Tumgik
#iotenn
shinimout · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
the best part is that half of these aren’t even my primary ships
7 notes · View notes
rikus-hips · 1 year
Note
Got any iotenn (iori/tenn) headcanons?
iotenn relationship headcanons
iori x tenn
— [cw] ⨾ iori and tenn are reimagined as 21 year olds (pls remember that those under 18 in real life cannot consent and grooming minors is disgusting, immoral, and a crime)
Tumblr media
frequently fighting to be the more dominant one in the relationship
this leads to sex being pretty frustrating at first as neither one wants to give in to the other
if they're particularly stubborn that day, they'll end up biting and groping each other until they're so tired they can only rub themselves against each other to cum
despite their egos, there are times when they'll allow themself to be vulnerable to the other, usually due to their persistence being used up during the day
iori tends to be gentle when he's giving, only able to satisfy tenn's order to be harsher when tenn pisses him off
iori's careful administrations overwhelm tenn, who finds the delicate treatment to be completely foreign
iori is very aware not to do anything that'll interfere with tenn's schedule, so tenn places more trust in him than he would any other partner
when tenn’s giving, it’s playful and relentless, often leaving iori mentally and physically exhausted
between the teasing and edging and the rough but controlled thrusting, iori’s brain eventually gives up on maintaining his pride
getting The Izumi Iori to submit to him is one of the only times tenn allows himself to revel in his masculinity, it’s therapeutic for him in a way
tenn never shirks on aftercare, always especially sweet to the barely functional iori after sex
but no matter who’s in which role, they always do fall asleep in the other’s embrace
9 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media
14 notes · View notes
flyswhumpcenter · 6 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Bad Things Happen Bingo! The event where you send me requests according to this marvelous card!
This story was written to respond to a request made by @antimondes (for some reason it won’t tag you, thank you Tumblr for being a dysfunctional piece of shit)! It was a very wild ride (waaaaaay too wild) and it has 75% chances to be out of character shit, but I hope you’ll like it nonetheless! It was still very fun to experiment with Tenn for the first time. I hope you don’t mind me setting it in my Takanashi Residence AU!
Bitter Words and Sour Tears
Summary:  The tensions between Tamaki and Tenn expended to the entire Takanashi Residence, taking their toll on siblings and their links between them. Iori just happens to be there with an outside view, and as a man of secrets.
Fandom: IDOLiSH7 Ship: Iori/Tenn (can be read as platonic)
Wordcount: 2K words
Event organized by @badthingshappenbingo
AO3 version available here.
They had always been kind of distant, even they were linked through Riku Nanase, before that one event. It was more of a professional relationship in a way: it was a mutual, doubtful respect. They didn’t trust each other very much: while they knew the other wouldn’t try to harm them, it still felt like a chore to be around each other.
The thing was: Kujou was Nanase’s twin brother. As soon as they found each other again after a few years of outside shenanigans, including Kujou getting adopted by another family and becoming an idol, he had come to the residence much more frequently.
 To be fair, Iori was always overly suspicious of visitors coming to the residence, especially if they came around this often. The perks of being part of such a tight-knit colocation was that everybody knew everybody, including the related strangers. How many times had he seen Yotsuba’s little sister too? Apparently, she lived with the Kujous too.
After a while, however, he had come to appreciate these two siblings coming over to the residence, despite the tension between Kujou and Yotsuba over Aya. He always felt like he needed to be near them in case a fight exploded between the two of them, knowing Yotsuba’s impulsive nature and Kujou’s dry and cold demeanour around anyone who wasn’t his twin brother.
 Watching Tenn Kujou be around Nanase was a way to make him empathize even more with his own big brother. Through the pink eyes of the professional singer, he could see Mitsuki’s instincts: the concern, the empathy, the thoughts and the speaking patterns of the older sibling.  It was almost a social commentary from him, at times: he stood there, nearby, ears wide opened and eyes looking at the scene.
As far as he knew, Kujou had thought for the longest time that Mitsuki was the younger brother and Iori was the older brother, a common misconception solely based on height. However, as soon as Mitsuki spoke about hom, Kujou had seemed to instantly understand he was facing someone with a deep common point with him. Ever since, he had noticed somewhat of a vitriolic complicity, a rivalry in who was the best big brother. Kind of childish, but it proved Kujou wasn’t just a very advanced android Nanase was calling his brother.
 After a couple months of seeing the weekly visits from the siblings, Iori threw his own shot at getting to know them. The topic he had in mind to come up to Kujou with was as obvious as it could possibly get: as the residence’s unofficial medical help (who was officially Nanase, but if Nanase got an attack, he couldn’t really help anyone else with their health couldn’t he?), he wanted some advice on how to monitor Nanase’s asthma better. Who else was better than the latter’s own brother to ask on the topic?
Kujou stared at him until he dropped the question. Upon that point, the older twin seemed to barely be able to retain the actual kindness he had for his sibling: he would explain in great details how to deal with every single symptom the best way possible, how to make his younger twin more comfortable when these happened, how to tell if an attack was about to happen, how to make the residence better for Nanase…
And then it delved into an impossibly long list of things the residence was faulty at being and providing, including the amount of house dust and how the room placements made it so Nanase’s room was too far from the entrance door in case he had to go to the hospital in a hurry. It was long enough for Iori himself, the man called “the Nit-pick Guy” by his classmates, to think it was nit-picking.
 Talking about Kujou was fascinating. The latter was always rich in information despite his career of being a J-pop singer with legions of fangirls at his feet. He’d usually say the residence was a good place to avoid paparazzi and obnoxious, voyeur journalists. Not only was it where his little brother was living surrounded by his friends: it was also fairly unknown and drown in the urban landscape, making it a place where people starving for private information would never even try finding said information in.
They sympathized over Nanase in general, how he was a ray of sunshine with heavy health issues which needed to be cared for, but it didn’t stop there. Speaking to the other revealed they weren’t that different: a similar frank speech style, an unordinary amount of talents and skills and, last but not least, a will to help and protect the people they cared about. This was the most relatable part they could find in each other, the click that made Iori think “we could be more than acquaintances”.
 Alas, the tranquillity of these visits stopped dead in its tracks on one fateful day. It all started with the tensions around Aya: Yotsuba and Kujou disagreed heavily on whether she should have been allowed to visit her brother on her own or if she had to be accompanied by Kujou. The other inhabitants of the residence didn’t dare stepping in, fearing it would backfire on them.
It escalated to Yotsuba throwing a violent fit, a fit only stopped by Aya telling her brother not to hit her other brother. In the end, it got broken off by Osaka and Nikaido, but it had been a close call. Ever since, Yotstuba and Kujou had been forbidden to be near each other unless someone was next to them.
 This was, however, only the beginning of a snowball effect: people were always weary whenever the Kujous visited because of this incident. Even Mitsuki had grown somewhat distant, just in case it’d be considered taking sides to remain with one or the other when Kujou was around.
Only Nanase didn’t mind, always happy to see his brother visit him, but the visits also became rarer and rarer as a result of the growing tensions. Once a week became once every two weeks, which in turn became once a month. This was obviously saddening Nanase and Yotsuba, but as far as Iori knew, it also had taken a toll on the visitors.
 He was reading a report for college when someone knocked at his door. He had been a bit unaware of his surroundings because of his approaching exams, so the noise slightly took him aback. In fact, he had been so surprised, he had gotten up to open the door instead of just saying “yes” to this unknown visitor. He could beneficiate from a break anyway.
His surprised turned astonishment when he opened the door to Tenn Kujou’s saddened frown, shining eyes and arms wrapped around himself.
 “Mind if I come in, Izumi…?”
Concern washing all over him, Iori replied with his heart.
“Not at all. Please come in”, he gestured as he closed the door behind them.
 Almost like a robot, Kujou sat down on the bed, looking down on the ground. It was kind of an awkward silence between the two of them: Iori didn’t really know what to say, since he didn’t know what had caused Kujou to seem so depressed. So, huh… He’d just have to pop the uncomfortable question.
“What’s wrong?” he asked as he sat down on the bed, around ten centimetres away from him.
There was no response for a few, lead-heavy moments. Just silence and the beginning of a weep.
“Do you… mind me venting for a bit…? I don’t want to burden Riku with this… you’re the closest second option I have right now…”
“Go ahead. I’ll keep it a secret if you want it to be so.”
 Kujou slightly rose his head, but not high enough for his bang not to hide half of his face.
“I may have strained Yotsuba and Aya’s relationship because of my tense links with him…”
Iori didn’t say anything back. He just listened like he’d listen to Mitsuki venting, to Nanase’s thoughts and to Takanashi’s ideas for the residence, with a wise ear open for suggestions and reassuring words to be told.
“I’m only noticing now how much this has impacted Riku and Aya. I should have thought everything out more before the situation got this way…”
Kujou sniffed slightly before resuming.
“I’m aware this got out of hand because I couldn’t control myself around Yotsuba. It’s all my fault if I have to see Aya so afraid to ask me if we can go see her brother and if Riku is so sad whenever I visit. It’s become bittersweet for everyone involved… I’m sorry.”
 Despite how calm his words and speech were, Iori could notice the ugly tears rearing their face in Kujou’s eyes. He was this close to crying.
“Until I find a way to fix everything with Yotsuba, it’ll stay that way… Don’t tell anyone, Izumi, it’ll just make things worse because Riku and Aya will start themselves himself too…”
“I did say I was going to keep this secret if you wanted.”
“Thank you for listening… You… are a man of confidence…”
 The singer’s cold and aloof demeanour suddenly broke down as he started to let his sorrow come out, crying between his hands, weeping filling the room with a damp atmosphere, as if rain had started to fall against the windows.
Kind of unable to do much, Iori immediately thought back to what his brother would do whenever he was sad. It was going to be awkward, but he leaned closer to Kujou and opened his arms, slowly wrapping them around the other man in the room.
 Instead of the rejection he expected, Kujou threw himself in his arms, almost trying lean against his chest, as he let himself express the concerns and guilt he must had had accumulated for the past weeks. This was going to stay in this room until the truth was ready to come out, so he remained silent.
Time seemed to have slowed down by half during this time. It was all silent, but he felt the strange and unfamiliar warmth of someone crying in his chest. It wasn’t what he had expected to see Kujou doing today, perhaps he was expecting nothing more than being the recipient of all the defaults of the residence again, but he didn’t mind. If it meant helping someone out, especially someone who seemed dear to a fellow resident and friend, he would serve as a shelter for a day.
 Kujou was crying silently, even if he could tell so by how damp his shirt had become. The older boy was barely letting anything out, yet it was painfully clear how hurt he was by everything he thought was his fault. In this silence, all he could hope for was for the situation to get better.
After what felt like minutes, Kujou rose his head again, eyes red and trails on his face. He slowly got out of the improvised embrace, cheeks reddened by what seemed to be both crying and embarrassment of the sudden turn of events. To be fair, Iori was embarrassed too by how bad his instincts were. Perhaps not the best potential big brother around.
 “Izumi… You’re an analytical genius, right?” he then asked.
“I am. Why so?”
“What do you think the best course of action is?”
“Find a way to peacefully patch things up with Yotsuba. This will ease tensions between you two.”
“That’s what I thought… Thank you for listening. How much do I owe you?”
“An apology to Yotsuba. I’ll try to get him to understand it’ll only be better if he makes an effort in return.”
“Got it.”
 Kujou got up from the bed and silently exited the room, closing the door behind him again. He had taken back his stance as a singer: perhaps he was already thinking on his apology.
No matter what, feeling useful and comforting for someone was nice.
5 notes · View notes
sweetmoonbun · 8 years
Photo
Tumblr media
sgjksdjkgsdksjk khfdkjdhjkhkj fgkjs sjksg please excuse me ,
41 notes · View notes
kuriiii · 8 years
Text
For Only Tea and Books
Happy birthday @sweetmoonbun !
TITLE: For Only Tea and Books
CHARACTER(S)/PAIRING(S): Izumi Iori/Kujou Ten, Mentions of: Yaotome Gaku, Nanase Riku, Izumi Mitsuki
RATING: General
WORDS: 2722
AO3 LINK: HERE
SUMMARY: In which the Izumis own a book cafe/patissiere in San Francisco, and Ten still comes to America, but for ballet.
It’s foggy and cold, as he’s come to expect of San Francisco. Brochures and web images of glittering water, clear skies, and warm sunshine are all true, but not nearly as often as glossy photos had indicated to him. So when Ten catches sight of the little cafe, tucked between a (surprisingly) immaculate patissiere and the street, he grabs at the opportunity to escape the wind, even though it was his own boredom that lead him to the streets of Japantown.
The moment he steps through the doorway, he’s overwhelmed with a sense of familiarity, from the clearly Japanese-influenced decor to the melody flowing from the back corner of the room at the hands of a stoic faced boy, who sits straight-backed in front of the upright piano. The other is clearly also of Japanese descent, black hair falling around his face, though even so Ten can tell his eyes are closed, fingers moving deftly across the keys.
“Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake,” Ten says aloud before he can help himself, and the only other in the room is startled, abruptly stopping in the middle of the bar, and Ten can’t help but feel a measure of loss when the music stops.
“Ah—  irasshaimase ,” the pianist calls as he stands from the bench, sharp grey eyes meeting Ten’s for a split second as he rushes to get back behind the cafe counter, weaving through low shelves filled with books. “I apologize, I didn’t notice a customer had entered the shop…”
Ten’s gaze trails up the barista’s slim waist to the edges of collarbones just visible from the neckline of his shirt before finally reaching the other’s stoic expression, though the barista (pianist?) shifts a little under Ten’s scrutiny. “It’s no problem, if anything I apologize for disrupting your practice,” Ten answers smoothly, fixing the other with the barest hint of a smile.
The barista (pianist? Pianist who happens to be a barista?) can’t be much younger than Ten, if at all, and he merely shrugs before gesturing at the menu behind him. “I just play for fun, nowadays. Would you like to order anything, or are you just here to read?” His words are clipped, but not impolite.
“Just green tea, please,” he requests as his gaze slides across the room. It’s cozy, as it had appeared from the outside, and surprisingly organized for the sheer amount of furniture it contains. Numerous armchairs and sofas littered between shelves, some reaching the ceiling, others barely as tall as Ten’s hip, all filled with books and novels of varying size and genre, many showing signs of wear.
“Here you are, and if you get hungry, you’re always welcome to stop by next door to our family’s patissiere, though we ask you do not remove the books from this portion of the building,” the barista monotones at Ten as he hands him his drink, as if he’s recited this line a thousand times. A book cafe connected to a patissiere, tucked into the corners of San Francisco, and honestly, Ten isn’t surprised. He might have been, in his first couple of weeks in America, but he’s come to accept the unexpected. Ten nods his thanks, accepting the cup of tea, ignoring the pang of longing in his heart as he settles at one of the tables, absently picking up the novel left there, unable to stop the wry smile as he notices that it’s a collection of history’s greatest ballets.
As much as Ten would like to feign ignorance on the reason behind his multiple returns to the little book cafe, there’s no one to delude but himself, so he really may as well not.
Izumi Iori. It takes Ten an entire three visits to get just the baristas name, and only from a tall boy who stops by to gather lecture notes from “Iorin” with a lazy drawl of a thanks.
(“So your name is Iorin?” “No! Don’t call me that...It’s just Izumi, to you.”)
His parents own the dual-business, working daily in the patissiere portion of the shop, while their two sons, Izumi Mitsuki, aged 23, and Iori himself, at 19, to run the cafe portion of the shop, generally Mitsuki during the day, and Iori taking over for his brother after his return from school. This, Ten gets from an overly chatty patron of the cafe one sunny day a month after his first visit, as he sips his tea and acts just the right amount of disinterested and focused at the same time.
Ten is a person of action. He got himself to America by his own motivation. He practiced late nights, countless hours for his understudy position. Yet here he is, idly pushing his bangs out of his face with one hand, as the other plays with the edge of a page in the novel he can’t focus on,  because yet, how uncharastically, he can’t bring himself to say anything.
But as it turns out, he doesn’t need to. A slim hand slides into his vision with a pair of hairpins, unexpectedly cute; light blue with little usamimi deco, resting on the palm, and Ten’s eyes trace up the pale arm to Iori’s deadpan expression.
“You’re always brushing your hair out of your face. Pin it back, it’s annoying to watch,” is the curt explanation he receives before the barista turns away to take a customer’s order.
While his first reaction is mild irritation— he’s a dancer, of course he knows how to pin his hair—  Ten doesn’t miss the red flushing Iori’s ears and the second is something akin to shock, with the realization that Iori has been watching him.
————
Izumi Iori, who moved to America when he was in elementary school, really likes cats (surprising) and books (less surprising), and dislikes sweet coffee drinks, because they’re the hardest to clean when spilled.
Ten picks up these random pieces of information at every visit, perhaps taking just as much pleasure in getting them as in the process it takes to get there. Iori is easily flustered, once one gets past his cold expression and sharp mannerisms, and Ten takes some sort of twisted pleasure in verbally poking and prodding at him while his own hands are wrapped around a cup of perfectly brewed green tea that Iori has just pushed at him.
While less often, Ten also lets Iori pull information out of him. That he’s just a year older than Iori, having moved from Japan to study at the San Francisco Ballet School while an understudy to members of the San Francisco Ballet. That he doesn’t actually care for sweet drinks at all, either, and much prefers simple green tea, and not because it reminds him of home.
“How was it?”
Iori’s voice breaks through the haze of Ten’s thoughts, and Ten looks up from the novel he’s just finished, sincerely hoping his distress isn’t clear.
“You’re an asshole,” Ten starts, and continues before Iori can interrupt him, “You didn’t say the book ended badly.” “Badly as in you didn’t care for it, or—”
“You know perfectly well what I mean,” Ten gripes, looking to the side, still refusing to let Iori know exactly how much the book got to him. Though by doing so, he completely misses the little smile Iori gives as he sets another cup of tea down to replace the one that had gone cold hours before.
————
“Who’s the asshole now,” Iori mumbles, late one night when most other customers have long since left, and it’s just Ten watching as Iori thumbs through the last few pages of the most recent book the dancer left for him. Somewhere along the line, they had fallen into exchanging books and titles, which had lead to quiet afternoons and evenings of sitting across from each other in silent yet comfortable company.
Ten merely gives a smug little smile, curled up on a particularly squishy armchair, nursing a cup of warm milk tea that warms him in a different way than the four hours of practice he had just come from.
“Where do you get these books anyway,” Iori asks as he sets the book down on the coffee table, running a finger gently down it’s cover along the spine, “We mostly rely on donations, but these are all clearly secondhand, so if there’s a store nearby…”
“I’ll take you there,” Ten says right away, perhaps a bit faster, a bit more eager, than he would like. Nonetheless, Iori lights up, or as much as he ever does.
And that same look stays on Iori’s face the entire time they’re at the bookstore the following weekend, where he spends well over an hour filtering through volumes. Stays, though maybe a little conflicted when they stop at Japantown for Harajuku crepes decorated like little animals.
(“Do you like cute things, Izumi?” “O-of course not! Why would you say such a thing, Kujou-san…”)
————
And the week after that , Iori brings Ten to the Japanese Tea Gardens, where they have free matcha tasting, Ten revelling at the Golden Gate Bridge. While he had been here for a number of months, outside his regular visits to the book cafe, Ten didn’t particularly care to go sight-seeing, despite Riku’s pleas for more photos.  As it is, he monotones his request to Iori, who seems mildly taken aback before hesitantly stepping closer to Ten so that the elder can take a selfie of them both, with the iconic bridge in the background.
It’s only when Ten is tapping at the screen of his phone to get it to focus that he is suddenly aware that this may very well be the closest he’s been to Iori, not counting the brushes of hands in the shop, and it takes every iota of Ten’s focus to take a proper picture. Once it’s done and over, altogether too fast to truly form proper, let alone coherent, thoughts, Iori declares he knows possibly the best Japanese restaurant around, not counting his parents’ place, of course.
(“Hey, Kujou-san, do you miss Japan at all?” “Of course not. Why would I miss something I willingly left?”)
Ten doesn’t find opportunity to visit the cafe for almost a month after that. Practices with the San Francisco ballet begin to pick up, and it means he spends long hours alone, after rehearsal, after almost everybody else has returned home or to the dorms, and it takes every last bit of energy he has to return his own dorm and collapse into bed.
The next time he manages to get to the cafe, he spends more time drinking tea and watching Iori bustle around, the cafe crowded on account of the gloomier than normal weather outside. As is, he promises that he’ll come back the next day, hurriedly rushing out the door to hopefully beat the storm home.
————
As San Francisco would have it, the rain starts dumping the moment the door closes behind Ten, and Iori sighs as he cleans up for the day, prepping the coffee bar for tomorrow before bracing himself to be soaked as he runs outside to take out the trash.
Like he expects, he’s drenched within seconds, and the fleeting thought of wondering if Ten managed to get back safely crosses his mind, as he flings the bags into the dumpster. What he isn’t expecting, though, is to see the very slim figure of this thoughts standing from a crouch in an alley across the street, leaving his umbrella over a cardboard box, with the gentlest smile that Iori has seen yet.
————
Ten is startled out of his thoughts by a hand closing around his wrist, and he’s only given a moment to be shocked before Iori’s dragging him back towards the cafe, ignoring Ten’s protests, either because he can’t hear them over the pounding rain, or simply because he’s stubborn.
He’s only given a moment to take in the way Iori’s hair is messily plastered to his face and neck, white collared shirt soaked through, before Iori disappears and returns within moments, only briefly, to shove towels and spare clothes into Ten’s arms, pushing him towards the restroom.
When Ten re-emerges, Iori is already dressed, similarly to Ten, setting two cups of tea down on the table in front of what has become Ten’s favorite armchair. They drink in silence until Iori excuses himself, mentioning that he has to go clean up next door, but that he’ll be back soon. And that Ten is free to stay, considering the storm outside.
————
Ten doesn’t remember falling asleep, but the next thing he knows, he’s awake and Iori is curled up on one end of the couch across from him, working his way through a novel. When the barista notices Ten is awake, he offers a quick smile, about to return to his book before Ten speaks, not quite sure what possesses him to do so.
“Play for me.”
“...Huh?” Is Iori’s less than intelligent response, and Ten blinks at him.
“The piano. I haven’t heard you play since that first time.”
Iori seems to pause, as if thinking, before he concedes.
“What do you want me to play?”
“Anything.”
“Mendelssohn, then.”
("Izumi Mitsuki." "Just Mitsuki, or even Mikki is fine." "Does your brother play the piano often?" "Not really? It's there mostly for decoration. Iori doesn't like playing in front of people.")
————
Ten thinks he might be a little selfish.
“No, you’re definitely selfish,” the monotone of Gaku drones across tinny laptop speakers, and Ten glares at his webcam where his friend sits, across the Pacific Ocean. “I can’t believe you went to America just to pick up a Japanese boyfriend.”
“He’s not my boyfriend,” Ten bites back, wondering why he even bothers calling his long-time friend when it just riles him up.
Gaku levels his sharp gaze on Ten, piercing even through a laptop camera, “Really now. Or at least, you want him to be.”
Ten looks to the side, which is as good as answer, and earns him a rare laugh.
“I hope you know that you’re a very difficult person to read, Ten,” Gaku mentions, perhaps a bit too offhandedly, and Ten isn’t sure if he wants to laugh at the unintentional pun behind Gaku’s words, or if he wants to tell Gaku that he’s not any better. “I don’t think anyone really, truly, knows Kujou Ten until they’ve seen him dance.”
Ten opens his mouth to retort, then shuts it, inspired. “...I gotta go, Gaku. I’ll talk to you soon,” he manages, logging off before Gaku can even reply.
(“...You know, Kujou-san, you don’t talk much about yourself.” “There’s not much really to say .”)
Iori walks into the performance hall, awed. He had been here once before with his family, for the yearly Nutcracker performance, the same year he had moved to America. This time, he settles into his seat alone, nervously tugging at the edges of his sleeves.
Swan Lake.
The ballet from which Iori had been playing selections, the very first time Ten and walked into the cafe.
But this time, it’s Ten performing, and Iori watching in silence and awe. Of power and grace, as muscles flex under opaque tights. Of muted snark turned to passion, and if Iori ever thought Ten was focused when engrossed in a good book, it pales in comparison to the fierce concentration that’s evident on Ten’s face. Of emotions that are fleeting in existence, if there at all, are now so clear Iori can see them plain as day from halfway back in the opera hall.
Kujou Ten, who moved to America to dance, likes doughnuts (surprising) and matcha green tea (less surprising, now), and dislikes dancing to Peter Pan the ballet, because the choreography is less structured than most. It’s foggy and cold, as Iori has become used to, living in San Francisco. Brochures and pictures of sparkling lights and velvet seats are all true, just as glamorous as he remembers. So when a hand catches him by the wrist, turning him in place, Iori gives what he hopes is a smile half as beautiful as the performance he’s just witnessed, and Ten kisses him under the stone archways of the San Francisco Opera House, the melody of the Swan Lake theme floating from the strings of violins.
2 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 5 years
Text
For that goth Iori au......
Tumblr media
25 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 5 years
Text
Iotenn AU where Iori and Tenn are top ranking students but visual opposites. They end up falling in love 😭💕💖
Tumblr media
22 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
it's an Iotenn mood tonight uwu 
 おやすみ~ 💗💙💕
18 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 5 years
Text
Ko-fi sketches
Here are 2 examples of sketches I have done for my ko-fi donations! When you donate, just leave me a message of what you would like me to draw and I will usually get it done within the next 24 hours!
this is limited only to the the first 20 donations, than it will rise to $15+ for the next 10 donations!
Thank you so much for your support!! <3
Tumblr media Tumblr media
8 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 4 years
Text
I want to draw more soft IoTenns.... but I have no ideas;;;;;;;; or............ pillow fort times 👀
1 note · View note
zenkjou · 5 years
Text
I missed Iotenn day and now I'm really disappointed in myself
2 notes · View notes
zenkjou · 4 years
Text
Iotenn on a date, what will they do? 👀
0 notes