kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
([personal profile] kaberett Sep. 28th, 2025 09:56 pm)

Reading. Brosh, McMorland Hunter & Hughes, Melzack & Wall )

Dreamwidth! Down to two and a half months behind.

Writing. So many e-mails about objects. So many.

Watching. Farscape S02E06, Picture if You Will. The discussion about which of the Highly Specific Fetish Big Bads it was who was resurrecting in this particular context was entertaining in terms of highlighting the, you know, motifs. Of the work.

Playing. We have just managed some Fluxx. <3

Cooking. Batch of puff pastry for the sake of making two (of the three) things in East that call for it (because I could not quite bring myself to buy pre-made). Pleased with how the puff came out; mildly dubious about both the tomato, pistachio + saffron tart and the banana tarte tatin, but on the level of "I am unlikely to make these again", not "I regret making them".

Eating. On Tuesday we hit the point of Make The Internet Bring Us Pizza. The Pizza was very welcome.

Yesterday, Saturday, we went to say goodbye to Ruby Violet, i.e. we had cake for breakfast, along with hot chocolate. The flavours were all ones I was familiar with but I'm still pleased to have had them. (It is not impossible I will decide I want to make another trip by myself, though, especially given that they currently have the malted milk on...)

As mentioned we then also availed ourselves of an Ethiopian-and-Eritrean Veggie Combo and a piece of Japanese Curry Bread, both of which I am pleased to have experienced.

Exploring. St Pancras Waterpoint! Brief turn through Camley Street Natural Park.

Growing. Spinach that I thought was unlikely to still be viable turns out to in fact still be Extremely Viable! Spinach is go! And the lambs' lettuce has self-seeded nicely (so in fact I also had some of that plus some allotment rocket accompanying the tomato tart). Tomatoes continue to produce tomatoes. Peppers various looked very happy last time I went to see them so now I want to overwinter them all. At home, the pineapple continues to grow and the lemongrass isn't obviously dead yet (and I'm doing something right with at least the larger of the two orchids...)

Observing. BAT, extremely obliging with the aerobatics. Good sunsets. Cyclamen various. Moon.

gwynnega: (books poisoninjest)
([personal profile] gwynnega Sep. 28th, 2025 02:08 pm)
I'm happy to announce that my poem "heroes" will appear in a future issue of Not One of Us. The title is a Bowie reference. I'm always delighted to have my work in this wonderful magazine.

Los Angeles managed a semblance of fall weather the last couple of days, though it's going to warm up a bit. (Considering we often have hellish blasts of heat until around Halloween, I am pleased.)

Soon it will be October, my favorite month, and I will once again become Gwynne Ghoulfinkle on Bluesky.

Posted by douqi7s

To Embers We Return — Chapter 26

Previous | TOC | Next

***

When Shen Ni opened her eyes again, Bian Jin was no longer touching her.

‘That feels so much better,’ said Shen Ni, taking the little bottle from Bian Jin and turning it over to look at the label. ‘This brand is hard to get hold of, too. Thank you.’ Her rosy fingers curved gently over its crystalline surface as she spun it slowly round and round, caressing it as if it were some cherished object.

Bian Jin did not respond directly. All she said was, ‘Now that you’re feeling better, you should have something to eat.’

‘Yes, I will.’

It wasn’t Bian Jin’s imagination — Shen Ni really was unusually docile and well-behaved tonight. She even ate all her spinach without needing to be cajoled into it.

After she’d finished her meal, Shen Ni went off to rinse her mouth. By the time she returned, Bian Jin was toying once again with the little jar of lip-rouge in the pocket of her sleeve. She said tentatively, ‘I hear some of Prince Wei’s men saw me pushing you away outside the Information Services Bureau after the battle the other day, and he and his supporters intend to use that as an excuse to make a formal indictment against you at court.’

Shen Ni dabbed some stray droplets of water from her mouth with a handkerchief. ‘Did Qingluo tell you that?’

Bian Jin recounted to Shen Ni the visit she and Zeng Qingluo had paid Diwu Que and He Lanzhuo earlier that day. Naturally, she omitted the part where she’d mistaken the love-bite on Diwu Que’s neck for a genuine injury.

‘I hadn’t wanted to trouble you about so trivial a matter,’ said Shen Ni. She extracted a recording from her memory module, then projected it onto the screen which was stretched across one wall of the workshop.

‘Two hours ago, Li Ruoyuan held an assembly of ministers. We were originally meant to attend in person, but as she was unwell, she decided to hold court online instead. That was when Prince Wei decided to launch his attack against me. There were a few other matters of interest as well, but — here, shijie, take a look.’

The memory had been recorded from Shen Ni’s point of view, so the events playing out on the screen were exactly as she had seen them.

The contents stored in one’s memory module were, of course, extremely personal in nature. Even though there might be nothing particularly scandalous or unseemly about them, most people did not share those images lightly — only where it was absolutely necessary, such as when Shen Ni had shown her memory of Liu Ji’s death to Li Ruoyuan. If they did choose to share them, it would usually be with their closest, most trusted family members and friends.

Shen Ni had an excellent organic memory. She remembered down to the minute when the online assembly had started, so she was able to replay that exact section of the recording from her memory module.

The meeting had been rendered as a full holographic simulation. The top half of Shen Ni was dressed very properly and formally in her ministerial robes and futou. The simulation had captured that and used it as the basis for modelling the rest of her appearance, so she had not bothered much with the bottom half of her clothing. From the waist down, she was still clad in the under-trousers she’d worn to bed the night before, and her feet were tucked only loosely into her shoes, her heels resting casually on their backs.

Shen Ni disinfected the most comfortable sofa in the whole workshop for Bian Jin to sit on. As the ministers began filing into the holographic throne room in the projection, Shen Ni explained, ‘It is now absolutely certain that the Black Box virus is beginning to spread through the capital. The proposal I put forward at court was that we should finalise our plans for protecting the city, then disclose the Black Box’s presence to the public. Not everyone will have the means to defend themselves from it, but they can at least make their preparations, knowing the full extent of the danger they face. Prince Wei’s faction, however, claimed that such a move would only cause mass unrest across the city. Their preferred plan was to keep the truth hidden from the public for as long as possible, while hunting down and eliminating instances of the Black Box in secret.’

‘What did Li Ruoyuan say?’

‘Li Ruoyuan means to pursue a scheme that’s halfway between the two: to let slip some whispers of the truth to the public, while secretly tracking down and getting rid of all traces of the virus we’re able to find.’

Bian Jin smiled grimly. ‘As I would expect.’

‘I know we haven’t had the chance to discuss the matter of the box jellyfish yet,’ Shen Ni went on, ‘but I’m sure you must have realised that they are inextricably connected to the Black Box. But those jellyfish weren’t the first creatures in Chang’an to fall prey to the virus. There was a victim before that — a man named Liu Ji, who owned a florist’s shop. I happened to be passing by in time to see his corpse mutating.’

At the mention of ‘florist’s shop’, Bian Jin deduced instantly that this must be where the ice-blue cereus flowers had come from. Shen Ni had still not acknowledged that she’d bought them especially for Bian Jin.

‘It’s still unclear how Liu Ji managed to bring the virus with him into Chang’an,’ said Shen Ni. ‘But Li Ruoyuan had already agreed to the execution of Liu Ji’s entire household, in order to eliminate any future risks to the safety of the capital.’

Bian Jin’s expression, Shen Ni realised, had not changed.

To make the projection appear clearer and sharper, Shen Ni had turned off the overhead light. In the now-darkened room, Bian Jin’s features were bathed in the cool glow from the screen, making it seem as though she were encased in a false, metallic shell.

Bian Jin had passed no judgment on Li Ruoyuan’s decision, but Shen Ni’s next words caught her somewhat by surprise.

‘But Liu Ji’s household wasn’t executed after all,’ Shen Ni went on. ‘This morning, they were escorted from the city by a battalion from the Southern Garrison, who meant to bring them to the buffer zone in order to carry out the sentence. On their way there, however, they were intercepted, and Liu Ji’s whole household was whisked away by some unknown rescuer. We still have no idea where they are.’

‘Rescued? How many people in Liu Ji’s household were sentenced?’

‘Fifty-three.’

‘Given the gravity of the situation,’ said Bian Jin thoughtfully, ‘their escort must have been more than a hundred soldiers strong, all of them skilled combatants. Who could have carried off over fifty prisoners without leaving a trace of their identity behind?’

‘The Ruifeng Battalion was the one in charge of the prisoners. They’re a subdivision of the Jinwu Guards, consisting of two hundred and twenty soldiers. Every single one of them was found dead in the buffer zone some three miles from the city’s northwestern gate. The Ruifeng Battalion was one of the most elite units within the Jinwu Guards, so that could only have been done by a yinglong-level mutant beast or higher, or…’

Shen Ni spoke the next words very slowly. ‘…or a warrior among warriors.’

Bian Jin seemed lost in thought. There was a stern, forbidding edge to her demeanour. Shen Ni gazed covertly at her until Li Chu’s irritable tones broke into her consciousness.

On the screen, Li Chu took a step forward and addressed Li Ruoyuan’s indistinct form, which was just visible through the curtains that had been hung behind the throne. In a clear voice he said, ‘The sixteen companies of the Southern Garrison consist of the most elite soldiers in the realm. This is especially the case with the Ruifeng Battalion, which has shouldered the burden of defending our imperial capital and its people for many years, and discharged their duties honorably and well. But even the most elite of troops are still mortal flesh and blood, and the Ruifeng Battalion was tragically wiped out by ambush. Whoever did this came well-prepared. They might even be linked to the Black Box virus, traces of which were found inside Liu Ji’s body. I trust that Your Majesty will take a fair view of this matter, particularly as to how the virus was able to make its way into our city, and how its presence was so coincidentally discovered.’

Li Chu emphasised the word ‘coincidentally’. When he stopped speaking, his wolflike eyes shot a sharp, hateful look at Shen Ni from above his respectfully cupped hands.

The memory had been recorded from Shen Ni’s point of view, so Bian Jin, who was watching it, caught the full force of Li Chu’s glare. She blinked. ‘Why does Li Chu seem so agitated?’

Shen Ni gave her a look. So her shijie had been distracted just now too.

‘I’d just told him there must be a spy within the Ruifeng Battalion, who passed on word of their plans and whereabouts to whoever rescued Liu Ji’s household. That threw him into a rage.’

Bian Jin was silent for a few moments. No wonder Li Chu was fuming; Shen Ni’s remarks had stabbed right at his sore spot.

‘It’s obvious, isn’t it?’ Shen Ni went on. ‘Li Chu and his faction petitioned the emperor for the execution of Liu Ji’s entire household, and after Li Ruoyuan granted the order, it was the Ruifeng Battalion themselves who took custody of the prisoners. As for when exactly they planned to escort the prisoners from the city, which gate they intended to leave by, where they were going — all that was decided in secret, so only the Ruifeng Battalion themselves knew. Yet now they all lie dead in the buffer zone. The only reasonable explanation is that they were betrayed by a spy. I was considerate enough to point this out to Prince Wei, but his response was to insinuate that I had something to do with the Black Box’s presence inside Chang’an. What an ungrateful wretch!’

Bian Jin had Shen Ni rewind the recording back to the point when she was speaking. In the projection, Shen Ni made her representations in a dignified, unhurried manner, with an air of maturity and wisdom that far belied her youth. Yet just now, when she’d been recounting the same speech to Bian Jin in person, she’d been full of undisguised indignation, like a little girl carrying a grievance to her guardian. Outsiders would no doubt be surprised to learn that the great Marquess Jing’an, whose very name inspired awe in the hearts of those who heard it, had no compunctions about letting her inner child roam free in front of her shijie.

Being unwell, Li Ruoyuan had dispensed with a full hologram.  From behind the curtains came her feeble, childish voice. ‘I will have the matter of the Ruifeng Battalion’s deaths thoroughly investigated, in order that I can provide a satisfactory account to you, Prince Wei.’

When he heard those words, Li Chu’s cupped hands shook a little, and he replied hastily, ‘Y-you have my th-thanks, Your Majesty. The souls of the Ruifeng troops who served you so loyally and well will no doubt be grateful, as will the families they’ve left behind.’

At this point, the focus of the recording sharpened to a single point — Li Chu’s trembling hands. Everything else in the memory became slightly blurred, showing that Shen Ni’s gaze had been fixed on that particular detail at the time. A few moments later, the focus shifted to Li Chu’s face. His downcast eyes were flickering restlessly back and forth.

In the workshop, the real Shen Ni brought a thoughtful finger to her lips. No wonder people hated disclosing the contents of their memory modules. The viewer could see exactly what one had been focusing on at any given point; there was simply no way of hiding what was going on in one’s head. It did make one feel rather vulnerable.

‘Li Ruoyuan has always disliked Li Chu’s habit of cultivating supporters who are personally loyal to him,’ said Bian Jin, ‘and she especially looks askance at his close links to some of the companies within the Southern Garrison. When you goaded him into that rather rash display of emotion, it brought his connections to the Southern Garrison into the light. It was only when Li Ruoyuan told him she would give him full satisfaction in the matter that he realised he’d misspoken, but it was far too late to take it back. That was cleverly done indeed, shimei.’

Bian Jin was right. Shen Ni detested Li Chu, so she tried to trip him up at every opportunity she got. She was reluctant to acknowledge that she was deliberately trying to make his life difficult. The very notion, she felt, gave him far more credit than he deserved. He’d brought it all on himself anyway, with his foolishness and recklessness. At Bian Jin’s praise, however, a warm glow of accomplishment settled over Shen Ni. She squirreled away the words ‘cleverly done’ into the recesses of her heart.

In the projection, Shen Ni’s gaze flitted now and again to the shadowy outlines of Li Ruoyuan’s figure behind the curtains, as if she were pondering something.

‘Shimei, don’t you feel that there is something very odd about the deaths of the Ruifeng Battalion?’ asked Bian Jin.

Shen Ni nodded. ‘Of all the units within the Southern Garrison, the Ruifeng Battalion had the fiercest fighters — and the closest ties to Li Chu. Their captain owed his position to Li Chu’s influence. If I were Li Ruoyuan, the Ruifeng Battalion would be a constant thorn in my side. I’d find it necessary to get rid of them, but not openly. This would have been the perfect opportunity. Perhaps whoever eliminated the Ruifeng Battalion was one of Li Ruoyuan’s agents.

‘Once the entire battalion had been decimated, that would give Li Ruoyuan the chance to assemble it afresh — and this time, the choice of who was to lead it, and who should be enlisted in it, would no longer be up to Li Chu. Li Ruoyuan would be able to place her own trusted agents within the ranks of the Southern Garrison, and they in turn would be able to identify and dismantle Li Chu’s network of supporters from within.

‘This would also give Li Ruoyuan full control over the fates of Liu Ji’s household. Whether she chose to have them executed or to spare their lives, she could keep them hidden from the eyes of the public forever. Once she’s stopped their mouths, one way or another, there’s nothing to prevent her from announcing that she’s had them relocated safely elsewhere, further cementing her image as a benevolent monarch in the hearts and minds of the people. In one fell swoop, she’d be able to enhance her own reputation while quashing Li Chu’s faction and playing him and me off against each other, killing several birds with one stone.’

Shen Ni’s analysis of the situation was thorough and incisive. Bian Jin watched her with silent admiration.

‘Next comes the indictment,’ Shen Ni added.

In the projection, Li Chu was clearly shaken by Li Ruoyuan’s pointed words. A high-ranking official on the other side of the holographic throne room shot him a meaningful glance, indicating that he should let the matter drop.

Li Chu quickly collected himself, and launched into his indictment against Shen Ni. He claimed that Shen Ni had shown complete disdain for the match which the emperor had bestowed on her, and was estranged from her new wife. Why, the two of them had even been seen coming to blows in public! This was clear contempt for the emperor’s wishes. If these two women were allowed to carry on disrespecting the emperor’s will in this way, he went on, it would be the ultimate insult to Her Majesty’s honour. This behaviour needed to be contained swiftly lest it trickle down to the masses, setting a most evil precedent.

From behind the curtain, Li Ruoyuan let out a long sigh. ‘Shen Ni, my dear minister, are your dissatisfied with this marriage?’

No matter how mild her tone was, Shen Ni was fully conscious of the seriousness of the question. She bowed and said in grave, earnest tones, ‘On the contrary, Your Majesty. I cherish this honour you have granted me most deeply.’

‘Oh?’ said Li Ruoyuan. ‘And here I thought you resented it, given that the marriage remains unconsummated.’

Inside the workshop, Bian Jin turned and looked at Shen Ni. ‘Li Ruoyuan sounds so certain — not as if she’s merely probing or testing you.’

‘You and I have spent all these years on the front lines, so our roots within Chang’an are still relatively shallow,’ said Shen Ni. ‘Other than Auntie Wan, all of our servants were chosen by Li Ruoyuan herself. This household must be as leaky as a grain sieve by now. Even the smallest of incidents will have been reported to her by her spies. The show we put on during our wedding night could only have pulled the wool over their eyes for a short while. Our daily interactions — or lack of them — since then will have been enough to give them the true picture.’

In the projection, Li Ruoyuan interjected forcefully into the midst of Shen Ni’s denials. ‘I hear you and Bian Jin still hold unresolved grudges against each other. But remember, Shen Ni, I decreed this match between the two of you, and if you continue to have so little regard for my wishes, I will have no choice but to mete out a suitable punishment.’

‘As Your Majesty commands,’ said Shen Ni.

Li Ruoyuan’s voice returned to its usual mildness. ‘Now that you and Bian Jin are wed, you should strive to live in matrimonial harmony. I hope I will hear no more accusations of discord between you and Bian Jin, my dear minister.’

Shen Ni murmured her assent. Inwardly, she reflected on how absurd the whole situation was. She was the one who had sought out the match in the first place, to thwart Li Chu’s sordid little scheme of taking Bian Jin as his concubine — and, as she’d told Li Ruoyuan, to carry out her ‘covert investigation’ into Bian Jin’s supposed ‘treason’. Now, however, Li Ruoyuan was using it a stick to beat her with.

Shen Ni’s star had risen so high that it threatened to eclipse Li Ruoyuan’s, while Li Chu had spent years cultivating his own coterie of supporters at court. Li Ruoyuan, who was known for mild demeanour, had never before shown them her teeth. Instead, she’d bided her time, waiting for the perfect opportunity to come along. In the meantime, she’d allowed Shen Ni and Li Chu to clash time and again, playing them off against each other.

Li Chu’s accusation and Li Ruoyuan’s response to it left Bian Jin feeling rather at a loss. ‘I only gave you a small push, but now they’re claiming that we came to blows?’ 

‘It’s completely ridiculous,’ Shen Ni agreed. Inwardly she thought: That’s right — you, my oh-so-guilty shijie, perpetrated that absolutely heinous act of domestic violence unilaterally on poor innocent me. I never even laid a finger on you!

Now that they were on the subject, Shen Ni decided she might as well ask why Bian Jin had pushed her away so suddenly at the time. Before she could, however, the online assembly ended. The holographic throne room faded from view, to be replaced by Shen Ni’s workshop. In the projection, Shen Ni leaned back in her chair. Her gaze travelled downwards to the rensheng Bian Jin had made for her, still hanging from her belt. She gave it an affectionate little pat.

Fortunately, Bian Jin had been speaking to Shen Ni, so she was not looking at the screen. Shen Ni terminated the projection hastily. That was close, she thought. I’m never going to show anyone anything from my memory module ever again.

Shen Ni was inwardly rejoicing over her good luck when Bian Jin suddenly leaned closer to her and asked, ‘What are your thoughts on the matter?’

‘Hm?’ said Shen Ni.

‘On the matter of the indictment,’ said Bian Jin. A beam from the overhead lamp had fallen across her eyes, making them seem even brighter and clearer.

Shen Ni’s breath caught for a moment. She crooked a forefinger and placed a knuckle just beneath her lips, as she often did whenever she was thinking.

‘Li Chu came prepared for a fight this time, so I fear he won’t be easy to dissuade. If he were to bring this matter before the censorate, that would make things very difficult for us. Do you have a possible counter-measure in mind, shijie?’

Shen Ni had thought the question would give Bian Jin pause, but unexpectedly, Bian Jin seemed to settle on a plan after only a few moments. 

‘Lend me your lip-rouge,’ she told Shen Ni.

‘Lip-rouge?’ Shen Ni echoed.

There was a dressing-table in a corner of the workshop. Shen Ni had had it placed there for the sake of convenience, and so that she wouldn’t have to disturb Bian Jin when the latter was in their bedchamber. As she went towards it, Bian Jin added, ‘Bring me the shade you usually wear — the cherry-pink one.’

Shen Ni paused in the act of opening her dressing-case. So shijie knows which shade I use most often.

She retrieved the small, oval jar, and turned to see Bian Jin quietly plucking off her gloves. Those hands which so rarely saw the light of day were fair and slender, and her skin was as softly luminous as jade. They contrasted sharply with the thick, brown leather gloves that had enveloped them. The lamplight reflected off the backs of her hands like the sun on water.

The sight took Shen Ni aback. It was only with great difficulty that she was able to shift her gaze away from Bian Jin’s naked hands.

‘Here.’ Bian Jin held out her hand for the lip-rouge — her right hand.

Shen Ni gave her the little jar. Denuded of the gloves, Bian Jin’s hands seemed delicate and fragile, almost breakable. Lightly she twisted the red lid open, and dipped two fingers into its cherry-pink contents. Then, turning to face the mirror, she tilted her head to one side and ran those fingers across the soft skin of her neck, leaving two faint streaks of colour behind.

Shen Ni finally realised what she was doing. ‘Shijie, are you trying to make it seem as if we’ve been intimate with each other, the better to convince onlookers that we really are a loving couple?’

At that very frank question, Bian Jin glanced at Shen Ni over her shoulder. ‘And is there something wrong with that?’

Shen Ni stepped closer to her. ‘Not as such,’ she said. ‘It’s just that those marks don’t look much like love-bites. Anyone who bothered to look could tell that they’d been smeared on by hand.’

Shimei truly is an expert in such matters, Bian Jin reflected. Out loud, she said, ‘Then what should we do?’

She looked at the pair of them in the mirror. Herself, cool and reserved; Shen Ni, standing just behind her, all seductive charm. There was a small gap between the two of them, but in the reflection, they seemed to be leaning suggestively close to each other.

With seeming artlessness, and as solemnly as if she were speaking to the emperor before the whole court, Shen Ni explained, ‘It should be a real love-bite. No one would be able to see through that.’

Bian Jin was silent for a moment or two. Then she said, ‘I’m ticklish. Especially there.’

Shen Ni had not been expecting her to say yes in the first place — and found herself rather grateful that Bian Jin had chosen ticklishness as her excuse, rather than her phobia of dirt.

‘If the mark is somewhere less obvious,’ she said, ‘then it doesn’t matter so much if it’s not… completely authentic.’

‘How much less obvious?’ asked Bian Jin.

Shen Ni took the jar from her and scooped up a tiny bit of lip-rouge with two fingers. Then she put the jar down and took another step forward. The soft curve of her breasts brushed against Bian Jin’s shoulder blades, and Bian Jin could feel the heat of Shen Ni’s body against her back. That last sliver of physical distance between them had vanished. Bian Jin could smell temple tea and pear-blossom, blended into a complex fragrance that belonged to Shen Ni alone.

‘Shijie, tilt your head back,’ Shen Ni whispered. Her voice echoed in Bian Jin’s ears, overlapping with those words from the dream she so desperately wanted to forget: Open up, shijie… Yes, there’s a good girl…

Heat roiled in Bian Jin’s chest. With a monumental effort, she managed to keep her breathing under control, stopping it from growing any rougher.

In the mirror, she watched herself tilt her head back. The delicate curve of her neck emerged gracefully from her tightly-fastened collar; it shifted restlessly as she swallowed once, then again.

On the battlefield, this would have been a highly dangerous move. Had she ever left such a fatal spot exposed to the enemy, she would almost certainly have been killed in an instant. Even now, it made her feel deeply vulnerable. 

Vulnerability or not, Shen Ni seemed dissatisfied with her pose. She asked Bian Jin to hold her head at a another angle. Somewhat mystified, Bian Jin complied

‘That’s not right either,’ said Shen Ni, and Bian Jin turned her head back to its original position.

‘That’s it,’ said Shen Ni. ‘Don’t move.’

Not wanting to lose this perfect angle, she reached out and cupped Bian Jin’s chin firmly in one hand, preventing her from moving any further. Bian Jin felt tiny, dense pinpricks of heat gathering slowly where Shen Ni was touching her. Because all of Shen Ni’s attention was on Bian Jin’s throat, she did not notice that her shijie’s eyes were beginning to darken, nor that her slender earlobes were flushed as scarlet as if she had been drinking.

Once again, Bian Jin’s movements were now fully under Shen Ni’s control. But to her, this felt very different from the last time, when she’d been cuffed to the top of the workbench. Then, she had been filled with anger and shame. But now, because Shen Ni was touching such a very small part of her skin, a sense of yearning was welling up in her consciousness, leaving her profoundly unfulfilled; there was a strange hollow sensation deep inside her. Not wanting Shen Ni to suspect that anything might be out of the ordinary, she forced herself to repress the shivers that were threatening to spread through her body.

Bian Jin was now absolutely certain that some unknown aberration must have occurred when Shen Ni was fixing her. It was the only thing that could explain this heightened sensitivity she’d developed towards Shen Ni’s touch.

Shen Ni, meanwhile, had no idea of the turmoil that was seething within Bian Jin. She ran her rouge-stained fingers from the base of Bian Jin’s throat to just under her chin, leaving a cool, slightly sticky sensation in her wake. There was now a smear of cherry-pink on Bian Jin’s neck, half-hidden by the line of her jaw.

That dragonfly-light touch roused a series of thrills at the base of Bian Jin’s spine. Her hands, which had been resting on Shen Ni’s dressing-case, gripped its sandalwood surface even harder. A strange moisture was beginning to well up in the palms of her hands. 

Shen Ni’s chin hung over Bian Jin’s shoulder as she scrutinised her handiwork in the mirror. She said critically, ‘Most of that mark will be hidden whenever you look down, but some of it should still be visible. That only makes it look more real.’

The growing heat and wetness in a particular part of Bian Jin’s body was making her both uncomfortable and embarrassed. She made an effort at collecting herself. She hadn’t quite managed to do what she’d set out to do, but that didn’t really matter now.

‘That should be enough to pass muster,’ she told Shen Ni. ‘I’ll be going now.’ 

She had just moved towards the door when Shen Ni hooked a finger through her sash. ‘Aren’t you going to leave me one too, shijie?’

Bian Jin looked over her shoulder, startled. 

Shen Ni was turning the little jar of lip-rouge round and round in the rosy tips of her fingers. She had been looking down at the dressing-table before; now, she glanced up alluringly through her eyelashes. She turned her face slightly to one side, revealing her flawless, snow-fair throat.

‘I’m not ticklish,’ she said.

***

Author’s Note:

Why Yes, I Do Want to Get Up Close and Personal with My Aloof, Distant, Mysophobic Shijie (v 2.0)

***

Previous | TOC | Next

andrewducker: (Default)
([personal profile] andrewducker Sep. 28th, 2025 08:49 pm)
Ways to tell you have a child #37: the contents of your tumble dryer's lint trap is 50% glitter.

(And your hands are now covered in glitter from emptying it)
Tags:
tozka: Drawing of a caucasian person with longish brown hair and glasses holding a black cat (me with cat)
([personal profile] tozka Sep. 28th, 2025 12:19 pm)

Life Updates

This week has fairly flown by but honestly I’ve been spending most of my time petting the cats, wandering the neighborhood, reading fanfics, and doing a BIT of work.

It’s a very enjoyable life, but at the same time I wish I’d gotten more done than I had. Oh well! There’s always next week…

Media Consumption

📺 Tried watching several movies and nothing much caught my eye, so instead have been putting Mystery Science Theater 3000 episodes on in the background. Some of the newer episodes– including the very newest ones that were audience-funded– are now available on the Shout TV streaming channel (or Tubi) which is interesting because there’s a whole new host!

📖 Currently halfway through a very fun Star Wars fanfic, The 212th Attack Battalion’s Guide to Staging Rescues by antigrav_vector and Quarra, and am very much enjoying it.

🎮 I have my (hacked) 3DS with me, and am currently playing a fan translation of Rocket Slime 3 (not as fun as Rocket Slime 2, but okay) and Animal Crossing: New Leaf (which will get its own page on my website eventually).

I also have Sanrio Characters Picross going, which is super cute– you get “stickers” for finishing puzzles and can use them to decorate the backgrounds IN the game.

I’m planning on writing a post later about my 3DS because a) I decorated it and want to show off, and b) there’s some fun homebrew stuff which came out recently and has made the 3DS community more active than it was a few years ago when I first jailbroke it.

Food & Dining

Went to the farmer’s market and splurged on a few things, including a packet of “Reaper” flavored cheese from a local dairy farm and a $10 loaf of jalapeno cheddar sourdough (yum).

Also stopped by a coffee truck and got a honeybun latte, which was good but perhaps just a little overpriced ($7+ yikes).

Web Updates

I need to get back into the habit of posting again! I have so many drafts, but very little energy to finish them. Until then:

Looking Forward

Next week is several fun local events, including a flea market. I’m also planning to go to a thrift store and perhaps a Little Free Library. And of course, reading lots of fanfic (and maybe finishing a book or two).

Crossposted from Pixietails Club Blog.

siria: (iwtv - armand is erotic)
([personal profile] siria Sep. 28th, 2025 03:19 pm)
The Boys of Summer
Interview with the Vampire | Armand/Daniel | ~1000 words | For [tumblr.com profile] trinityofone, with thanks to [personal profile] sheafrotherdon for betaing.

(Also on AO3)

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brithistorian: (Default)
([personal profile] brithistorian Sep. 28th, 2025 01:26 pm)

I've had a couple of weird dreams over the last two nights. I'm recording them more for my own reference than anything else, but if you decide to read them, I hope you enjoy them. In case you are (as I am) someone who doesn't enjoy reading other people's dreams, I'm putting them behind cuts.

To help distinguish states: IRL = "in real life" (obviously), ITD = "in the dream."

Night of 26-27 September:

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Night of 27-28 September:

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davidgillon: Text: I really don't think you should put your hand inside the manticore, you don't know where it's been. (Don't put your hand inside the manticore)
([personal profile] davidgillon Sep. 28th, 2025 07:44 pm)

 I went to grab the bunch of spring onions out of the fridge last night and they wouldn't move. Further investigation revealed they were welded to the shelf by a block of ice the size of my fist, which was also blocking the drainage hole at the back. I had to empty half the fridge to be able to loosen everything off with some hot water and leave the chunk of scallions to defrost in a bowl.

Maybe need to check what temperature the fridge is set at!

goodbyebird: Journey Into Mystery: Sif is facepalming. (C ∞ urgh)
([personal profile] goodbyebird Sep. 28th, 2025 07:45 pm)
Guess who picked up a super fun comic, tore through three trades, then wanted to find folks talking about it and searched on BluSky... to find it got cancelled the very day she picked it up? AYUP.

Why aren't people buying super fun team comics?? *shakes fist at universe*
(yes it was cancelled due to poor sales)

The comic in question? Birds of Prey, written by Kelly Thompson. It had team! Quips! Competency! Siblings! Big Barda and Tiny Bat!! Muscles and mind-controlled beefcakes!

The last issue comes out in December and I'd prefer to pick up the trade. When I went to check if we'd even get volume 4 - comics! they treat us so well! - there was some good sprinkled in there. Firstly, she's pitching a new book at DC featuring a couple of the characters from BoP. My feral mind is slamming both fists on the table, chanting "Big and tiny! Big and tiny!" Probably not but gimme.

Secondly, Thompson's heading up the new Buffy and Angel run at Dynamite!
In my early days trying to figure out how to be a writer and what stories mattered to me and why — no heroine quite broke through for me like Buffy Summers.

She was somehow everything my young geek heart had always wanted but hadn’t known to ask for. Something about that delicate alchemy of horror, fantasy, and comedy paired with a hero so pure of heart and yet flawed and relatable was… impossible to deny. I fell deeply in love with Buffy, and following that, her whole world. Her ex-boyfriend is now a supernatural detective in Los Angeles you say? Inject it directly into my veins! But unlike a lot of other worlds I loved, the world of Buffy and Angel somehow never fell to the wayside. I could always come back to it and find something new, or something I’d missed, or something I needed. And I hope this new story we’re telling can do the same for old and new fans everywhere.

Thank god BOOM! lost the license because oof. Outside of the pretty covers and first issue, that was rough to say the least.

But I'm excited for this! We could, dare I say it, get a good Buffy comic.
torachan: tavros from homestuck dressed as pupa pan (pupa pan)
([personal profile] torachan Sep. 28th, 2025 10:39 am)
Currently Reading
European Travel for the Monstrous Gentelwoman
14%. Sequel to The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter. This one is very long (over 24 hours in audiobook form) so I'll be at it for a while, but I'm enjoying it a lot.

Death at the Fireside Inn
42%. First in a new-to-me historical mystery series, but it's pretty mid so I doubt I'll continue the series.

The Death of Public School: How Conservatives Won the War Over Education in America
8%. Title is self-explanatory. I only read the first chapter so far, but it's interesting. Unfortunately I had to return it to the library, but I immediately put it on hold again and there was no one else waiting for it, so I should have it back soon.

The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State
29%.

Recently Finished
The Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Science
This was fun. A little on the too wacky side for me, but enjoyable. I'll check out the sequel when it's out.

Lone Women
Highly recommended. I really liked this a lot.

Murder on the Marlow Belle
I don't know why the US release of these books is so far behind the UK release. It's in the same language! But it is, and that's annoying. This was out in January in the UK and only came out in the US this month. The next one is out soon in the UK but I assume I'll have to wait a while to get it here. :(

Made in Chicago: Stories Behind 30 Great Hometown Bites
We watched someone on youtube talking about one of the dishes in this book and he mentioned that this is where he heard about it. The book sounded interesting, so we ordered it right away. It's only 130 pages and some of the dishes have recipes to make at home, so it's a very quick read. I should look and see if there's something like this for LA.

Kaikai Gigigigigi vol. 1
New series by Uguisu Sachiko. I like all her stuff so of course I bought it. To be honest, it seems very much like a retread of You Will Hear the Voice of the Dead, but I loved that series so I'm down for it. Protag is a very ordinary boy who keeps finding himself at the center of supernatural happenings in his town. Each chapter is basically a stand-alone horror story with a thin overarching plot linking them.

Kubikari vol. 1-4
Short four-volume horror manga that I only finished because it was so short. A group of high school kids go to an old hotel in the middle of nowhere to film something for their social media channel, only to get trapped there while people start dying. The motivations were very flimsy and the whole thing was just not very good, but since it was short I wanted to see how it ended.
Title: Desperation At The Altar
Fandom: Kamen Rider Gotchard
Relationships: Lachesis/Shiori
Medium: Fic
Warnings: Smut
A/N: Done for [community profile] femslashfete, prompt was Insipid.

Read more... )
runpunkrun: sunflowers against a blue sky with a huge billowy white cloud (where hydrogen is built into helium)
([personal profile] runpunkrun Sep. 28th, 2025 09:14 am)
I went to Trader Joe's yesterday and in addition to the things I was meant to purchase, I also got apple cider scented foaming hand soap, maple & sea salt kettle corn, ultra moisturizing pumpkin hand cream, and a little white and orange pumpkin to go with the big heirloom pumpkin I also impulse purchased earlier this week. Because it's decorative gourd season, motherfuckers.

While we're on the subject of gourds, let me also recommend this recipe for gluten-free pumpkin bars from Texanerin. Though, really, it's more of a pumpkin cake, tall and fluffy and full of fall spices. I wrote up the details over on [community profile] gluten_free.
Title: Pretty Lies, Rough Truth
Fandom: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Characters/Pairing: Spuffy
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: none
Word count: 100 (Google Docs)
Setting/Spoilers: Set in S6, during ep. 6x15 “As You Were.”
Summary: The lies and excuses Buffy tells herself for seeking out Spike won’t hold much longer...
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Prompt: #461 - Futile

Crossposted: [community profile] anythingdrabble, [community profile] drabble_zone, My journal, Sunnydale After Dark


READ: Pretty Lies, Rough Truth )
troisoiseaux: (reading 2)
([personal profile] troisoiseaux Sep. 28th, 2025 10:24 am)
Read Will There Ever Be Another You by Patricia Lockwood, her second work of autofiction (after her more or less autobiographical novel No One Is Talking About This and straight-up memoir Priestdaddy), based on her experience with long Covid and her husband's own serious medical crisis a few years later. The first half of the book is written in a disorienting, fragmented way that evokes the narrator/main character/Lockwood's (novel alternates between first and third person) experience of illness and brain fog (or "Brian fog"); I found myself frequently having to re-read passages a couple of times to untangle what was happening. There is a whole chapter about doing mushrooms and reading Anna Karenina and honestly it might be the least convoluted part of the book.

There's a meta sort of intimacy about the way Lockwood writes obliquely about very specific, often recognizable people and occurrences, a sort of if you know, you know. Per the Guardian, "Will There Ever Be Another You assumes a fluency in Lockwood. Fandom is the price of entry here: not just a familiarity with the cult author’s work, but with her life" [x]— I was actually startled by the details of her life that I recognized from the internet, such as the time her cat (the Miette, from the meme) ate a lizard and tripped balls. And not just her life: I immediately recognized the reference to an author named Susanna who spent "{t}en years in a dark room, writing about a man in a maze" while also suffering from a disorienting chronic illness (i.e., Susanna Clarke, Piranesi, chronic fatigue syndrome); I finally figured out that the "Heidi" referred to throughout is Heidi Schreck of What the Constitution Means to Me fame, who is(?) indeed working with Lockwood on a pilot of a TV show.

Reading this concurrently with Grief Is For People by Sloane Crosley was interesting, because the effect was kind of like standing between two stereos playing different songs with just enough of a similar beat— both chronicle the experience of being unmoored by loss (in Lockwood's case, the loss of her infant niece to a genetic disorder and her sense of self to long Covid; in Crosley's, the loss of a close friend to suicide and family heirlooms/jewelry to a home invasion and everyday life in New York City to the pandemic), with secondary themes of writers on writing/the publishing industry/art and, of course, the pandemic— that they started to blur together; I was going to say that my takeaway from both books is that I should finally get around to reading Joan Didion, but no, having double-checked, besides a passing name-drop in Will There Ever Be Another You the Didion references were all Crosley's. Other books this reminded me of was, in the very, very loose sense that both are memoirs where the author's close platonic relationship with a male colleague turned friend plays a major narrative role, Hope Jahren's Lab Girl and, for more obvious thematic similarities (suicide, books), Sarah Chihaya's Bibliophobia— sort of a flip side of that coin.
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sovay: (Mr Palfrey: a prissy bastard)
([personal profile] sovay Sep. 27th, 2025 09:55 pm)
Every time I watch Heat and Dust (1983), I want to write about its beautifully patterned expectations and ironies, its women who confront or evade them, its last extraordinary melding of time done with nothing more than a window that contains one decade and reflects another while the snow-flanked mountains stand behind them both, and it seems that I am writing about Harry Hamilton-Paul.

I shouldn't be surprised. In a film much concerned with cultural codes and transgressions, he's the most liminal character, the oddest man out, the last living memory of the scandal that rocked the Civil Lines at Satipur in 1923 when British India was the jewel of the never-set Empire of which he was most definitely not a builder. He's the storyteller, partly narrating the past thread of the film from his future as a tobacco-tanned old India hand who can't resist giving the same colonial advice about water and fruit and salads that he never heeded in his youthful days as—a meaningful, veiled word—the guest of the Nawab of Khatm. His presence at diplomatic functions is ambidextrous, dinner-jacketed at a state banquet, turbaned at a palace durbar, as likely to be found on his own time in an angarkha as a tennis shirt, belting out enthusiastically amateur selections from Pagliacci and acidly losing at cards to the ladies of the zenana. His role in them is blatantly unexplained. Nickolas Grace gives him such an arch, pointed face, his eyes ironically lidded even when flat on his back in a fever of homesickness and his serious statements edged like light comedy, he's impossible to imagine as even a one-time appendage of the repressive civil service which in any case considers him to have rather disgracefully let the side down, but neither does he seem, like his secretarial antecedents of E. M. Forster or J. R. Ackerley, even pretextually employed at the court of the Nawab. The British colony pronounces the censorious last word: "No Englishman has any business living in that palace." But of course he does, if a man as brilliantly virile and vulnerable as Shashi Kapoor's Nawab wants him there. Like a kinder revision of Cyril Sahib in Autobiography of a Princess (1975), Harry admits the possibility of queerness into the double-tracked heterosexuality of the plot. Bonding over the absurdities of imperial ritual with Greta Scacchi's Olivia Rivers, he drops the courteous hairpin of complimenting the playing-fields-of-Eton looks of her assistant collector of a husband, but his cynically comfortable company offers more than a diversion from the crashing propriety incumbent on a junior officer's wife: he's the dangerous proof that a sojourn in the subcontinent doesn't have to be circumscribed by casually racist platitudes and the insular summer exodus to Simla, that she too might meet something of the less tamely glamorous, princely India under the veneer of the Raj in the reciprocal person of the Nawab, for whom she is no more the typical memsahib than Harry is anything other than "a very improper Englishman." What she cannot see in her reckless innocence is the difference in the risks they run, how much more inflammatorily her cross-cultural desires intersect with the implacable conventions of both sides of the colonial project. Harry's situation is sufficiently ambiguous that the Nawab can claim him as if with the bridal cliché that his mother has gained rather than lost a son, but Olivia's unchaperoned visits to the palace set the rumor mill grinding even when their ostensible object is her heat-stricken countryman, reading all the London-fogged Dickens he can get his hands on. No political value is set on his virtue. And yet for just a little while before the tide of empire engulfs Khatm and strands its principal players in a flat in Park Lane, a chalet in Gulmarg, the denuded ghost of the palace left like a rain-stained shrine to its ruler's deposition, the triangulation of the friendship between Olivia and Harry and their mutual importance to the Nawab makes the three of them look like a ménage across borders, the charmed space of a triad not so totally unlike the tripartite composition of their writing-directing-producing team. The appeal of a hand on a shoulder, a fumble with unfamiliar undergarments. "We've left British India. Now you're in my power, like him. I'm only joking."

The production that broke them out on the international scene, Heat and Dust was model Merchant Ivory, produced by Ismail, directed by James, and closely and imaginatively adapted by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala from her own 1975 Booker winner with a cast as sumptuous and astringent as its dual-layered portrait of India. As the captivating Nawab, Kapoor gets to strike evasive, reflective, funny as well as mouthwatering notes, while Christopher Cazenove's Douglas Rivers may be a dutiful empire-builder, but we meet him first weeping for his wife: Scacchi's Olivia with her blossoming, owl-boned face moves against her colonial obligations out of defiance as well as naïveté and it suits a film so attentive to the limits of female autonomy that the resolution of her predicament should lie with Madhur Jaffrey as the regally chain-smoking Begum. By dint of wrapping itself around a mystery, the 1982 thread can't help feeling like a frame story even when interwoven with deliberate, blurring touches like a municipal office suddenly faded out of a bungalow, but Julie Christie and Zakir Hussein give the affair of Anne and Inder Lal enough of its own casual chemistry that it makes a contrast, although Ratna Pathak as Ritu is just sketched as the spouse this time around; the film seems more curious about the would-be sanyasi of Charles McCaughan's Chid, whose dead-end self-actualization lightly tweaks the latter-day colonialism of cultural appropriation. Walter Lassally shoots painterly set-ups and candid camera streets with equal assurance, including the introductory shot of Olivia looking straight out through the fourth wall of the letters to her sister that started Anne off on the whole quest to retrace her great-aunt's scandalous footsteps, whose bookend is an elegantly enigmatic, portrait-like moment where record and recollection have run out, leaving only the woman herself. The fact remains of my affection for Harry, who bridges the threads of time and when faced with the turmoil of dacoits and riots and the murky intrigues of the man he loves, admits frankly, "Well, when all these kinds of things happened, I just gave up and ran away to Olivia's house and begged her to play some Schumann." Fortunately, he and his film are prolifically available on various forms of streaming and more than one region of Blu-Ray/DVD. It only took me since before the last glaciation to get around to them. This indiscretion brought to you by my improper backers at Patreon.
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tarlanx: Zhou Zishu wrapped in white with Wen Kexing in red with hand wrapped around to support Zishu (Cdrama - Word of Honor 2 - pair)
([personal profile] tarlanx posting in [community profile] c_ent Sep. 28th, 2025 12:58 pm)
Fandom: Word of Honor (TV 2021)
Characters: Wen Kexing and Zhou Zishu

A plain and text version of a bookmark I created for a challenge. Click on image for 300x800 size.

HERE
Word of Honor - WenZhou Bookmark by Tarlan Word of Honor - WenZhou Bookmark - WITH TEXT by Tarlan

 
dolorosa_12: (persephone lore olympus)
([personal profile] dolorosa_12 Sep. 28th, 2025 12:44 pm)
My four-day weekend has reached its final day, and although it hasn't been quite as relaxing as I intended, it has been a lot of fun. Matthias and I just came back from a little Sunday market wander in the rain, and I'm now curled up in the living room in my wing chair, a takeaway coffee in hand, watching people walk by and the raindrops fall. The sky is white, rather than grey, and it feels as if we are under cotton wool.

This weekend has involved two trips into Cambridge. On Friday night, Matthias and I had booked to attend a collaborative event between the upmarket wine sellers and one of the restaurants, with wine from Bordeaux and a French-ish five-course dinner. We've been to several of these types of events, although all the others have been in one of the wine seller's shops and more like a wine-tasting with canapés, rather than a full sit-down restaurant meal. I was amused to discover that the restaurant was actually run by the guy who used to manage the wine cellars and catering at my old Cambridge residential college (on one memorable occasion, I was invited on a tour of the extensive underground cellars, led by him, by virtue of the fact that I lived in a share house with a woman who was the head of the college's postgraduate student committee). He was already an older man when I knew him in college, so I'm amused that he's elected to spend his 'retirement' doing something as stressful as running a restaurant! In any case, the food was good, the wine was excellent, but the people organising things had clearly failed to consider the fact that not everyone attending actually lived in Cambridge — things went on until after 11pm, and we had to dash out to make the last train (which was inevitably delayed by half an hour), and didn't get to bed until close to 1am. I was not super thrilled to be waking up at 7am on Saturday morning to go to two hours of classes at the gym, that's for sure!

Our second trip in to Cambridge was somewhat spontaneous, as [instagram.com profile] misshoijer announced on Thursday that she'd be in the city for a flying visit, and would anyone like to meet up on Saturday afternoon. She's a friend from my postgraduate days in Cambridge — she did her undergrad degree in the same department where I did my MPhil and PhD, and for three years, I sat in on her undergraduate medieval Welsh classes (by the third year, it was just her, one other guy, and me, and we grappled with medieval Cornish and Breton as well). She moved back to Sweden a couple of years ago and I hadn't seen her for ages, so it was good to catch up — and all done in a logistically straightforward way that meant I didn't have to go into central Cambridge on the same Saturday when all the students moved back in for the start of the new academic year: she, Matthias and I met in a pub that was literally on the train station platform, we had one drink, and then she went on to London and we went back to Ely, where we tried a new Indian restaurant for dinner. This restaurant is in somewhat cursed location on the high street — it used to be a nightclub (so the space is big) which closed down at some point during or immediately after the pandemic lockdowns, then it got turned into an extremely mediocre cocktail bar (we went once and were basically the only people there in a cavernous space — very depressing), which then closed down, and it had been sitting empty for several years when suddenly I saw that it was alive and kicking as an Indian restaurant. The food was excellent (and absurdly cheap) — southern Indian food from Kerala, which is probably my favourite. We were home by 9.30, and I was asleep by 10pm.

I've only finished one book this week, but what a book it was: Tori Bovalino's adult fantasy debut, The Second Death of Locke, which was much anticipated on my part, and definitely exceeded my high expectations. I should warn everyone that my enjoyment is entirely due to the fact that it is very much My Kind of Nonsense — self-indulgent in a way that really suits my particular tastes and preferences when it comes to character dynamic. (Amusingly, it also manages to involve two separate ideas that teenage me had for fantasy novels that never saw fruition at my hands — when I say it is my kind of nonsense, I'm not kidding.) This is a world in which magic springs from intense bonds between mages and their human sources (called 'wells'); the former draws on the latter for all manner of supernatural outcomes. It's also a world in which the source of magic is running dry, due to an act of betrayal some years previously in which the titular island and dynasty of Locke (from whence springs all magical power) was annihilated, save a lost heir whom all other powers in the land are fighting to locate and control as their magical power source puppet.

Into this chaos step our two focal characters: Kier, a mage fighting in the army of one of these countries, and Grey, his well and childhood best friend (she's an orphan and was in effect raised by his family; she's also secretly in love with him and has been pining unrequitedly for many years). When they're tasked with escorting a captured hostage teenage girl to a potential ally, this perilous quest risks exposing the pair's many dangerous secrets, with implications for the wider political and supernatural context in which they find themselves. The characters' absolutely intense bond is at the heart of the novel, and if you like stories where characters are loyal to one another to absurdly self-sacrificing degrees (barely a few chapters pass without either Kier or Grey putting themselves in life-threatening danger in order to save the other), you will find lots to enjoy here.

As with many current ostensibly adult fantasy novels, although the characters are in their twenties, it still does feel a bit YA in terms of the relationships, and the whole thing is a bit of a teenage girl power fantasy (at least for the kind of teenage girl I was), but I had an absolutely fantastic time reading it, and won't apologise for that! If I had read it slightly sooner, I would possibly have nominated it for Yuletide.

This morning has been absurdly productive — I've already been to the pool, done a load of laundry (hanging inside, much to my disappointment, due to the rain), done a yoga class, and, as previously mentioned, strolled around the market. I'm looking forward to a few hours spent lying around and doing very, very little. I picked up a copy of Half of a Yellow Sun (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie) from a free book exchange outside a house near the river, and I imagine it will feature heavily in this afternoon's plans. Next week is the start of the busiest few months of the year for me at work, and I'm hoping this weekend was enough of a reset in terms of my energy levels to leave me equal to the task.
beatrice_otter: (Falcon)
([personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake Sep. 27th, 2025 10:33 pm)
Fandom: Hawkeye, MCU
Pairings/Characters: Clint Barton, Kate Bishop, Bucky Barnes
Rating: teen
Length: 5k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] aimmyarrowshigh 
Theme: food, team,

Summary:

“I’m not saying you need to decide right now. Or any time soon. But someday, you might want to walk away. And you’re luckier than most of the… superheroes… that I’ve ever known because you know what normal looks like. You know how to be normal. You can go back to normal if it’s what you want. And I know it’s not what you want right now, and I respect that, but I’m glad that it’s an option.”

Or, Clint and Kate challenge each other to prove they're the better New Yorker because they know the best food spots. Truths about superhero life and life in general come out along the way as they eat through the five boroughs.

Reccer's Notes: I love the humor and the support, and the way Clint mentors Kate.

Fanwork Links: Slice of Life
beatrice_otter: Batman Begins--Batman flying with bats (Batman Flying)
([personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake Sep. 27th, 2025 10:26 pm)
Fandom: Batman
Pairings/Characters: Jason Todd, Alfred Pennyworth
Rating: Gen
Length: 12k
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] Cerusee 
Theme: food, trauma, family, angst,

Summary:

Alfred angles himself so he can stir the diced pancetta, sizzling away in the pan, and watch Jason at the same time. “You’ve never shared the particulars of your…missing years.”

"Yeah.” The rhythmic thunk thunk of the knife against the wood falters. “The missing years."

"I wish you would.”



Or, the one where Alfred drags the tale of Jason’s death and resurrection out of him piece by horrifying piece.

Reccer's Notes: There are a lot of stories about Jason reconciling with his family and them learning all the things that happened to him from his death and resurrection onwards. This has a lovely focus on Alfred, and the trauma that Jason suffered, and their relationship

Fanwork Links: Scheherazade
beatrice_otter: DS9 wormhole (DS9)
([personal profile] beatrice_otter posting in [community profile] fancake Sep. 27th, 2025 10:15 pm)
Fandom: Deep Space Nine
Pairings/Characters: Kira Nerys
Rating: Gen
Length: 871 words
Creator Links: [archiveofourown.org profile] AuroraNova 
Theme: food and cooking, worldbuilding, trauma & recovery, old fandoms, gen, female characters, backstory

Summary: Starfleet personnel mistake minor inconveniences for real suffering. Kira knows the difference all too well.

Reccer's Notes: This is short, but it packs a punch and explores the differences in perspective between Kira and the rest of the command staff in a very visceral way.

Fanwork Links: Hunger Pangs
Written for the prompts, 161 Taciturn and 164 Periphery, at [community profile] vocab_drabbles 
Title: A Nightingale Sang on Whickber Street
Fandom: Doctor Who/Good Omens
Author: Cat Moon
Rating: PG
Words: 999
Characters: Crowley, Martha Jones
Summary: Martha Jones walks into a bar and meets… Anthony Crowley. There might have been magic in the air.
Notes: I never participated in the 'Into a Bar' challenge, but I always wanted to write one. I've also had a yen to write me some Marth Jones. Mission accomplished.

A Nightingale Sang on Whickber Street... )
torachan: charlotte from bad machinery saying "oh the mysteries of the moth farm" (oh the mysteries of the moth farm)
([personal profile] torachan Sep. 27th, 2025 09:07 pm)
1. It was nice and overcast again today. Still very muggy, though. (It even rained a little overnight again.)

2. I beat Donkey Kong Bananza tonight. It's definitely a fun game. Looks like there's a ton of post-game stuff to do, and then there's a (paid, boo) DLC as well. I also want to play Final Fantasy Tactics, which is out at the end of the month, but I'll probably hold off on that and keep playing Donkey Kong for a bit first.

3. The lady at the farmers market had passionfruit bars again. They were soooooo good last week, I was really hoping she'd make them again. And the almond stand was back, so I was able to get my orange almond butter.

4. Jasper's posing for his mall photo.

sonia: Quilted wall-hanging (Default)
([personal profile] sonia Sep. 27th, 2025 08:13 pm)
This morning I went to the farmers market, and stopped at the hardware store on the way to pick up earthquake straps for my two 6' tall bookshelves. I swear I was thinking about it before the recent 4.3 earthquake just a couple miles up the road, but now everyone is after getting shaken awake at 3am. Fortunately there were still strap kits available.

I had cleared off the downstairs bookshelf and was working on marking where to drill, when CVS called. Their system let me schedule my Covid vaccine across their lunch break, so they were calling to say I could come in now, or an extra half hour later than I expected. I put down my tools and walked right over. Still on Team Moderna. They didn't ask me any extra questions or hassle me at all, and didn't ask for payment. Hopefully United Healthcare will cough up the payment for it.

Came home, struggled with drilling the holes and getting the long screws to go all the way in. I'm not sure they're anchored as firmly as they should be, but hopefully it's better than nothing.

My stud finder was giving me mixed signals, so I took it apart to check the battery, and then couldn't figure out where an extra piece went. Finally looked it up on youtube, found exactly the video I needed, with a lot of comments from people who had been exactly in my situation. Whew. Anyway, that's why I'm not sure if I picked the best places for the screws.

I put the shoe bins, bags, and cookbooks back on the bookshelf, and took a break by sitting on the front step in the sun and caught up with my accounting.

Then I tackled the bigger bookshelf upstairs. Found a few boxes to put books in, filled them, and made piles from even more books. Wrestled with locating studs again, and got the big screws most of the way into the wall. Sadly scratched the heck out of the wood floor moving the bookshelf on my own. :-( I wanted to find a handyperson to do it for me but just haven't found one. Oh well, now I get to go back to the hardware store and see if there's anything I can do to smooth over the scratch.

I put most of the books back. My arm is starting to feel sore from the vaccine, so I'll deal with the rest tomorrow. But it feels good to have the earthquake strapping done, even if not perfectly. And it feels good to have gotten my Covid vaccine too, although physically it won't feel great for a day or two.
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