Disco queens d'un soir : Jeanne Brakmar and Harriette des Doigts !!
I mean, it would have been a shame to do nothing with the blond wig
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Translation and explanation for the names and process below vvv
Why Jeanne Brakmar : 'Jeanne' is the feminine of Jean, and 'Brakmar' is a silly vulgar word that means "erect dick" in french slang (it sounds pretty close to Vicquemare) (and the phrase "fuck me, Jeanne brakmar" said in an heavy french accent is just too funny)
Why Harriette des doigts : It was @quijicroix 's idea ! It translates to "Harriette fingers/fingering" kgkgkgn 'du bois' and 'des doigts' are prononced nearly the same (yes the 'gts' is silent, because french is a language of clowns)
(I had an alternative name that I thought was very funny, but incomprehensible to anyone who's not french : "Comment Dom Costeau" kfknglfn is it a drag name ? Not really. But I hope the french speackers reading this will appreciate this tastefull word plays)
I think having both drag names be a dirty derivative of their name reinforce the cheap drag/first time doing drag feel of the drawing :)
It's been too long since I've drawn Disco Elysium fanart :) I really should do it more often
PS : Deso les francophones pour l'utilisation du mot brakmar tel un vieux gars de 50 ans au pmu lfkckgkglcl j'ai jamais dit j'etais pas beauf
since tumblr is going to start scraping blogs to train ai be sure to glaze and nightshade your art!! Not only will both of these programs protect your art from being copied but nightshade also poisons any ai that tries to steal it
here is some more info on these tools and where you can download them:
Once in a blue moon, I apparently have to write pure angst.
For those not familiar with archives lore, Wallace is from Ace's tome "Go for Broke".
Rated T | â Major character death â | 3.7k words | ao3 link
Itâs a cold spring day.
The sky is gray and the ground is damp, covered in leaves that have rotted from orange to brown over the winter. A few ravens perched in a nearby tree and a car horn sounding somewhere far away are the only signs of life.
The casket next to the empty grave only radiates death.
Wallace swallows thickly and straightens the shirt he didnât have time to iron this morning. The graveyard is windy and heâs already freezing, but if thereâs anything he owes the bastard itâs to be there for him this one last time.
Like he wasnât on the night he died.
Cold stings in Wallaceâs suddenly wet eyes and he blinks the feeling away. He looks at the priest to try to figure out what theyâre waiting for, but she just stands there and silently watches the only guest apart from Wallace who bothered to show up.
Wallace has never seen him before today. Heâs tall and blond and dressed in a full black tux, the color so dark it makes his already pale skin appear a sickly white. A black dress shirt with a black tux is probably against some kind of dress code but apparently this guy really wants to pretend to be mourning.
Wallace doesnât even own a tux. Heâs wearing a simple green jacket and patterned yellow shirt with denim blue jeans.
Because Ace loved color. Red was his favorite color but Wallace couldnât do red, not after the gunshots and sirens and running up to the motel room only to see the slumped body and splatters along the wall and red, red, redâ
Wallace clenches his trembling fists until his nails dig into his palms. He fucking told Ace that those people were bad business but Ace didnât care, laughing it off with a flippant, âIâve cheated death more times than you can count, buddy. Have you forgotten how lucky I am?â
Now Wallace wonât even get the chance to say, âI told you soâ. He doesnât understand why Ace was so reckless, how heâd somehow gotten the idea that he was immortal.
Wallace relaxes his fists and looks back at the other man. Itâs just the two of them: Wallace tried to get a hold of Aceâs remaining relatives in Argentina but couldn't find any. He always suspected that neither Ace nor Visconti were his real names, but thatâs what Wallace knew him as and he refused to dig further. Ace would have told him if he wanted him to know.
But fake names or not, their friendship was real. Wallace didnât always think so, but then Ace showed up one day from god-knows-where, after seven years of complete radio silence, laughing and slapping Wallaceâs back and asking, âMiss me?â with that stupid, cocky smirk of his.
Wallaceâs chest felt full then, like something he didnât even know was missing was slotting back into place. He didnât care that the bastard disappeared without a word or that he took even dumber and more careless risks than before. He was just glad to have him back.
Ace claimed heâd been in Europe working a con all those years. He was just as shady as usual, not saying much because Wallace didnât ask. But based on the spring in his step and the grin he got whenever his phone buzzed, Wallace knew heâd found something more than just a quick buck in Europe. That chick had to be real special for Ace to stick around that long and even attempt long-distance after he returned to the States.
Or thatâs what Wallace thought, but there's no mystery lady standing by his grave now. She clearly didnât give a shit about Ace: she was probably the one who put those reckless thoughts in his head in the first place, demanding he earn more money to fund a life of luxury for her. Wallace doesn't know anything about her but he still hates her.
He looks at the blond again. Heâs standing ramrod straight with his chin up like rich folks so often do. He has to be a lawyer or something, because Wallace was told there was someone to arrange the funeral and take care of Aceâs assets. Or the lack thereof.
The lawyerâs face is stone cold and without any emotion. Another asshole whoâs probably happy Ace died just so he could get money out of it; Wallace knows the sort. At least this one had the decency to show up to the funeral.
âWhatâre we waitinâ for?â Wallace asks.
âThe others,â the man says in an accent Wallace canât place. It catches him off guard: not your typical west coast lawyer, then.
âThereâs no one else cominâ,â Wallace says through gritted teeth, because he doesnât want to spell out that Ace didnât have friends.
The man finally turns to face him for the first time since they got here. His expression is just as neutral as before, but his eyes areâŠwrong, somehow. His gaze flirts all over the place and he almost looks lost, completely at odds with the rest of his carefully presented persona. Like a crack in the facade.
âJust a few more minutes,â the man says.
âAlright,â Wallace agrees.
The stranger turns back to stare unblinking at the casket and, not having anything else to do, Wallace keeps looking at him to try to figure him out. The tux is tailored to a T and his watch looks expensive, making Wallaceâs mind immediately jump to how much he could pawn it for. Bad habit.
Wallace frowns as he notices the manâs hands are scarred and blemished. He looks so perfectly put-together otherwise but his hands are in piss-poor shape, with bitten nails and picked cuticles and scabs that have barely healed. Wallace spots gloves peeking out from his pocket and realizes he probably usually covers them. But not for this, for some reason.
The guy must be cold in nothing but the tux, but he still insists on waiting. For what?
Wallace opens his mouth to ask again, when he hears it.
Car doors slamming and the gradually growing sound of voices and footsteps on gravel. And not just those of one or two people.
Wallace turns to look. Through the nearest cemetery gates, what has to be a group of nearly thirty people are making their way over. Young and old, men and women and boys and girls, chatting, laughing and some already wiping away tears. Theyâre dressed in both formal and casual clothes mostly in black, but also in earth tones and pastels and neons. Most of them are carrying flowersâmore flowers than Wallace has ever seen at once.
Wallace blinks. Are they here for Ace? All of them?
A few of them push their way to the front of the group. A black woman in an evening gown and a blond girl in jeans and a sweater hurry past Wallace and to the other man.
The woman puts her hand on his shoulder. âFelix,â she says, voice gentler than her fancy exterior would suggest.
The girl comes to stand in front of the manâFelixâand looks up at him. âAre you okay?â
Wallace expects him to nod or at most mumble an unenthusiastic, âIâm fine.â Instead, the rich, obnoxious dick who Wallace hated nearly on sight simplyâŠbreaks.
Wallace watches as his face twists in agony and he hunches in on himself, his body wracked with ugly sobs that sound so unfitting for a man of his caliber. The women pull him tight and he clings to them desperately. It doesnât even seem like heâs faking the tears. Maybe his arrogance was just an act.
The girl is crying now too, her hands trembling where sheâs holding onto him. Her eyeliner is already running down her cheeks and ruining her makeup. The other woman doesnât cry, but she squeezes the manâs shoulder and murmurs quiet reassurance.
More of the group hurry over to flock around the grieving trio, all worried faces and silent tears and, âIâm sorry, Iâm so sorry,â while the blond guy just keeps crying. Wallace can barely see him through the crowd; itâs like theyâre shielding him from the world and Wallaceâs prying eyes alike. Wallace doesnât think a man like him needs protecting, but he still looks away out of politeness.
The rest of the group gather around the casket. They murmur and whisper amongst each other, some offering comforting words and touches to the ones who start sniffling.
Who the hell are these people, appearing out of nowhere to cry by Aceâs grave?
âHey, you must be Wallace,â comes a voice from behind him.
Wallace turns to find a nerdy white guy standing in front of him. He looks young and has old-fashioned glasses and an ill-fitting suit, but he stands straight and looks Wallace right in the eye, with an air of quiet confidence that catches Wallace off guard.
âY-yeah,â Wallace stutters. Clearly, he could use some of that same confidence.
The man gives a little smile and holds out his hand. âDwight Fairfield. Itâs good to finally meet you.â
Wallace accepts the handshake and asks, âYouâve heard about me?â
Dwight huffs, like something is funny. âMore than you can imagine.â
â
With all of them there, the priest starts the ceremony. Itâs short and simple and Wallace is thankful, because the only deity Ace ever believed in was lady Fortuna.
Dwight gives a eulogy. Wallace doesnât understand most of it and by the looks of it neither does the priest, but he doesnât need to know what trials mean or why some campfire is important to get the gist of it. This is the seven years of Aceâs life Wallace knows nothing about: these are the people he met and the life he led. So many people from all over the worldâFrance, China, Brazil, Japanâand they all came here for Ace.
Wallace is glad Felix made him wait for them.
A black girl in a floral dress arranges the flowers on the casket. Thereâs so many different kinds and she quietly explains what they all mean, and Wallace chokes on a sob when she tells Aceâs casket, âAnd Snowdrops for good luck, because I want you to have that even when yours ran out.â
A redhead with glasses places incense by the gravestone. Wallace only then notices it says Ace Visconti, and he doesnât know what strings someone had to pull to engrave it with Aceâs chosen name and not his legal one, but heâs grateful for it.
The incense smells like warmth and fire, comforting and so different from the cold and wet around them.
Felix wordlessly slides down to his knees beside the casket and nobody seems surprised by this other than Wallace. The expensive tux will probably be ruined by mud but Felix doesnât appear to care: like heâs happy to lower himself to Aceâs level even if it means everyone else is now looking down on them. He places his handâscars and calluses and allâon the smooth wooden surface of the casket and sits there for several minutes, murmuring words in a language Wallace doesnât understand.
When Felix rises, Dwight asks Wallace if he wants to say something. Wallace shakes his head: heâs not good at speeches and he didnât bring anything fancy to leave on Aceâs grave.Â
The alligator tooth he won all those years ago presses into his chest under his shirt, but Ace would be pissed if he left it on the grave. Heâd say something like, âIâm already dead, what the hell do you think Iâm gonna do with a gator tooth necklace? Win a ghost beauty pageant?â
Or maybe Wallace just wants something of Aceâs to hold onto.
At the priestâs encouragement, some of the men in the group help lower the casket into the grave. Wallace assumed theyâd have to let the church staff do it since it was just him and Felix, but now thereâs also a big bearded man and a guy with face tattoos and a loud Brit and a quiet Hispanic man who help them put Ace into the ground.
A blonde woman plays guitar and sings. The song is melancholy and her voice sounds familiar, accompanied by sniffles from several people in the group. The priest gives a few parting words after to close the ceremony.
And then they shovel.
Silence hangs heavy in the air. Just as Wallace hopes this will be quick so he can go drown his sorrows in booze, the Brit points his shovel down at the casket and says, âJust layinâ there while we do all the work, eh? Lazy wanker.â
Several people laugh, and then others join in to tell stories and share memories of Ace and Wallace does too, even if he still doesnât know what a trial is. He tells them about his and Aceâs big win in Seattle and one of the girls, the redhead with braids, snorts and asks, âWas that the time Ace stole a uniform and pretended to be a dealer so you guys could scam the casino?â
Wallace stutters and they all look at him expectantly. Some of the kids are grinning and even Felix is smiling, though his eyes are still red from crying.
Wallace finds himself chuckling and giving them the unfiltered version of the story, now knowing they can handle the not-so-legal parts of it. His audience listens raptly and some even chime in with details Wallace didnât know about that dayâor just typical exaggerations Ace would have added to the story. He doesnât bother correcting them.
The priest shortly leavesâprobably not thrilled about them bonding over gambling and stealingâbut the whole group stays to wait for them to finish shoveling.Â
Even after theyâre done, nobody makes a move to leave; on the contrary, they all settle into a big circle on the ground, carelessly dirtying their nice dresses and suits. Felix takes a seat next to the grave and the black woman sits down on his other side, with the rest already having fallen into place like itâs a practiced effort. Like everyone has their own place.
Wallace hesitates. He thought they were done here, but the others urge him to join them, pointing at the other side of the filled grave. Wallace does as told and realizes the grave acts like an empty spot, like Ace is still part of the group.
Before Wallace can get too sentimental, a man with a prosthetic arm thumps a big cooler in the middle of the circle and beers and sodas begin exchanging hands. An Indian woman starts dealing playing cards and several bets are made among the group before the game even starts. The singer whips out her guitar again and starts strumming an upbeat melody.
âIs this allowed?â Wallace asks even as his chest warms. âItâs a graveyard. Isnât this against the rules or somethinâ?âÂ
An older black man shrugs. âLoitering isnât grounds for arrest and I think Felix is more than capable of paying a fine if someone calls the police.â
Wallace only then notices a badge peeking out from his shirt pocket. Heâs a cop: Ace somehow befriended a cop, and now heâs here, honoring Aceâs memory with an illegal party like the rest of them.
âHere,â Dwight says, handing Wallace a beer.
Wallace doesnât ask if they should be drinking and celebrating at a time like this. He just uncaps his beer and raises it along with the others once they toast and the Brit booms, âTo Ace!â
Because a party is exactly what Ace would have wanted.
â
They stay there for hours; laughing, playing, drinking and telling stories. Wallace actually makes an effort to get to know this strange group, though he still doesnât catch all of their names.
Once the sun starts setting, the Korean woman complains about the cold even though sheâs wearing a fur jacket. Jane fishes out a pair of keys from her pantsuit and says they have more blankets and snacks in the car, prompting the Brazilian siblings to jump up and volunteer to retrieve them.
On the other side of the circle, the boy with dark bags under his eyes has nodded off against Cherylâs shoulder. Meg and Jake argue over whether to start a fire now that itâs getting dark, with Meg saying itâs not the same without a real campfire and Jake claiming theyâll end up burning down the whole graveyard. Adam manages to resolve the argument by retrieving a large lantern from the car, lighting up the area with a warm yellow.
Despite everyoneâs best efforts to celebrate life and not mourn death, Wallace feels the heavy shroud of grief hanging over all of them. Thereâs a moment of hesitation whenever a card game ends and someone has to deal the players in again, strange gaps in conversation like they all expect Ace to fill the silence, and bright eyes glazing over in sadness whenever someone looks at his grave.
But thereâs also joy and camaraderie. The wind is cold and the ground theyâre sitting on is dull and brown, but Wallace can finally see a few flower buds sprouting through the rotten leaves. The group has lost one of their own but they choose to remember the good and not the bad; itâs probably a kindness Ace doesnât deserve, but Wallaceâs throat still feels tight with emotion from the respect being shown.
When the next card game ends, the Chinese girl starts cursing vividly, glaring at the grave and accusing Ace of cheating. Wallace laughs, because if Ace could, he would. Even from beyond the grave.
Some of the guys gather around newly appeared bottles of vodka for a drinking contest and the Japanese woman promptly gets up to join them. Her name must be Yui, because thatâs what nearly everyone starts chanting.
Yui wins, drinking the much larger men under the table with what seems like barely any effort. Thereâs cheers and whoops from around the circle before the singerâKateâencourages everyone to sing a campfire song together.
Wallace doesnât know the song so he looks around, only to notice Felix quietly fiddling with something in his hands. Itâs a ring: a particularly worn and gray and ugly ring, probably made of simple steel and not even silver. Why would someone like him even have a cheap knock-off like that?
Felixâs bitten nails trail over the inside of the ring and catch on an engraving and Wallace nearly swallows his tongue. He realizes heâs seen that ring many times before: Ace throwing it in the air and catching it; Ace fiddling with it in his pocket when he was impatient; Ace wearing it on his ring finger whenever a con needed him to pretend to be married; Ace having it engraved with some corny Latin phrase because it was supposedly another of his good luck charms.
When Ace returned from Europe, he claimed to have lost the ring, and Wallace should have smelled his bullshit right then and there. Ace wasnât sentimental about a lot of things but his lucky charms were always the exception. Wallace had helped Ace throw a motel room upside down in search of a rabbitâs foot, listened to yearsâ worth of complaints after he won the gator tooth from him in a bet, and painstakingly superglued an old poker chip back together after it got run over by a car and Ace just sat on the sidewalk cradling the broken pieces like he was holding an injured animal.
Wallace should have known better than to think Ace would have just lost the ring.
Felix abruptly stills and Wallace realizes heâs been caught staring. Their eyes meet and Felix curls his hand around the ring, holding it tightly against his chest.
A lot of things suddenly make sense and Wallace feels stupid for not realizing it before. Felix isnât even wearing the ring, but he doesn't have to: marriage isnât meant for people like Ace and Wallace, and just Felix having something so important of Aceâs and being this protective of it says more than enough.
Wallace considers pulling out the alligator tooth to rest over his shirt instead of hiding it underneath, but he doesnât want to give off the wrong impression. Ace was like a brother to him and heâs not sure what exactly he was to Felixâfriend, lover, partner, kindred spirit?âbut the specifics probably donât even matter. Whatever they were, Ace was happy with Felix.
Wallace settles on a meaningful nod to Felix, giving his approval even if it wasnât asked for. He then quickly turns back to observe the groupâs singing, but canât help smiling to himself: looks like Aceâs special European someone made it here after all.
âIâm gonna do a handstand!â someone drunkenly announces as soon as the singing stops.
âYou only have one hand, jackass!â Nea pipes up.
âDoes anyone want to dance?â one of the siblings asks, swaying a little on her feet.
âWhat, on Aceâs grave?â Zarina asks, arching an eyebrow. âEven Iâm not that glad to be rid of him.â
Laughter erupts from the group once again. A few people roll their eyes at the alcohol-fueled antics but nobody protests or shushes the progressively louder voices; not even when someone suggests a handstand contest that will most likely end in a visit to the ER.
Wallace braves another glance at Felix but heâs just smiling again. Most people probably wouldnât welcome this kind of behavior at the funeral of someone they loved, but Felix knew Aceâall of these people did, maybe even better than Wallace. And they stuck by Aceâs side for seven years and made this horrible day into a celebration he would be proud of.
Seven years. Thatâs all the time it took for Ace to somehow become a man Wallace barely recognizes anymore. He did what Wallace never thought either of them capable of, what heâd have bet his entire life savings on never happening.
Ace found a family.
Wallace bows his head and chuckles, addressing the empty space on his right. âTwenty-five years of friendship and you still keep surprisinâ me.â
HAPPY (kinda late) HOLIDAYS!! đđ May I offer a couple of old gays getting cozy and drinking hot chocolate đđ
I wanted to finish this earlier but I've had long hours at work (cuz christmas rush oof) so I didn't have the energy đ but at least I finished before new year's so I call that a success lol
[Pls click for better quality and a close up and a version without text is under the cut!]
Happy holidays riconti fandom! Please accept this gift of festive fluff đ„°
Rated G | 3.2k words | ao3 link
Felix still feels strange being back in his hometown.Â
The Coburg market square is bustling with life at the annual Christmas market. Felix was never an avid visitor before, but this time the nostalgia is kicking in full force: the smell of street food and mulled wine, the glow of string lights and the big Christmas tree, and even the obnoxious holiday jingles make his chest ache with familiarity. Itâs almost like he never left Coburg in the first place.
Except for the fact that one Ace Visconti is here with him.
Ace has a mug of GlĂŒhwein in his hands and is blowing on the hot beverage, his eyes eagerly drinking in the busy market. Itâs a couple degrees below zero and a gentle snow is falling, but despite Felixâs best efforts to the contrary Ace is thoroughly underdressed for the weather. He has neither gloves nor anything to cover his head, and his windbreaker jacket and pants might protect him from the nonexistent wind but not the late-December temperature.
But even if Ace must be freezing, he hasnât complained once.
âŠUnlike Felix, who complained first about the long line to the sausage kiosk, then about the awful apple punch they made the mistake of trying, and then about a family of stupid tourists blocking the street. But thatâs neither here nor there.
Aceâs nose and ears are already red and Felix should probably be annoyed at him for not dressing properly, but instead he finds it oddly endearing. He doesnât know how long it will take Ace to get used to German winters after decades of sun on the west coast of the USA, but today is clearly not that day.
A group of teenagers pass them on the street and briefly pause to stare at Aceâwhoâs currently browsing a selection of wooden craftsâand a few of them giggle and continue on their way. Felix really canât blame them: the bright, clashing colors of Aceâs outfit stick out like a sore thumb in the sea of muted winterwear in grayscale and neutral colors. Looking at the neon pink and green for too long would probably give Felix a migraine; but then again, he only has his past self to blame for deciding to flirt with a man who combined a leopard print shirt with purple sequin pants.
Felix smiles to himself. If awful fashion sense was a dealbreaker for him, their relationship would probably have lasted less than twenty-four hours total.
âWhatâre you grinning at?â Ace asks, having caught him staring.
âYou,â Felix says bluntly. âAnd your outfit that is horrendously unfit for this weather.â
Ace scoffs. âItâs not that cold.â
Felix simply smiles. âCome on,â he urges, âWe should try the crepes next.â
Ace obediently falls into step beside him. Felixâs hand twitches in a familiar urge to touchâborn out of countless times of patching up injuries, pulling each other up on their feet, and sitting by the fire leaning against Ace in quiet solidarityâbut there are too many people here and too many eyes on them.
Of course, it doesn't help that Ace is wearing the equivalent of a big flashing sign saying âLook at me!â
âYou know, I wasnât too sure about this market when you first told me about it,â Ace says while they walk. âBut itâs actually really cozy with the snow and lights and all. And any event that boils down to drinking wine and eating good food? Iâm sold.â
âIâm glad,â Felix says. âIt was never my favorite, but I wanted to show you. And even I missed it, afterâŠâ
He trails off, and something in Ace's eyes softens.Â
"I love it. And I'm glad you wanted to take me here," Ace says. And then, because getting him to be earnest for more than five seconds is like pulling teeth, he grins and adds, "Even if I'm pretty sure all these 'handmade Bavarian' souvenirs came straight out of a Bangladesh sweatshop."
Felix grimaces. He always hated how the tourist crap seemed to overtake more and more of the event each year.
That being said, he still stopped to buy a terribly overpriced and absolutely hideous knit hat while Ace was busy refilling their GlĂŒhwein mugs at another stall. It will make a nice Christmas present to match his questionable excuse for a winter jacket.
âSo how exactly are crepes German or festive?â Ace prods.
âBecause the French can't take credit for mixing milk with water and throwing it on a pan,â Felix huffs. âIt's bad enough they got to name them. Pretentious little shits.â
Ace smirks. âIâm telling Ălodie you said that.â
âTrust me, she has much worse opinions about Germans.â
âAh, sweet neighborly rivalry,â Ace sighs. âI can't wait to meet the Lyras again so they can tryâand failâto argue that Brazil is better than Argentina.â
He looks at Felix expectantly, clearly waiting for him to agree.
âI wouldnât know,â Felix says. âIâve never been.â
âMaybe you should do something about that, then,â Ace says. His voice is playful and his smile casual, but heâs still looking at Felix a little too intently for it to be a joke.
âYou just have to tell me when and I'll be there,â Felix says and fully means it.
âYeah, right,â Ace snorts. âI bet Lauren would love for you to go touristing in the middle of a big project.â
âYouâre vastly overestimating my importance in the company,â Felix says. âLauren survived five years without me. I don't think a week will even make a dent in her schedule.â
Ace regards him silently: he knows that Felix took on much less responsibility upon returning to workââRichter & Golderâ was practically just âGolderâ these days, and Felix was grateful Lauren even wanted him back on the team at allâbut Felix suspects itâs another thing to see it in practice.
âYou'd really come to Argentina?â Ace finally asks.
âOf course,â Felix says. âBut only if you want me to.â
Ace beams up at him, then throws his head back and groans dramatically. âOh, god, my sisters will eat you alive. Please don't learn any Spanish before the trip. Or Italian. You know what, just wear noise canceling headphones whenever theyâre around. Actuallyââ
Felix watches Ace ramble with a smile. Heâs leaving for Buenos Aires in just a few days to spend the holidays with his sisters and their families, having reunited with them after their escape from the Entity. For as much as Ace sang the praises of Las Vegas and America for the last few years, he doesn't seem to care much about going back to the USA compared to Argentina and Germany.
ââthough, full disclosure, if you don't like Dulce de Leche I'm breaking up with you,â Ace says.
Felix chuckles. âI suspect I wonât, but Iâll be sure to lie for your benefit.â
âThatâs all I ask,â Ace says with a grin.
Theyâre finally coming up to the crepe kiosk and Ace turns to look at the menu. Itâs a little strange to imagine not being with him for Christmas, seeing as theyâveâadmittedly not by choiceâspent every holiday together for the last few years. Even if said holidays mostly consisted of Dwight in an elf costume distributing firecrackers and styptic agents around the campfire.
But Felix knows they both have more important places to be. Ace hasnât spent quality time with his family in decades, and Felix's number one priority for the foreseeable future will spending every moment he possibly can with his own new family:
His five-year-old daughter, Klara.
Felix's ex-girlfriend has invited him over for Christmas eve to have dinner and open presents together. It will most likely be indescribably awkwardâespecially with both his exâs parents and her new husband thereâbut theyâre all doing it for Klara, who seemed very excited about the idea.
Or possibly just about the extra presents.
Regardless, Felix immensely respects his ex for not only managing to build a stable home for their daughter when he disappeared, but for being honest with said daughter from the start. Even when she was furious with Felix for seemingly abandoning them, for five years she told Klara stories about her other father building houses and showed her pictures of him. And when Felix finally showed back up and tried to pick up the pieces of his broken life, he got to meet his daughter for the first time and she immediately recognized him.
Felix clears his throat before washing down the sudden lump in his throat with some GlĂŒhwein. Heâs not sure what he's done to deserve so many incredible people in his lifeâthe survivors, Lauren, his ex, Klara, Aceâbut heâs determined to be a man they can all be proud of.
âChe.â Ace nudges Felix's side, pulling him out of his thoughts.
âHm?â
âIs the crepe guy okay?â Ace whispers, leaning closer to Felix while staring at the shopkeeper frying a batch of crepes. âHe just chucked three whole chocolate bars on a crepe and wrapped it up like it was normal.â
Felix snorts, his somber mood instantly elevated. âIt's a Kinder bar too. That has to be some kind of crime against gastronomy.â
âI know.â Ace only pauses for a beat before asking, âShould we get one of those?â
Felix doesnât even hesitate. âOf course.â
Ace shoots him a lopsided smirk. âYou really do have a soft spot for tacky things,â he says, then turns to place their order.
Felix bites his lip to suppress a thoroughly dorky smile. Just five years ago, he would have scoffed at the mere sight of childrenâs street food and retro windbreakers, all to preserve the image of a man nobody even liked. And even if the motto of âbe yourselfâ first seemed like an impossible task after half a lifetime of hiding everything genuine about himself, itâs been slowly but surely resurfacingâthrough trials, friendships, and having someone by his side who never judges.
Felix doesn't have to filter himself with Ace. Even his worst foot-in-mouth moments only earn teasing remarks in response and more often than not end in both of them laughing. Ace doesnât take offense to Felix's bluntness and he more than pulls his weight in the playful bickering that has become one of Felix's favorite pastimes.
And Felix knows the feeling goes both ways: all their years together have chipped away at Aceâs compulsive lying just like it has for Felix's play-act. Ace has never had to avoid talking about his past of crimes and addiction and betraying people for money, because Felix doesn't judge him by who he was before, but rather by who he is today.
Just a few days ago, a seemingly harmless question about whether Felix could chip in for Aceâs plane tickets derailed into a serious conversation, with Ace sitting Felix down and making him swear to never give him a significant sum of money or gift him anything valuable that could be returned. There was always a part of Ace that would crave the thrill of gambling and the risk of relapsing increased significantly if he had easy money lying aroundâno matter if he knew said money was meant for rent, bills, or a plane ticket.
Felix was silent for a long time after that revelation. Ace tried to joke it off and desperately switch the subject, but after Felix quietly stood and pulled him into his arms, Ace just slumped against him and exhaled a long and shaky breath. Neither of them had to use words, because the meaning was clear:
Thank you for trusting me. Thank you for understanding me. Thank you for being here.
âBiological weapon acquired!â Ace strolls up to Felix with a grin, holding a cardboard plate with a crepe and two forks sticking out of it.
Felix probably shouldn't be making heart eyes at a man in full neon carrying a glorified candy pancake, but he does.Â
Ace steers them to an unoccupied table and hands Felix his fork. They proceed to eat a few bites in expectant silence.
âItâs good,â Ace says, clearly surprised. âWhy is it good!?â
âItâs way too sweet,â Felix complains. He still keeps eating the crepe.
âLetâs just agree that after three mugs of wine weâre too drunk to know better,â Ace says.
âSpeak for yourself, you lightweight.â
âWell excuse me for not being six-foot-two and born with German beer in my veins!â
Felix snorts and proceeds to almost choke on his bite, then bows his head to wheeze quietly instead.
âThatâs it, no more Kinder for you,â Ace says, holding the plate protectively against himself. âI should have known that shit is like crack to Germans. No wonder itâs banned in the States.â
Felix wheezes harder and has to lean against the table for support, his shoulders shaking with the force of his laughter. He dimly registers someone muttering, âWhat the fuck is wrong with that guy?â in German, but he really canât bring himself to care.
When Felix has somewhat collected himself and looks up, Ace is smiling smugly at him around a forkful of crepe.
âDrink?â Ace asks, pushing his mug closer to Felixâs empty one over the table.
Felix nods and accepts the item, and in quiet understanding they turn to stand side by side and look over the market while Ace polishes off the crepe and Felix finishes his drink.
He enjoys these moments of silence between them just as much as the usual back-and-forth or long conversations at the campfire. Felix knows that they still have a lot to figure out when it comes to adjusting back to a normal life, with the logistics and long distance and Felix's daughter. But instead of the existential dread thatâs plagued Felix for most of his life, these days he only feels a deep calm when thinking about the future.
Things have been so much easier when thereâs a constant in his life, something thatâs not dependent on Felix's career or family name. And every time Felix wakes from a nightmare or starts second-guessing himself on whether all that horrible shit really happened, he just has to listen to Ace snoring next to him or touch one of the numerous lucky charms he insists on showering Felix with.
Ace is tangible proof that Felix went through hell and came out stronger for it. Heâs been Felix's anchor for years and even when heâs across the world, Felix still feels just as grounded as he does with Ace right by his side.
Ace glances at Felix and catches him lookingâFelix has been watching him for quite some time instead of observing the marketâand he quirks an eyebrow as he tosses the empty plate in a nearby bin.Â
âYouâre staring again,â Ace says. âAre you gonna keep nagging about my jacket?â
In response, Felix simply leans closer, then hesitates and searches Ace's eyes. Understanding dawns on Aceâs features before his mouth splits into a bright smile, and then heâs grabbing Felix by the lapels of his jacket and pulling him down for a kiss.
Aceâs nose is cold where it bumps into Felixâs cheek but his lips are warm, stained with chocolate and mulled wine and soft against Felixâs. Felix cups Aceâs head and sinks into the gentle press of their mouths, simply enjoying the closeness.
Felix doesn't care if people are watching. He doesnât care if someone sees him with a man or thinks theyâre being inappropriate. He doesnât care that they still have many challenges to face. For the first time ever, Felix knows exactly what he wants to do with his life and heâs going to do everything in his power to get it.
Starting with kissing the man he loves in the most crowded place in all of Coburg, apparently.
Ace is trembling when they pull apart. Felix could flatter himself by thinking his kissing prowess was enough to make him weak in the knees, but the truth is that the weather must finally be catching up to Ace.
And he still won't admit it, the stubborn idiot.
âYou know,â Felix starts, brushing his thumb over the stubble on Aceâs cheek. âThereâs a pub I like just down the street. Why donât we go and warm up for a little while?â
âOh, thank god,â Ace groans and thumps his forehead against Felixâs shoulder. âIâm fucking freezing and this supposedly famous wine really isnât all that great.â
âYou could have told me you were cold.â
Ace pulls back enough to give him a defiant stare. âAnd listen to your âFor the love of god, Ace, I told you five times to bring a scarfâ all the way home? Not a chance.â
âI would never,â Felix says. Ace huffs a disbelieving snort, and Felix canât suppress his smile as he continues, âBecause I told you at least ten times and also asked you to bring gloves, and a thicker jacket, andââ
âOkay, okay!â Ace exclaims. âChrist, the word Besserwisser was probably coined just for you, wasnât it?â
Felix chuckles and reaches into his pocket for the knit cap he bought earlier. He was planning to wrap it and gift it properly another day, but practicality usually trumps sentimentality where Felix is concerned.
âHere,â Felix says, holding out the item. âMerry Christmas.â
âItâs traditional Bangladeshi reindeer,â Felix deadpans.
âThank you,â Ace finally says slowly, then puts on the hat. âHow do I look?â
Felix tries not to laugh as he takes in the sight. The cap somehow looks even worse when itâs worn because of the pattern stretching and distorting. The price tag also still dangles loosely from the too-big pompom on top, and the muted orange and brown somehow makes the neon of Aceâs jacket pop out even more obnoxiously.
âFucking hideous,â Felix concludes.
Ace barks out a laugh and Felix chuckles too. Despite Felixâs harsh words, theyâre both leaning into each other, Aceâs arms wrapping around Felixâs waist and Felix gently tucking a few errant strands of gray hair into the cap.
âGood,â Ace says, then looks up to meet Felixâs eyes with an overly exaggerated pout. âNow hold me, Iâm cold.â
Felix smiles and slings an arm over Aceâs shoulders to pull him even closer. âCome on. It's not far.â
Ace lets himself be led to a quiet pub around the street corner, insisting on paying for their drinks while apologizing for not having anything to gift Felix in return. Felix maybe gets a little sappy and confesses that just having him here is the best gift of all, and in response Ace tugs him into a corner booth and kisses him longer and deeper than is probably appropriate.
And despite the cold and crowd and fashion hiccups along the way, this yearâs Christmas market will remain Felixâs favorite for a long, long time.
Or at least until next year when they no doubt visit it again.
Thanks for reading! đ
Aceâs outfit is from his leaked winter skin, because itâs tacky and I love it. (Minus the headpiece. What the fuck is that beard.)