it’s wrong that her immediate reaction is satisfaction, because she also knows how much this is going to impact the shitstorm that’s already clouding each of them, but she can’t help it. It feels like some sort of check and balance in the name of a restorative justice that will never be served, and she holds onto it. It’s something.
“And the article?” Karolina asks. Gerri makes no note of the fact that it’s Karolina’s job to know.
“We’re moving to internal investigations,” Gerri says. “We’ll be outsourcing a firm—no word yet on who our lucky match will be.”
“Great,” Karolina says, and even though it’s a private room, she still speaks lower. “Your bases are covered, right?”
“Blindsided by the article,” Gerri feigns. It’s another painful reminder of who they are and what they do, and though Karolina was blindsided, a part of her always knew. The rumors about cruises were inescapable in the PR department and there are no rumors at Waystar that come without basis.
“I don’t know when I’ll be in the office, but there’s no official communication that doesn’t go through me,” Karolina says. “We have enough messes.”
She hates to refer to her current predicament as a mess, because it’s nothing she feels burdened to clean up. Nobody’s forcing her to sit in this dentist's office, and certainly nobody’s forcing her to open her apartment doors, and her bed sheets, and her top left dresser drawer, but she can’t say that. Not even to Gerri.
“How’s our archeologist?” Gerri asks.
“Undergoing a root canal,” Karolina says. “They can save the tooth, so, some good news, I guess.”
“Good,” Gerri says. Karolina can hear papers shuffling in the background, and she’s dreading the amount of catch-up she’s going to have to do just from missing one day in the office. “Where’s her head at?”
“I think she’d like to pretend it never happened,” Karolina admits. Shiv hasn’t said it yet, but she can’t imagine this being the hill that Shiv Roy would choose to die on. Gerri hums on the other end, and Karolina can guess how the rest of the trip is going. She can only hope someone did actually get Logan a fucking Quaalude.
“Logan would be pleased with that,” Gerri says, and even though she says it sarcastically, the sentiment alone is enough to crack Karolina’s outward indifference.
“Well, as long as Logan’s pleased,” she snipes. Gerri’s silent on the other end for a moment and Karolina waits for the usual lecture, that Karolina cares too much and you’re not their babysitter, Karolina, just do what’s in your purview and nothing more, which is always cheap talk coming from Gerri anyway, but it doesn’t come.
“And how’s your head?” Gerri asks.
Karolina sighs, running a hand over her eyes. They both know this call was never about business. “Haven’t had any complaints, Ger.”
“Very funny,” Gerri says, and Karolina can’t find it in herself to be too satisfied, but she can picture the look of fond disdain in Gerri’s silence, and she finds a little bit of comfort in the image. “Seriously, Karolina…if you need the cavalry to step in—"
“It’s fine, Gerri,” Karolina says. “I’m fine.”
Because Gerri knows. She’s heard the stories and she’s seen the remnants herself. She’s the first pair of eyes on Karolina the second Logan’s a little too aggressive and the first voice in her ear when she thinks Karolina’s about to crack, but it’s different this time. It’s not about her, it’s about being there for Shiv.
“She’s not your responsibility,” Gerri finally says. It’s an act of protection, Karolina knows this, and she can rationalize Gerri’s point of view—Karolina inserting herself into a ticking time bomb of a family, putting herself right at the center of something she’s spent her entire adult life trying to escape—but Karolina had never done anything to earn Gerri’s protection. It was something Gerri decided on, something she felt she could give, and it shouldn’t be any different for Karolina. Gerri’s right, Shiv isn’t her responsibility, but Karolina still owes her something. There’s a sense of security that Shiv is now cashing in. If Karolina were to break that, what would it make her?
“I think we both know that’s not true,” Karolina replies.
Gerri doesn’t have anything to say to that.
Karolina’s created an entire action plan for monitoring news about cruises and drafted up about four different press releases by the time Shiv gets out (her favorite is the one where she’s announcing Hugo’s retirement).
Shiv seems to be in a lot less pain after the procedure, hunkering down on Karolina’s couch as soon as they get back to the apartment. Karolina’s still trying her best not to hover, but there’s also a part of her that can’t settle down, so she compromises by sitting on the couch adjacent to Shiv and opens her laptop for the first time in over twenty-four hours. She forwards the action plan to her team for review and does a few indirect searches regarding Waystar and the news. It’s not as bad as she was fearing. There’s a bit of a rocky perception from the conference that’s mostly shrouded in inconsistent messaging, but it’s nothing she can’t work with.
It’s a while before Shiv stirs, and Karolina doesn’t take the time for granted, ordering soft groceries and panic-searching everything she can about root canals and molar splinting and if there’s somehow still a risk of concussion even though it’s been a full twenty-four hours and Shiv has never even once complained about a headache.
She left a pair of pills out on the coffee table, a light prescription from the dentist should Shiv need it, and she pretends not to watch when Shiv finally sits up and analyzes the display as Karolina types away. Shiv takes them, Karolina glad that she’s no longer participating in whatever emotionally charged abstinence she was displaying earlier in the day. Shiv leaves the room wordlessly, and Karolina distracts herself with work while she waits for Shiv to return, careful to listen out for any signs that might make her needed. She’s about to give in and check on Shiv when she appears back in the living room, a pillow from Karolina’s bed in her hand, and she lays down right up against Karolina. Karolina instinctively drops a hand in Shiv’s hair, scratching lightly as Shiv gets comfortable again.
“You need anything?” Karolina asks.
“Just this,” Shiv says quietly. “And to not have wires poking my cheeks like I’m fucking fourteen.”
“I can only help with one of those things, unfortunately,” Karolina says, brushing back a lock of hair.
“Really?” Shiv hums. “You’re supposed to be a fixer.”
It’s not meant to be a jab, but Karolina can’t help the way it hits her. Fixing something like this is out of her depth, no matter how much she wishes it wasn’t.
“How’s the rest of it?” Karolina asks. The dentist checked out Shiv’s jaw, figuring it was most likely just sore from the hit, but did refer Shiv to a specialist in case there are any lasting issues. Karolina, naturally, is on edge about the possibility of another complication, but Shiv doesn’t need that from her. She needs reassurance, a strong hand to hold. Not shaky.
“Hurts,” Shiv says. “Maybe Dad’s true calling was the ring.”
Shiv can’t see Karolina, so she doesn’t even attempt feigned amusement. She doesn’t think that’s what Shiv was going for anyway, what, with the deadpan tone and the fully deepened bruise. It’s then, that Shiv’s phone rings from the coffee table. They both look at it, Dad, popping up in big bright letters on the caller ID. Shiv’s knuckles pale as her hand clenches into a tight fist, her thumbnail worrying itself into the skin of her fingers.
“You don’t have to answer it,” Karolina reassures. Shiv nods, digging a hand into her eyes. She must hit her bad eye the wrong way, because she yelps out in pain before her entire body goes rigid under Karolina’s hand.
“What is it?” Karolina asks worriedly, sitting up. Shiv exhales slowly, her body releasing some of the tension as she does so, but her face still clearly expressing the discomfort she must be feeling as she attempts to breathe through the pain.
“I just—moved too fast,” Shiv says.
“Okay,” Karolina says. “That’s okay, let’s just take it easy. I’m going to get some ice.”
Shiv nods and Karolina carefully gets up, once again pushing back the immediate concern that comes with Shiv not denying care. She returns to the living room with the ice pack and kneels in front of the couch, brushing a thumb across Shiv’s forehead as she hands it over. Shiv hesitantly holds it against the side of her face, and Karolina continues to brush Shiv’s hair, waiting patiently for her breathing to return to a normal pattern, and she’s relieved when it does.
“Why don’t we get comfortable in bed?” Karolina asks, and Shiv shakes her head lightly right away.
“No,” Shiv says. “Can we—will you stay here?”
“Of course,” Karolina says. It’s not often Shiv asks her for anything—she’s barely asked anything of Karolina throughout this entire ordeal—and even if she did, Karolina would never say no. “I’m wherever you want me.”
She gets back on the couch, and Shiv settles against her once more. Karolina draws light patterns along her side, only pausing when her laptop dings with an email, and she closes it before they have to hear any more.
“I’m sorry,” Shiv says, her voice thick with exhaustion.
“You have nothing to be sorry for,” Karolina says. “And you don’t have to talk to me right now, either.”
“It’s fine, I just—forgot about my eye,” Shiv says. Forgot. As in, Shiv’s not used to having shiners that she has to be careful not to touch, and she shouldn’t be. She shouldn’t even have one to be careful with in the first place. Karolina tries not to dwell on that part of the conversation, doesn’t want her anger to seep through the comfort that she’s supposed to be supplying.
“Just, don’t push it, Shiv,” she ends up saying.
“That’s my big skill, Kay,” Shiv says. Karolina’s heart lurches at the nickname, Shiv’s voice far too frail and far too defeated.
“You did what was asked of you,” Karolina says. What I asked of you. “You tried to make things better.”
“I don’t even know why I did,” Shiv says. “I should’ve just let Kendall have his fucking moment.”
“With that plausible deniability bullshit?” Karolina asks. “You said some hard truths, Shiv. That isn’t a crime.”
And the punishment certainly didn’t fit the bill.
“Still, I should’ve known better,” Shiv argues lightly.
“Should’ves won’t get you anywhere,” Karolina says. “You could’ve read a script Logan had written himself, and this still would’ve happened.”
Shiv is silent as she mulls over the words. They both know Karolina’s right, that nothing is good enough for Logan Roy unless it’s his words coming out of his own mouth. Shiv removes the ice pack and Karolina reaches out to put it on the table for her. She intertwines their hands, shivering slightly at how cold Shiv’s is.
“I don’t know where to go from here,” Shiv eventually says. “What to say to him.”
“You don’t have to say anything,” Karolina tells her. “This isn’t your mistake to fix.”
“You don’t know what it’s like with him. Everything is our fucking fault.”
“I know what it’s like—”
“To work for him,” Shiv interrupts. “Not to have him as a dad.”
Karolina brings Shiv’s hand to her lips gently. Shiv’s skin still smells like the lavender body wash she likes to steal out of Karolina’s bathroom, and it’s nothing like blood, or sweat, or angry fathers.
“I had my own dad, Shiv,” Karolina says. “Nothing was ever good enough for him, either.”
Shiv stills, her fingers fidgeting in Karolina’s hand.
“I mean, but did he…” Her voice trails off, but Karolina doesn’t have to work very hard to figure out what the question is supposed to be.
“He did,” Karolina says quietly. “And thinking about everything that I should’ve done—it never made anything better. There’s no world where he wanted to be anything other than what he was. It took me a long time to accept that.”
Shiv sits up and Karolina meets her troubled eyes with a calm gaze. Shiv looks her up and down as if she’s inspecting her, like she can’t quite imagine the Karolina she knows ever having any man-made imperfections. Karolina knows when a light scar catches Shiv’s eye, remnants of a thinly split brow in ’98, one that’s difficult to notice unless you’re searching. It was a humiliating affair that left her facing reality for the first time when she was a doe-eyed intern at Waystar and a certain member of the legal department who’d taken her on as some sort of mentee inquired why she came back from the Thanksgiving holiday roughed up. Karolina said she had brothers; her background check didn’t add up.
(Then came a small note on the inside of her planner reading that she’d have to get better at cover-ups if she wanted a future in PR. The next half was an address, and an open invitation for the winter holiday should she choose not to spend it with her brothers.)
Shiv brushes her thumb across the scar, faded and not Karolina’s biggest takeaway from that period of her life, and Karolina grabs the hand, bringing Shiv’s knuckles to her lips once more. Shiv’s eyebrows are furrowed in a pitiful sort of sadness that she doesn’t mind too much coming from Shiv. Coming from someone who understands.
“What are you thinking?” Karolina asks.
Shiv shakes her head lightly and sniffs. “That I’m tired of this bullshit,” she says, attempting to keep the tears at bay. “That I don’t know if I can walk away.”
Karolina takes a deep breath, attempting to not let the conversation get to her the way it feels like it is, poking and prodding at her gut.
“You don’t have to,” Karolina says. “You don’t have to do anything. All of it, it’s your choice.”
“But you walked away?” Shiv asks, as if Karolina has the right answer. She wishes she did.
“Shiv, my father…there was no room for conversation,” Karolina says, unable to control the slight shake in her voice. “If I kept going back—”
She doesn’t like to think about it, the way his anger kept building the less it seemed she needed him. Just like she doesn’t indulge in should’ves, she doesn’t like to think about the what ifs. Staying just wasn’t an option.
Logan seems to carry the same propensity for rage, but with a level of regret that sucks everyone back in. She doesn’t know what she would do in Shiv’s position either; it’s not hard to go back to someone who understands that they’re supposed to say sorry. And maybe that’s why she’s put up with Logan for so long herself. It’s nice to imagine a father who knows what he does is wrong, even if that doesn’t make it right.
“I’m sorry you went through that,” Shiv says, but the words sound wrong coming out of her mouth.
“I’m sorry, too,” Karolina says. Then a nagging question appears on her tongue, one that’s been eating away at her from the moment she stepped into that bathroom. “You said—that he meant to hit Roman?”
Shiv looks away then, as if guilty of something.
“He wouldn’t—I mean, it wasn’t often, but he—” Shiv stumbles through her words. “I mean, we were kids. It wasn’t like this. It wasn’t me.”
Her voice cracks at the end, and Karolina gently pulls Shiv into her, holding her tightly. She can imagine how confusing it must be, to go your whole life feeling some sort of distance from the violence, even if it was occasional. It’s not like Shiv has been spared any of Logan’s mind games, but even then, there’s a level of comfortability that she most likely reached in it. Whatever her normal was with Logan, he destroyed that.
“Have they just been carrying this with them their entire lives?” Shiv asks.
It’s a loaded question, one Shiv deserves an honest answer to. Karolina doesn’t like to believe it’s something she’s always carrying. It’s there, and it affects her in ways she wishes it didn’t, but she doesn’t think it has total control. She laughs, and she cries, and she still can’t stand the scent of Lucky Strike Reds without it making her skin itch a little, but she loves the scent of the Marlboros Shiv loves to pull out at the end of a long and drunken night at a Waystar event. It’s give and take, things come and go, but she’s still her, regardless of what she’s carrying and how much.
“Shiv, it all fucking sucks. Whether he’s spitting your name or spitting in your face,” Karolina says. She rubs a comforting thumb along Shiv’s arm. “Haven’t you already been carrying things your entire life, too?”
The question brings a discomfort to Shiv that she can Karolina immediately. It’s not normally her place to point out the flaws in Shiv’s upbringing, and it’s not a topic they’ve ever broached until tonight, but it needed to be pointed out. Shiv thinks this is the first time she’s suffered under Logan’s hand. Karolina would argue that Shiv doesn’t know what it’s like to not suffer under him.
“What do you think I should do?” Shiv asks, ignoring Karolina’s question. Karolina hates when Shiv does this, when she looks at Karolina like she has all the answers. Like whatever thing she’s about to say is an absolute that Shiv will let herself be ruled by, despite acting like she doesn’t ever really want anyone’s input at all. That’s where her responsibility lies, in being honest with Shiv. She thinks Shiv knows that, or at least, Karolina hopes she does.
“I think that wounds heal and scars fade,” Karolina says, piecing together her thoughts. “I think…that your father isn’t someone who’s going to change, but I think he might say that he’s sorry. It’s not a bad thing, if you’re willing to let it go. It’s not a bad thing if you can’t forget it, either.”
“I’m tired of being terrified of him,” Shiv whispers through a teary breath.
“I know,” Karolina says.
“If—if I walk away,” Shiv swallows, “What happens to this?”
This. Karolina’s not even sure she can define what this is in the current moment, but she can still recall her life without Shiv in it, and Karolina knows one thing is certain.
“Absolutely nothing will change.”
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utaesthetics · 2 months
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Edge of Na Pali DuskFalls
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aces-and-kings · 9 months
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"He is more myself than I am. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same." - Emily Bronte
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enigmatic-robin · 1 month
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Mind the tags, you don’t need to have read the first one there’s not really a timeline
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velnica · 5 months
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Bunny! (Inanna & Shamash)
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"Inanna, where on this perfectly normal star did you find that?"
"Oh Shamash, I made her of course! Isn't she cute?"
—Inanna is Fjora's Ancient and Shamash is Cora's Ancient. She's Azem and he's Azem's keeper. They are twins. Shamash keeps Inanna out of trouble, to Hades' eternal gratitude. The feeling lingers so strongly that he made two Azem stones in memory of them both.
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madboiissy · 24 days
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◤✞ 𝕯𝖚𝖘𝖐𝖋𝖆𝖑𝖑 ✞◥
Interlude and Act 6 to 10
Interlude: featuring ???
Act VI featuring Jezebel (new OC)
Act VII featuring Caroline (new OC)
Act VIII featuring Hatsune Miku
Act IX featuring ???
Act X featuring Marina and Guadalupe (Twin Goddesses) (OCs)
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earthndusk · 1 year
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🎧 DUSKFALL RELEASES: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/00R...
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🎧 EARTH & DUSK DISCORD: https://discord.gg/Da7s8d3KJ7
🎧 DID/OSDD PLURAL SUPPORT SERVER: https://discord.gg/QCkgPwf7ue
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🎧 DUSKFALL IS A PLURAL ARTIST. DX'ed with Autism & ADHD & Disassociate Identity Disorder - their music is a wide variety of tracks produced by the whole system. We're inspired by Spaz Project, Lichi Moonwall, ZordonOfDoom, Spectrumbranch & so many more. 🎧 DUSKFALL IS ALSO KNOWN AS THE VOID CREW OR SOME OLDER TRACKS ARE UNDER KIERAN SOMERVILLE - If this confuses you SO WHAT? -
NO We were not featured on MAKING THE CUT, one of our songs has the same vocal samples.
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🎧 HOW IS IT CREATED? - We are learning to use in program instruments without any special equipment other than our keyboard. If it's not that then it's legally obtained samples.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 🎧 Who else is involved with DUSKFALL? - Many collaborations are planned for the future but so far The Introject Society is actually considered a part of this artist name - though they're a system that is like family to ours - they help construct or record tidbits for some of our newer tracks.
THE INTROJECT SOCIETY: https://theintrojects.carrd.co/ / https://the-introject-society.tumblr.com/
DUSKFALL PORTAL CREW: https://duskfallcrew.carrd.co/ / @duskfallcrewsys / @duskfallcrewart are our main blogs here on tumblr.
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🎧 Enjoy and please subscribe to the channel :)
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CRAZY BLIND SADNESS is on 99% of most streaming platforms. Our music is TWITCH AND YOUTUBE FRIENDLY: Meaning that basically the only thing we ask is that if you're GONNA stream it link back, or possibly use our spotify!
Our tunes ARE featured 100% of the time on @ duskfallcrew tiktok!
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aurea-fide · 2 years
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x. I really need to do a background of Onyx and a gender timeline. There's a bit of information I been thinking about/should probably be written down.
This is also an PSA that people are more then welcome to come interact with Jorvek for alliance purposes/rumors/ect.
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midnyte-muses · 4 days
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Duskfall - Spider's Stardust [Royalty Free] (EXPLICIT) 
Inspired by Angel Dust from Hazbin Hotel, this song encompasses as much snark as you can get.  
Philosophical and emotional.  If you feel the need to re-use the song in a video or project, please do with credit to this youtube.  Right now it's not on streaming platforms, and may not be up for a while yet as i'm waiting to get better music production headphones. 
This was inspired by our MultiMuse rp’s Angel Dust who hasn’t gotten any action yet (and our alter clearly because he’s the idiot that has been cackling at the toothbrush line for four days now.) 
Normally we don’t do self promo of our art or music on here but this was inspired by our own Angel Dust and clearly we wanted to share XD - we usually put this stuff up at @hazbinatdusk or @duskfallcrewsys
JUST UPDATING: https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/duskfall1/spiders-stardust-demo ITS UP FOR PRE SAVE -  Just made a new post about it a few minutes ago <3 
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jeniffercheck · 6 months
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i come to add another prompt to your list 🧎‍♀️#6 please for shivlina
#6 - "Be gentle, please." & the sickfic request (i hope this hits what u were looking for!!)
It’s late (or early, depending on who you ask), and they’re sitting Shiv’s kitchen table, dissecting Waystar press mentions from the last forty years. Press mentions from the 80s, interviews from the 90s, her dad’s first fucking tweet.
“Of course he called the president a twat,” Karolina says. “I can’t believe they left it up.”
“Yeah,” Shiv snorts, saving the link. “I’m sure it put a real dent on Waystar’s reputation.”
She adds it to the compiled mentions for the memorial video, an end-of-year Waystar Gala, aptly set to honor the Life and Times of Logan Roy. It’s Karolina’s job to approve all of the options, and Shiv somehow convinced Karolina to let her help.
“Busiest man on the planet, yet he always had time for a tweet,” Shiv says. “I’m sure PR was a sanctuary before Twitter was invented.”
Karolina shrugs. “I think I prefer deletable tweets over waking up to New York Times quotes that were never run by the department,” she says, pulling a clipping. “We should burn everything from the 80s.”
“What?” Shiv says, “Dad wasn’t a goodhearted champion in the fight against AIDS?”
Karolina laughs, the noise quickly turning into Karolina clearing her throat as her face falls.
“Are they bad?” Shiv asks. She never had half a mind to seek out her dad’s commentary on devastating social issues, but she can’t imagine that whatever he did say warrants such a grim expression.
“No,” Karolina says. “No, he didn’t—I mean it’s bad, but it’s normal bad. We’ll probably find tweets with the exact same statements. Just won’t use them.”
Shiv nods, not quite believing Karolina as she winces into her computer screen, fingers rubbing lightly at the bridge of her nose.
“You alright?” Shiv asks.
“Yeah,” Karolina sighs. “Just need an eye break.”
She stands and moves into the kitchen, and Shiv can hear the rattling of pills as Karolina pulls out a bottle from her purse. Shiv says nothing as Karolina returns, typing away what’s most likely a note to omit anything and everything from the 80s. They work in comfortable silence for a while, Shiv flagging items they may have missed and Karolina adding them to her folder until Shiv notices Karolina’s hand has returned to her forehead, eyes closed this time.
Shiv rubs Karolina’s knee to get her attention. “Hey,” she says. “What’s wrong?”
“Just—a headache,” Karolina says.
“Just a headache,” Shiv says, “or something more?”
“It’s fine—I-I should go home—” Karolina attempts to stand, her hand dropping and eyes opening slightly, but not without a deep wince that has Shiv immediately pulling her back into her seat.
“Woah, slow down,” Shiv says, hand returning to Karolina’s knee. Shiv looks around her white kitchen, the sun reflecting through the eight-foot windows and hitting every marble surface like a perfect blinding death trap for Karolina in this current moment, unsure how Karolina can even make it through her apartment, let alone outside. “You gonna make it all the way across town with your eyes closed?”
“I’ll just call a car, and wear sunglasses,” Karolina says, her voice getting tighter with every word. Shiv doesn’t think there’s a chance that they get Karolina out of this kitchen if they wait any longer, the time for Karolina to make it back to her own place already passed. She recalls the last time she found Karolina with a migraine—at home “sick” from work according to Gerri, but not having responded to a single message from Shiv in over 24 hours—hiding under a fortress of blankets to shield her from the light and not having had as much as a sip of water in probably a day and a half. Karolina said that one was mild, but that she hadn’t been much in the practice of preventative medicine then.
“No, no way,” Shiv says. “We talked about this already—let me help.”
“Shiv—” Karolina starts, but her fist closes up and she lets out a pained breath, argument forgotten.
“Hey, it’s okay,” Shiv says softly. “Let’s go upstairs. Can you get up?”
Shiv grabs both of her hands, about to pull Karolina up when her quiet voice rings out, “Just—be gentle, please.” Shiv pauses, moving a steadying hand to Karolina’s back.
“I will,” she says. She helps her stand, growing mildly concerned at which the tightness Karolina’s holding onto Shiv. “You took something already, right?”
“Yeah,” Karolina says, her voice shaky. Shiv guides her through the apartment, going as steadily as possible until they make it to the bedroom. She helps Karolina into the bed, and gets to work closing all of the blinds, silently thanking the developer for installing the ridiculously excessive blackout blinds that she’d made fun of when she first moved in. When she’s finished, she kneels next to the bed, relieved to see at least a little bit less strain on Karolina’s face. Shiv grazes a piece of Karolina’s hair, tucking it lightly behind her ear. Karolina sighs in response, opening her eyes slightly. Shiv can see that it’s still painful even with the minimal light in the room, but there’s also a level of defiance that she knows not to press in the current moment.
“Do you still want what we talked about?” Shiv asks quietly.
Karolina had laid out the ground rules for Shiv after the last time—how much light to let in, how much movement to make, what pills to take and when, how loud to talk, when to say anything at all—and she’s determined to follow them, regardless of how much Karolina doesn’t want her to.
“This is more than enough, Shiv,” Karolina says, closing her eyes as Shiv strokes her hair again.
“Well, I don’t mind,” Shiv says. “So, how about I lay down next to you and play with your hair the way you like, and you’ll tell me if you want me to stop?”
It takes Karolina a few deep breaths and a furrowed brow to give in, her voice annoyed as she lets out a light, “Fine.”
Shiv keeps her movements slow as she climbs into the bed behind Karolina, taking care not to disturb her position. When she settles in, her hand returns to Karolina’s hair, massaging the back of Karolina’s head. She stays like that for a while until the light peaking through the edges of the curtains has disappeared and Karolina’s breathing steadies into something more like slumber, and Shiv goes to remove her hand, ready to escape the bed to get them both sustenance. As soon as she pulls away, Karolina speaks up.
“Shiv?”
“I’m right here,” Shiv says, leaning back down. Her hand returns to the back of Karolina’s head, and Karolina sighs again, a sign that it’s been bringing her some sort of relief. “How does it feel?”
“About the same,” Karolina says, her voice tired. Shiv frowns, knowing there’s not much she can do to help. Before Shiv can respond, Karolina’s speaking again, words that Shiv hates she feels like she even needs to say. “I’m sorry, Shiv. This is—”
“This is your life,” Shiv says. “I’m glad I can be in it. Don’t apologize.”
Karolina flips herself over before Shiv can stop her, and she lets out a pained breath before resting her head back down, pressing it lightly into Shiv.
“Even when my head’s exploding?”
“Especially then,” Shiv whispers, settling back into the bed.
She’s starting to think there isn’t anything that could keep her out of Karolina’s life.
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laurawithslblues · 6 days
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We met in Duskfall Court
“I sang of the dancing stars,I sang of the dædal earth,And of heaven, and the giant wars,And love, and death, and birth.” It could only happen here, in the dark woods of The Duskfall Court, where no mortal dares intrude, that we should meet and find each other. We, who are the things they whisper at each other with dread around their bonfires at night, we the monsters and fairies and ghouls, and…
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