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uwhe-arts · 19 days
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merano - alto adige light . . . | uwhe-arts
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dankgemestho · 6 months
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I wanted to draw them because I am obsessed with these guys and "if there's no new content, make it yourself" and so I drew a moment from chapter 2 of my jondami arranged marriage au fic To Wed A Warrior, the next chapter which this takes place in will be posted around the end of the day on Nov 1st!
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thespecialview · 2 months
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Zwischen den majestätischen Gipfeln und dem klaren Himmel – ein Tag, der die Seele aufleben lässt!
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steph-photographie · 25 days
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Photo originale par Steph-Photo
Couleurs du printemps à Montmeyan (83)
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hyperrkaine · 21 days
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iyas-adventures · 8 months
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Kuşadası, Turkey | October 2022
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pangeen · 1 year
Video
“ Horizontal video just hits different “ // © jj.trailwalker
Music: Amber Run - I Found
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shutter-pan · 1 year
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Artificial intelligence #10
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srbfotog · 8 months
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“CATCH THE SUN”
©www.SRBFotog.com | 2023
Series: Nature > Sun & Sky
Location: Lucknow, U.P., India
Gear: Nikon D750 | 24-120mm @65mm
Exif:  F11, 1/400s, ISO-500
Instagram/FB- @SRBFotog
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uwhe-arts · 9 months
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. . . over the rainbow | uwhe-arts
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landschaftsmalerei · 2 months
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Sommernacht am Ufer von Edvard Munch (Undatiert, Öl auf Leinwand)
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infini-tree · 8 months
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episodic - part 2
< prev | next >
Summary: Captain stumbles in the dark, the boys are hasty, and Krupp looms over the narrative.
As that one quote goes: it's the villains who act; heroes react. Or maybe it's the heroes who act, with the villains hindering their every action? Either way, there are pranks to pull.
A/N: the series was meant to be comprised of oneshots, the fact that there’s a new chapter to an existing one is just as surprising to me.
what changed my mind? i could not think of a good title for this next bit, so i decided to append it to this fic. to be honest it works out perfectly, as this is the direct result of the first part anyway. to those that thought that the first part was a clean conclusion to the whole thing re: the boys and captain: i'm only partially sorry (and besides, it did end with them saying they were going to meddle further, so...), in reality it was the start of a larger thread!
i haven't decided how many chapters this chunk of story will be, but for the time being i will hopefully write chronologically in relation to this part of the timeline (as far as the fic series half of this au is concerned). so for now i won't jump around the timeline for assorted written oneshots. for now.
——————————–
By the time Captain Underpants reached the man in his head’s house, the fuzzy feeling in his chest had fizzled out. The issue is done. A resolution was reached. They’ve all said their nice words, and it’s fine now. 
The house was silent, save for the TV that he had left on. The living room was still littered in what remained of the prankovation (trademark). He paid no heed to the grown up talk on air as his own words from earlier kept rattling around his head.
I miss what it was like before all this. I know you do, too.
He circled his way around the table before plopping on the chair. The light from the TV practically bleached out the scattered notes on the table, leaving the other man’s words impossible to read. Right now, he really didn’t want to read them. With everything that’s happened, he had almost forgotten that he had just been talking about how annoyed he was at the prank earlier.
He’d have to reply, eventually, but at this moment, he feels…
He feels.
He doubled over and clutched the cassette recorder against his chest. It reminded him of the moment he had recorded– what his sidekicks listened to – and his body seized up even further. He was fine earlier, so why was he acting like this? He had even thought, for a moment, that it was a latent effect from a monster. 
Captain knew it wasn’t. A part of him wished it was, like how he wished things were before.
He glanced back to the cassette in his hands. It was too dark to see through the plastic door that showed the cassette tape, but he knew it was equal on both ends of the spooling parts of it, paused right after that moment. A moment he didn’t want to share like that.
But they were his sidekicks. He supposed that they had the right to know, so it was fine. It was fine.
Captain’s hands shook in the dark. From the edge of his vision, he saw the light that lit up the chair and the living room change. Pale blue, to darkness, to red from a commercial.
His words rattled in his head, both what was recorded and what was said. The letters snare the other ones like they were static clung together– at the same time I don't.  
His mind felt like it was racing, but the only thing on the tracks was grawlixes ensnared in agitrons. He could feel it make a one-way trip to his chest, where it sat heavily.
After what felt like an eternity of being curled up, the feeling managed to fade, Captain quietly peeled himself off the seat. He turned on the light.
“Well–” He floundered for a moment, trying to recall where they left off. It felt like years since he spoke to him. Play it cool. “I think the prankovation, trademark, is an improvement.”
He dipped a few fingers in a nearby glass and flicked the drops in his face. 
Snap. He let the uncomfortable tenseness in his limbs wash over him before it dissipated.
What were you doing for an hour?!
“I was…” He looked back down at the cassette player. “Looking for the cassette. It, uh, got misplaced in the shuffle.”
Splash, snap. The fact he couldn’t feel much from the man felt worse than feeling a dissipating sweep of emotion. At least then, he could try and guess where this was going– as terrible as it felt. 
Awfully convenient timing, the note remarked vaguely.
Captain could practically feel the accusation curdling under the ink. He knew his voice would have too much ache in it to rebuke the statement. He cannot lie. 
In a smaller voice: “My sidekicks found it.”
The ache twisted. He nearly spilled the cup he was using as he put his hand in it and wiped his face. 
Snap. 
The twisting feeling mingled with the prickling hot emotion of the man in his head.
Those brats know?
“They’re not brats!” he defended. “They’re… they’re just looking out for me.”
Splash, snap. No prickling hot this time, just something he could only describe as slimy.
Behind your back? Sounds about right.
“I– I trust them,” he said out loud, though he made no effort to record it. His voice was too shaky for that– he repeated the words until they came out smoother and only then did he record.
Splash, snap. I mean, you didn’t know you weren’t real until now. Who knows what else they’re hiding.
Captain shook his head. This shouldn’t be affecting him this badly– any hero worth their salt knows how villains will do anything to get a rise out of you for any sort of footing. This was no different. He knew this was no different.
Captain grounded his teeth until he swore he heard it crack under the pressure. 
“Even– even if they were hiding something, I still trust them.” A pause. “That was just a hiccup, and minor conflicts are bound to happen. They’ll do the right thing in the end, usually.”
The Waistband Warrior listened through the recording again. The response felt foolproof!
Splash. Snap.
He was hit by the caramel onion emotion again. Sweet and good feeling at first until you got into the acidic onion-y part. It was the exact same feeling that lingered in his chest when the man in his head told him he wasn’t real.
They’ll do the right thing in the end “usually”? the note said. Honestly, you should keep better track of your little “sidekicks” and what they do– ten year olds don’t exactly have the best judgment.
In smaller print in brackets: (eg. Stealing that cassette. You know that counts as breaking and entering, right?)
Something hot flared in his gut seeing the last statement. “They are not thieves!”  
Captain immediately clamped his mouth shut with a hand. He gave a quick glance to the recorder, relieved that he hadn’t pressed the record button yet. 
He brought himself to stand on solid ground. Made his way to close the suddenly too loud TV. Was this how he ran the school? Is this how he thought of the children? His sidekicks?
He swallowed. Forced the heat in his gut to cool. Pressed record. Paused.
“We are a team.”
Splash, snap.
Are you, the note retorted. Because from my end, it looks like you're their personal idiot that’s part of a months long gag. One that may be going stale.
Captain elected not to give a response to that. Saying nothing was not a lie. Plus, the man in his head was ruthless, combed at every dip and rise in his voice and managed to figure him out. If his sidekicks had anything else to hide, then there had to be a good reason.
There had to be.
Captain looked at the sticky note one more time and placed it on the far end of the table. He needed… alone time. Or at least, alone time without seeing all those little notes.
He decided to follow his gut feeling, and his gut led him to the Closet At The End Of The Hallway, cassette player in hand. As he opened the door, his sights were set on a box in the lower shelf. With a quick press to the cassette door, he pulled the tape out, placed it in a box of other tapes he used, and pulled out a fresh– and most importantly, empty– one. 
The lights from the living room didn’t quite reach his little corner of the hallway, leaving him half-shadowed. He was still expecting something to pop out of a dark corner, or for the flowers on the wallpaper to twist to vines. But, the more he was out here, the house felt less lonely. 
Alone, maybe. But in the same way he was alone– with another presence looming around him.
(Or, within him, he guessed?)
Haunted, then? No, that word rattled in his brain like a rock you wanted out of a shoe. Apparently, that sort of thing was pretty uncomfortable.
Captain scratched at his chest with a frown, trying to will the ache to lessen. He sighed. Rocks.
He thought back to the papers scattered across the living room. To the confused looks on his sidekicks’ face. To the scattered remnants of the man’s backstory he could find in this closet. These moments were not fights, but there was a strange weight to these quiet and small moments he never had a chance to parse before. It wasn’t like his usual fare, but it wasn’t not, in some ways.
He’s still trying to untangle this specific subplot.
Captain finally placed the cassette in the player. The Man In His Head would not notice the change. The action wouldn’t matter much to anyone except him. 
Maybe that was the point. 
He made his way back to the living room. Nothing changed from when he left, and yet he was still… expectant.
Captain had contemplated staying for longer– how could he not, with the amount of plot threads he needed to untangle? But the time that stretched out before him was much more daunting than any villain, and he wouldn’t know where to start.
He thought back to the Man In His Head. If he was out, the other was not. Being out meant there was one less evil in the world. But he was a superhero, not a jailer with a key. It wasn’t his nature.
He splashed water on his face.
Snap.
Cuts from one scene to the next was a familiar thing to him. Much more than the endless stretches of time he was allotted in the house. So when one blink later he was somewhere that wasn’t in that lonely house, Captain sat up quickly. He was already getting out of the man’s clothes to get into something more heroic.
“Sidekicks?” 
George gave him a look. “Uh, Captain Underpants–”
“How’re you feeling?” Harold added.
In record time, he was out of the clothes the man in his head insisted on and had grabbed a picnic blanket-cape conveniently on the ground. 
“Well, I don’t feel like I was smashed to the ground, so… pretty good! Now where’s that monst– ack!”
Four hands grabbed at his cape before he could properly fly up. The momentum left him upside-down. 
From his point of view, Harold’s mouth curled up– that is to say it curled down, if he were right side up. “There’s no monster.”
“There’s always a monster.”
Now both of them were right side up-grimacing. 
Captain tilted his head, his entire body flipping right-side up at the motion, and amended with, “Or, uh, at least a conflict.”
“In that case…”
“Krupp’s cracked down on a lot of the school rules,” George explained. “And I figure that this would be a good opportunity to kill two birds with one stone.”
Captain gulped, trying to will away the words exchanged in the previous scene. “M– metaphorically, right?”
“It’s for all of us!” Harold picked up where the other left off. “Even you, after what Krupp must’ve put you through.”
“Now–” George waved a hand. “We were thinking that we could do a rehash of the prankovation, but–”
“We thought he might expect that! So then I thought you could help us out in the ideas department, like you did with the whole Brain Farts issue. Whaddya say?”
Captain stopped hovering. He could feel the stuck rock feeling again, rolling around in his chest.
“Listen, we get it– I know the last time you helped, it was… well, never mind about that,” Harold winced. “Nothing like that’s going to happen this time, we promise. And you won’t get caught. Plus, you’re the only one who can help us.”
“Promise?” Captain echoed, testing out the word like one would test the weight of a projectile before throwing it. 
“Yeah, for sure.” George said quickly, like throwing a hot potato before moving on. He looked up from what he was doing and handed him a plastic bag of supplies. “Think of this as… Free The Children, Part Two.” 
Captain gave a look inside. He wasn’t sure how the supplies connected to each other– he was never a planning sort of guy.
“Ah, to make school fun again, right?” 
“Yeah!”
His shoulders untensed. That was a good thing, he reassured himself. “Well, when you put it like that– what do you need me to do?”
——————————–
But before I tell you the rest of this story, I have to tell you this one.
Sunlight skirted off the remaining leaves around Treehouse Comix Inc. The wind was quickly snapping them up and off towards other autumn-y pastures. They had to bust out some of the blankets they kept up there, but eventually their parents were going to start telling them they’re not allowed up as George’s dad fortified it for winter
The key word was eventually. There were more pressing matters at stake than getting a little cold.
Harold frowned at the page he was working on. The content was fine, but something about the way he was drawing it was frustrating him and he didn’t know why. He set it aside next to the other pages. 
“Ugh,” he let himself splay on the ground dejectedly, face planting into the wood floor.
“Is that an ugh for Krupp suddenly going crazy mode with his rules or an ugh for the Cass-Incident?” George asked, leafing through his notebook and crossing out some of the more half-baked ideas.
“Uuugh,” Harold ugh’ed, which roughly translated to both.
He made his own noise of agreement as he crossed out another idea.
In one corner: the entire fourth grade had been blindsided by the sudden announcement of a whole gauntlet of assessments. Essays in English class, timed tests in math, horrible running tests in gym, but the real kicker was what was in store for science– a fair with mandatory participation. Even the weekend Invention Convention didn’t have that!
In the other: the Cassette Incident (Cass-Incedent, for short). It didn’t weigh in their minds so much as it squatted in the corner of it. It was just one of those things that was looming like a principal-and-or-superhero-shaped elephant in the room.
Harold slammed a fist down to the floor and pushed the sketchbook away. Instead of walking over, he just rolled beside the beanbag the other boy was sitting on. 
“This is too much.”
“I know.” He set his own notepad to the side. “It took a long time to figure out how to make comics at the same speed we did before we were in separate classes, now I’m not even sure we can keep up the same release schedule with everything else now.”
A pause. “Do you think this has to do with the Cass-Incident? The timing is too convenient.”
“What else could it be? It’s mostly affecting our grade.” Then, in a frustrated grumble he added: “Everything lately feels like it leads back to them.” 
Harold said a soft hm, before picking up the recently abandoned sketchbook. Turning to a new page, he started to draw.
“What did he mean by that he didn’t want it to change?” he asked. The doodle was Captain Underpants standing around with the same confused hurt they saw on his face as he found out that they found out. “Like you said, Krupp’s been nothing but mean to him.”
George thought for a moment. “Maybe he’s afraid of things getting worse if they did change. And, well–” He gestured vaguely.
“The sudden rules right after we found out.” Harold stared at the page intently. He started placing more lines; a panel around the Captain doodle, lighter lines radiating behind him. Shadows at his feet. “Poor Captain Underpants. At least he doesn’t have to deal with school.”
“Small victory that is.”
Harold continued scratching out more shadows. “What are we going to do?”
George put a hand to his chin. If he was right about the rule changes connecting to the Cass-Incident– and let's be real, he had a high chance of it on account of Krupp being predictable– then they had to deal with it and the source in one fell swoop. An inkling of a plan was forming in the back of his mind. 
And they could mesh it into the as-of-now half-baked idea they had shortly after said Cass-Incident. 
He stood up and made his way over to the Treehouse compartment where they kept stuff for their pranks. He began pulling everything out and dumped it on the ground.
“We’re going to need supplies. I don’t think the stuff we got is enough.”
The other boy sat up and dusted himself off. Confusion gave way to a determined look; he didn’t need to hear the plan– he knew this was going to be good. “What do we need?”
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hannesflo · 2 years
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gimme a minute v by hannesflo
Follow me on Instagram, DeviantArt, Twitter.
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steph-photographie · 1 month
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Photo originale par Steph-Photos
Les prémisses du printemps à Quinson (04)
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lonelylonely18 · 10 months
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via
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iyas-adventures · 6 months
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Saints Constantine and Helena, Bulgaria | November 2022
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