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#like seriously plz give the character designer a pay raise
my-otp-list · 5 months
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Okay honest question: which devil should I sell my soul to to ensure that these two beautiful characters will have more screen time together in season 2?
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(and don’t get me started on how romantically charged this scene is)
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foxy-exy · 4 years
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23 + andriel 👀
Bloom (forget me not)
Prompt 23 from here: “No, we’re going to talk about this now.” (and tattoo artist/piercer Andrew AU also came from Syd!!) TW: lots of talk about scars i’ve been mia working on my very-close-to-my-heart and very-long-compared-to-what-i’ve-been-writing-lately aftg big bang fic (WATCH OUT FOR THAT PLZ) but syd hit me w/ tattoo artist/piercer andrew right when my need for just one (1) tattoo and many (MANY) more piercings was highest so here we are (also my aftg server was talking about flower tattoos on jean and i was like oh worm flower tattoos on aftg characters you say??? so they are also partially responsible) also i may have never actually gotten a tattoo before but this is definitely Not How It Works, unrealistic, unprofessional, and general bad clienting but shhh you can also find this fic on my ao3 here!
Andrew’s pencil scratching is the only sound in the parlor — he thinks maybe his phone died an hour ago and with it, his music playlist. He should probably get up and plug it back in.
The cat eyes glare at him from his sketchpad page, though, and he can’t leave the face half finished now. He swings his chair back around to look at the picture on the shop’s computer screen that he’s sketching. God, this cat is ugly. He wouldn’t want this cat as a sleeve, but what the paying client wants, the paying client gets.
He blocks out the nose and jaw, shakes out his aching hand, and glares back at the drawing as he leans back in the chair and shoves the pencil eraser into his mouth to chew on.
“Hey.”
Andrew sends his sketchpad flying and nearly tips his chair over to turn back around. Nobody ever shows up for random walk-ins this early, it’s why he’s usually the only one on the schedule. (They retain more clients when Andrew is not the one who talks to them. Because Andrew is, as Nicky puts it, an asshole.)
Neil Josten stands before him, dressed as plainly as ever in his standard gray sweatshirt and baggy jeans, looking bemused and out of place in the strange context of Andrew’s workplace. He is not a piercings-and-tattoos kind of person. He is a somewhat-friends-with-Kevin-purely-because-they-like-to-yell-about-sports-together-on-Andrew’s-couch kind of person.
“Thanks for not even setting off the door bells,” Andrew says coolly, around a mouthful of pencil eraser, and takes it from his mouth immediately after, because Neil is smiling a little, eyes on it.
“Sorry, I’m pretty quiet.”
“No, you aren’t,” Andrew says, and Neil’s lips twitch again.
He and Neil are distant acquaintances at best. Kevin shares Andrew and Nicky’s apartment for rent purposes as Aaron moved out months ago to live with his girlfriend, but Kevin and Andrew don’t share friend groups. Even so, it is impossible to ignore Neil Josten when he’s worked up and shouting about Kevin’s favorite teams being terrible.
“What are you here for?” Andrew clicks off the cat photo and pulls up their schedule — empty for several hours, until Kevin comes in for an appointment with somebody who wants some script work. He doesn’t know why Neil is here when Kevin isn’t working, they’re the ones who know each other.
“How much for a…a medusa?”
“Fifty.” Andrew eyes him. The uncertainty in his voice is clear, which is…interesting. “I didn’t think you were into piercings, or Kevin would have bullied you into at least three by now.”
Neil doesn’t answer, because his gaze is glued to Andrew’s arms — his shirt sleeves have ridden up to show the patchwork pieces winding their way up his wrists and forearms.
“And…” This comes out more rushed now, clearly the actual reason for the visit, “What about tattoos?”
Andrew pulls back down his sleeves. “Are you asking for pricing? I can’t give you an estimate without any kind of idea of what you’re looking for. Do you even know the style you want? Where you want it?”
Neil drags his eyes back up to meet Andrew’s. “You covered up Kevin’s old tattoos, didn’t you?”
Andrew folds his arms. Enunciates clearly because he’s never been one to beat around the bush. “Are you looking for a tattoo consultation or not?”
“Yes,” says Neil, and his mouth flattens, brows pinching.
“Glad to see you’re so very excited about it,” Andrew deadpans, opens up an appointment entry on the schedule and types in Neil Josten, tattoo consultation: Andrew Minyard. He snatches up his sketchpad and pencil from the ground and curls a finger at Neil to follow.
***
“You don’t have tattoos to cover up,” Andrew says, when Neil tentatively perches on the edge of the lounge seat in the private office. “What do you want?”
Neil tugs at the fraying cuff of his shirt and looks pained. “I just…I don’t know.”
“That really sucks, because you’re paying me to help you figure out specifics on what you want right now.”
“Can you cover up scars,” Neil mumbles, and Andrew freezes. And Neil must pick up on this, because immediately he says, “Never mind. This was a bad idea.”
Andrew catches Neil’s shirt hem before he can completely turn towards the door. “No, we’re going to talk about this now.”
“I changed my mind, it’s okay, don’t tell Kevin, I just thought maybe —”
“I won’t tell Kevin,” Andrew says.
Neil tugs at his hair.
“I can cover up scars,” Andrew says.
Neil looks back at him, and he is very pale.
And then, because Andrew is stupid, “I’ve covered up my own scars.”
Neil’s face does something very complicated, his hands shake a little, and slowly, carefully, Neil sits back down.
***
Neil doesn’t know what he wants, exactly, he says. He says he likes what he’s seen of Andrew’s work, which isn’t all that helpful.
“Abstract,” Andrew says, and Neil shrugs.
“Animals.” Shrug.
“Skulls,” Andrew says, with a hint of impatience.
“Anything,” Neil says.
“You’re my least favorite client.”
“Even that one with the lion back tattoo?” Neil asks, and he is smiling again. Teasing. Andrew knows that Neil was in the house when he was telling Kevin about that client and his ridiculous whining, but he hadn’t realized Neil had been listening.
“Yes, maybe you’ll overtake even him,” Andrew retorts, reaches for the binder sitting in the corner marked Andrew Minyard — full of his past work — and tosses it at Neil. “I can’t work with ‘anything.’ That’s how people get tattoos they regret.”
“I liked Kevin’s black rose,” Neil says, and flips through the book, lingering on a page with more floral designs. “But you do color, too?”
“That is a style I do, yes.” Andrew watches Neil’s fingers trace delicate petals and fights back a curious rush. “Scar tissue can be unpredictable when it comes to holding ink, and it can hurt. But I’ve had experience with it. Do you want something like that?”
“I like these,” Neil says quietly, and Andrew shoves his pencil eraser back into his mouth and turns resolutely back to his sketchpad so he doesn’t have to look at Neil looking at his work.
“Colored flowers,” he says, drumming fingernails against his paper. “Fine. What flowers do you like? Where would this be?”
“Forget-me-not? On my arm?” Again, Neil sounds uncertain, and Andrew turns a glare on him.
“If you want this, you want this. If you’re not sure, I’m not inking an inch of you.”
He decides he hates looking at Neil’s soft smile when he is on its receiving end. This is the first time it’s happened, and he thinks if it happens again, he should check into a hospital for heart palpitations.
“I want it. Here.” Neil rolls up a sleeve, and Andrew clamps his jaw shut as Neil taps a finger to his forearm, covered in circular red puckers of skin and the occasional, familiar raised line of white. Andrew forces himself to lean closer to examine the canvas with clinical detachment, and press his fingers to the skin, measuring.
“This big?”
“Yeah,” Neil says, and that’s that.
***
“Why the hell was Neil on your schedule?” Kevin asks very loudly from the front desk as Andrew lounges across the waiting room couch and doodles blue petals.
“Huh, Kevin, I don’t see how that’s really any of your business,” Andrew says, and scribbles out another draft.
“No, seriously. He’s never wanted anything before. Why didn’t he tell me?”
“Contrary to what your ego says, not everything is about you,” Andrew drawls.
“Neil,” Kevin barks, and Andrew looks up to find Kevin with his phone to his ear. “Why did you come to see Andrew?”
Neil must apparently say something similar to Andrew’s sentiments because Kevin rolls his eyes. “You should have told me that you wanted something. No, I — he didn’t say anything to me. Neil —!” The last part is said to an apparently dead line, because Kevin pulls the phone away with a huff. “I don’t understand why he came to you without saying anything, I’m his tattoo artist friend.”
“Too bad,” Andrew says, and pulls out his own phone when it buzzes.
Thanks, is the simple text from Neil Josten. For not telling him.
Andrew doesn’t reply, but he tucks his phone between his elbows and pretends to ignore the warmth blooming in his chest as he flips the page and starts to shade another forget-me-not.
***
Do you like this? Andrew asks, and attaches a picture of his latest draft.
Almost immediately, the text is marked as Seen, but Neil doesn’t respond for a solid few minutes.
Finally, Andrew locks his phone again, irritated, and shoves away his sketchpad, feeling too jittery to sleep like he should be doing at — he checks the clock — 2 AM.
His phone chimes, and Andrew looks down at It’s perfect and thinks that having such a giant crush on his apartment mate’s probably uninterested friend is maybe really, really bad.
***
“Hey, Andrew.”
Andrew looks up from the fridge. He has been studiously ignoring Neil’s presence on the couch while Kevin chatters to him about the latest hockey wins. But Kevin has disappeared, and Neil remains, and Neil is…looking at him.
“I like it a lot. Like, fuck, really a lot.”
Andrew glares and slams the fridge closed. Neil’s smile only grows wider as Andrew stalks over to the table to deposit whatever leftovers he grabbed (that he most definitely did not look at) onto it.
“So, when are you free to ink me?”
Andrew’s going to die, and Neil Josten saying when are you free to ink me is going to be the cause of death.
“Tomorrow. 10 AM,” he grits out.
“Okay,” Neil says.
***
“Andrew.”
“Shut up.”
“Andrew,” Neil says again, shakily.
“Don’t.”
“Thank you.” Neil stares at the forget-me-not cluster blooming across pinkened skin underneath the plastic wrap, lips parted. Andrew wants to kiss them.
“Oh,” says Neil when he looks up, and Andrew is still too close, and Andrew would usually probably pull back but instead, he dips closer. And Neil would usually probably avoid physical contact like he does with everyone but instead, Neil kisses him back.
“Oh,” Andrew agrees, and starts to turn away, but Neil shifts with him, eyes too intense, and a finger hovers at Andrew’s collar to tug very lightly.
“When would be too soon to ask when you’re free again?”
“Has the tattoo bug bitten you already?” Andrew scoffs, and Neil looks down at his forget-me-not and nods. “You’ll have to schedule an appointment like everybody else. You’re lucky my schedule hasn’t been as booked lately.”
“Okay,” says Neil, and then, “and what about asking when you’re free outside of work?”
Andrew stares at him. “For?”
“What about a repeat of this kind of thing?” Neil gestures between them. “Or…lunch, on me?”
“Lunch, on me,” says Andrew automatically. “You just gave me a lot of money.”
“Okay,” says Neil again, and laughs. “Kevin’s going to be so pissed that he missed all this happening.”
“I don’t see why I have to tell him who I’m kissing,” Andrew says.
“You’ve only done it once.”
Andrew raises an eyebrow and fixes that grievous mistake.
Neil’s answering grin is not soft, just impish, but it does things to Andrew’s heart all the same.
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