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txtniipped · 1 year
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your red rover series is like godtier
THANK YOU!!! i really really enjoy those two fics, they’re very specific to what i like, so i’m glad they appeal to other people too!!!
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txtniipped · 3 years
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here’s a list of wips im working on/have at least started outlines/some of the actual fic for:
- green oak/reader where reader is the johto player character n has a mild rivalry with green just because he’s an annoyance originally in getting the viridian badge. it turns into a begrudging mentorship to actual friends to lovers—the timeline would start with first meeting him on cinnabar n then progress into adulthood similar to my other green/reader fic. i love “growing as a person alongside someone else” okay
- several chili fics bc im wilding. these include:
childe sending mixed signals to zhongli by being very affectionate and then immediately backpedaling and giving an excuse for it that zhongli somehow always takes as real/lets it go. zhongli cant help but be disappointed that the affection is “customary” or whatever else childe excuses himself with.
night at the museum au where zhongli is working as a curator at that particular museum and theres an exhibit on the fatui harbingers from a few centuries ago. theres a portrait of them all in their own little sections along with replicas and some actual personal items they could scrounge up. the paintings come alive at night but the most they can do is move between paintings in the museum, like that section in madarame’s palace in p5. the childe portrait is much too interested in dedicating the night to listening to his favorite curator’s voice to go anywhere tho. basically the idea is portrait childe doesnt know a lot about himself other than pretty much what a wikipedia article would have, so zhongli is filling in knowledge for him about the real childe back when he was alive. basically portrait childe gets to fall in love with zhongli like the real childe did centuries ago. it gets established at some point that portrait childe knows zhongli is waiting for the reincarnation to come along n portrait childe is just the filler til then
based on the song dear McCracken by bug hunter. outside pov of zhongli and childe’s relationship through lumine reading the email zhongli is writing childe in the seat next to her while waiting for their plane to take off. she gets to experience all of zhongli’s rough draft as he writes it and sees all his feelings laid bare there on the screen before he backspaces them and rewrites something less intimate. by the time he’s done lumine is convinced zhongli is in love with this “tartaglia” even if the final version of the email never explicitly touches on that subject
- a whole series of fics where childe is meeting a bunch of the genshin cast because he’d have interesting relationships with a lot of them if he was allowed to know anyone other than the traveler, zhongli, and the fatui. this one is just an outline right now with lots of vagueness on some of the interactions, but the list includes venti, klee, albedo, bennett, hu tao, noelle, mona, and sucrose. i’d like to do beidou as well but it’s been a while since i touched that document. these fics would take place in the same timeline that ode to flower and cloud does
i’m also tossing around the idea of a fic exploring childe’s relationship with the abyss and how that’s messed with him but i have a lot of ideas for that and am not sure which pieces i should play with and which i should put away for now so we’ll see if i ever get around to that
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txtniipped · 3 years
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tomorrow was another fic catered to me. whoops
today i offer you a fanfic that caters to me and me alone. tomorrow? who knows
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txtniipped · 3 years
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come over, come over
genshin impact -- childe/zhongli
explicit (1404 words)
ao3 link
“Everything okay?” Childe asks, startling Zhongli out of her thoughts.
Lucky for her, her jump is contained, her attention only snapping to Childe. Qiqi continues to color where she sits at the low table there, undisturbed.
“Yes, it is,” Zhongli answers after a moment.
Childe nods at her response, gives her a smile, and then returns to his cooking. Zhongli’s gaze wanders over the young man wearing her cooking apron then, taking in the domestic nature of all this, and finally, she decides that whoever does marry Childe will be awfully lucky.
Or
Zhongli and Childe's budding relationship, roughly a year after they met.
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txtniipped · 3 years
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today i offer you a fanfic that caters to me and me alone. tomorrow? who knows
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txtniipped · 3 years
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red rover, red rover
genshin impact -- childe/zhongli, zhongli & qiqi, childe & qiqi
modern au / female zhongli / implied thoughts of infidelity (1856 words)
ao3 version
Zhongli hasn’t caught sight of their new neighbor yet. However, she can only imagine them as one of two people: a young lady with a busy schedule, who knows how to be brutally efficient in the mornings before Zhongli is even up, tending to her rose bushes’ every need and then disappearing to go to her day job, or an older gentleman with ample time on his hands, shelves lined with every horticulture book known to man, who just so happens to be excellent at avoiding Zhongli’s watchful eye.
Or
Zhongli is a housewife lacking the love she deserves. Though, between her darling daughter Qiqi and their new neighbor, she's appreciated for everything under the sun.
The apartment across the yard has been empty for a few months now. 
For Zhongli, the patio and soft grass between the buildings outweigh the stomping of neighbors upstairs. She’s seen the lackluster balcony gardens some of the other tenants maintain. It’s not due to a lack of trying, oh no--even the most dedicated of gardeners can only do so much with so little room. Her little Qiqi’s garden, however, flourishes under both the space and care they can offer it. Several of the other ground floor tenants, Zhongli knows, strive to have plants as well loved as theirs. 
When beautiful new rose bushes seem to appear across the yard, planted carefully around the little patio connected to the usually-empty apartment, Zhongli is surprised, to say the least.
She hasn’t caught sight of their new neighbor yet. However, she can only imagine them as one of two people: a young lady with a busy schedule, who knows how to be brutally efficient in the mornings before Zhongli is even up, tending to her rose bushes’ every need and then disappearing to go to her day job, or an older gentleman with ample time on his hands, shelves lined with every horticulture book known to man, who just so happens to be excellent at avoiding Zhongli’s watchful eye.
Her first guess seems to be the correct one, when several days later, the previously empty apartment’s slider opens, and out steps a young lady--a touch younger than Zhongli imagined--with a head of fiery, messy curls. To her surprise though, a young man follows her out, a handful of years older than the girl most likely, sporting similar hair and a proud smile as the young lady seemingly inspects the bushes.
Zhongli watches from her living room as the young lady stands and smooshes her (presumably) brother’s face, who laughs as he grabs her wrists and tugs them away. They chat there for a moment, and then the young man pulls a cutesy watering can out from just inside the slider door, steps around his sister, and begins watering the roses.
It’s late in the evening, and normally around this time, Zhongli is helping Qiqi bathe and get ready for bed. Tonight, however, Qiqi is staying the night with the other family with a child in this section of the complex--her first ever sleepover. Zhongli’s husband doesn’t return until nearly midnight on the weekends, so she’s left alone for the first time in their little apartment in many moons with just her teacup and her books.
With her reading light on next to her, Zhongli realizes she must have been obviously staring at them, if the brother turning and looking directly at her is any indication. The young man pulls on a smile though and offers Zhongli a wave. She waves back mildly, somewhat caught off guard, widening the young man’s smile. He turns back towards his sister then, who’s also looking in Zhongli’s direction, and escorts her inside, that cutesy watering can still gripped in his hand.
Zhongli hopes she’ll see him around more often now.
As it just so happens, she does.
The young man seems to work on the weekdays, while on the weekends he usually appears midday on his patio, athletic wear on as he leaves through his slider with nothing but his phone and a pair of earbuds. She’s purposefully looking out for him now, and when he returns home sweaty and panting, Zhongli turns her gaze elsewhere.
It’s early Thursday evening when she finally talks to him, only after nearly bolting out into the yard in panic after hearing Qiqi’s soft voice choke up and dissolve into sobs. Zhongli nearly rips the screen door off to get to her child when she sees the young man knelt in the grass in front of Qiqi, a first aid kit lying open next to them.
The young man’s voice is soft as he asks Qiqi about her day, doing what he can to distract her as he pulls thorns from her little hand. Qiqi, normally not one for conversation with anyone she doesn’t know, answers through her blubbering, doing her best to tell the young man the plot of a children's book her teacher read to them today.
Qiqi’s no longer crying by the time the young man is wrapping the last bandage around her finger. Zhongli can’t help but notice the colorful characters printed on them, some she vaguely recognizes from when Qiqi’s cartoons switch over to the older kid’s programming in the afternoon. Zhongli only has a moment to wonder if maybe this new neighbor has a kid of his own before the two have gotten up from the grass and walked their way over to her, still in the doorway of her apartment.
“Hi, Mama,” Qiqi greets quietly as she gently pulls her hand from their neighbor’s, stepping forward to instead get picked up by Zhongli.
“Hello, darling.” As soon as Qiqi is settled on her hip, Zhongli lifts a hand to brush some of Qiqi’s hair out of her face, speaking once more. “Are you alright?” A nod. Zhongli turns her attention to their neighbor from there. “What happened?” The smile the young man gives her is a bit on the guilty side, like he had personal responsibility for a child that isn’t even his. “She tried to pick one of my roses with her bare hands, ma’am,” he answers, voice boyish and, frankly, lovely. “I was just coming outside as she tried--I didn’t react in time. But, uh,” he pauses, one of his hands lifting to rub the back of his neck. “I keep a first aid kit right by the door, so she didn’t suffer for long.”
“Oh,” Zhongli replies, blinking at the man. “Thank you.”
“Of course!” He says with a bit of a laugh, though Zhongli can hear the slight nerve in his voice anyway. Surely she’s not intimidating in her cooking apron of all things.
“Well,” Zhongli starts, returning her gaze to her daughter. “What do we say, Qiqi?” Qiqi squirms under the gaze of her mother, her face flushing as she tucks herself up against Zhongli, mumbling her thanks to the air behind Zhongli instead of towards their neighbor. The young man laughs good-naturedly regardless, his stiff shoulders relaxing with Qiqi’s shyness.
“You’re welcome, Qiqi. Oh!” He perks up, quickly turning towards his own apartment. “One second!” The young man half-jogs over to his patio, stepping just into the threshold of his apartment and reaching towards the same spot Zhongli sees him grab his watering can from. Instead he pulls out a pair of pruning shears and a single glove, steps back out, and beelines to one of the rose bushes. Zhongli hears the snip of the shears after a second despite the young man putting himself between her and whatever he’s cutting, and when he turns around, he’s holding a beautiful rose by its long stem, his gloved hand pulling off the leaves towards the bottom.
“If you cut about an inch off the bottom of this every time you change the water, it should last a while.” He holds the rose out to Zhongli as he steps up to them, a small smile on his face. Zhongli can admire his features more readily like this, and takes delight in noticing the stroke of freckles across his nose and cheeks.
“Thank you.” She returns his smile as she takes it, which only serves to widen his own, a set of dimples revealing themselves to her. How darling.
The young man shrugs. “Consider it a gift for being understanding. I know my mom wouldn’t have been as calm as you if one of my siblings was under the care of someone she doesn’t know, no matter how brief.”
Zhongli laughs, much to the obvious delight of their neighbor. “Why don’t you tell me your name then? So you’re no longer a stranger.”
He laughs again, then smiles at them both, though his eyes return to Zhongli barely after a second of looking at Qiqi. “Ajax, but my friends call me Childe.”
“Childe, then.” Zhongli nods, then jostles Qiqi a little on her hip, pulling a little disgruntled noise from her daughter as she’s dislodged from her hiding place. “This is Qiqi, as you heard earlier. You may call me Zhongli.”
“Zhongli,” Childe tests, his deep blue eyes wandering over her face. Zhongli feels her cheeks flush ever so slightly. She sincerely hopes Childe doesn’t notice.
To help distract, Zhongli speaks. “Well, I suppose I should put this rose in some water...”
“Oh!” Childe blinks, then laughs, light and happy. She can guess the young man is laughing at himself. “Yeah, that would be good.” He steps back from their patio with a smile, passing his pruning shears from his ungloved hand to the gloved one, then waves to both Zhongli and Qiqi, a pleasant smile on his face. “When that one dies, I don’t mind replacing it. Just let me know.”
“I will,” Zhongli nearly whispers, watching as Childe drops the leaves he plucked into the dirt his roses rest in. He pulls that single glove off as he looks over his shoulder back towards Zhongli and Qiqi once more, giving them both another smile and a wave. Zhongli lifts some of her fingers from her rose to wave in return, watching as the young man smiles just a touch more, then steps into his apartment, returning his tools to their spots.
Zhongli hums as Childe comes back out once more to collect the first aid kit still in the grass, then she finally turns away, stepping back into her own apartment. She bends over to place Qiqi down, then stands back up and turns herself to close the slider. She spots Childe standing on his patio then, eyes clearly glued to her, and she pauses, her hand resting on the handle of the door. The young man seems to snap out of whatever trance he was in around then and hurriedly stumbles inside his own apartment, his slider nearly getting slammed in his rush.
Zhongli blinks at the commotion, then shuts her own slider in a much calmer fashion. “I suppose…” she starts as she watches Childe’s silhouette disappear from the little amount of the interior of his apartment she can see, then huffs in amusement. What a peculiar young man. She closes the blinds over the door, then makes her way through the living room, gently patting her daughter’s head. “I suppose we should start on dinner, lest we risk your father’s grumpiness by waiting any longer, hm?”
“Yes.” Qiqi points to the rose, then to herself. “Qiqi will get water.” The little girl hurries herself into the kitchen after saying so, much cleaner than Childe did into his apartment. Zhongli hums in amusement with her daughter, then directs her gaze to the rose still in her hand. Carefully, she lifts it to her nose, inhales, and sighs pleasantly as she pulls it away. She’s looking forward to the smell of flowers in their home from now on.
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txtniipped · 3 years
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i got another idea for a green/reader fic i MIGHT end up writing if i remember the idea in the morning... we will see
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txtniipped · 3 years
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hi it’s the blue/green oak anon again :) maybe rivals to lovers? so i guess yeah the playable character :)
posted (finally lol)!! here ya go
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txtniipped · 3 years
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time, ever moving
pokemon (gameverse) -- green oak/reader
(1892 words)
ao3 version
What snapped Green out of his funk was some cocky brat from Johto. His name was Gold, you learned, when Green complained to you at some banquet. He spoke about Gold bugging him at Cinnabar, about how the kid wanted to fight him right there, on top of all the ash and cinders. You had smiled wryly at him, and had told him, “I bet you would have if you were still twelve.”
Green snorted in response, lifting his glass of champagne to his lips as he spoke. “Good thing I’m not twelve anymore then.”
You’re not sure when your relationship with Green Oak changed.
When you were kids, he was a menace. You were no better, but it was always Green getting the two of you in trouble. Between rushing through the tall grass Pokemon-less, exploring nearby caves with “borrowed” equipment from Professor Oak’s lab, or dumb dares down at the coast south of Pallet, the blame would befall both of you, despite all of the instigating being Green’s doing.
Even during your journey, most of your trouble—when not dealing with an interregional crime syndicate—came from the one and only Green Oak.
Roadblock of the century, Green Oak was always waiting for you. Town after town, route after route, you found him flaunting his progress, forcing you to pause in your own as he challenged you. Given, you’d always win, and Green always gave you some piece of advice or a tip you genuinely didn’t know after, but it was still a momentum breaker; another bullet point on your list of annoying habits of one Green Oak.
Squaring up against him at the final point in your journey, however, was much more fitting than fighting Champion Lance.
Green was devastated when he lost, despite the front he put on for you. There was no name for the way he left after his grandfather came into the room other than retreating, and if Professor Oak hadn’t corralled you towards the Hall of Fame, you would have run after your rival.
Champion duties took over from there, and though you were a kid, you were swamped with work. Between interviews and tv appearances, photoshoots and League meetings (the last one, you’re sure, was the only true duty you had. The other stuff was most likely Lance fishing for funds for the League—two child prodigies claiming the title of Champion within a few months of beginning their journeys was honestly quite the cash cow), you rarely saw Green.
You found out later—sometime after most of the euphoria had died down—that Lance had hired Green as the new Viridian Gym Leader.
As Champion, you had the final signature on the paperwork to make it official. When Lance presented it to you, you almost thought it was a joke. Green Oak, willingly working with the League? With you?
He’d gone radio silent the moment he left the Plateau after you won the Champion battle. You only learned from Daisy after you nearly knocked a hole in the Oak residence’s door that Green left for Sevii Islands— that he’d been gone for weeks now, I thought he let you know?—and when he got back, he had ignored you. You! Rivals, best friends, whatever, he hadn’t said a word, and now—now?!
You signed off on it, of course. Your beef with Green was yours, not the League’s, and with how desperate you knew Lance was on filling the empty hole where Giovanni once stood, you weren’t going to be petty about this.
It turned out that Green was actually an excellent pick for a gym leader. You knew he would be—duh, he was Green Oak—, but you were proud of him anyway.
Viridian perked up nicely with a new gym leader at the helm—the influx of new trainers in Kanto the season Green stepped into his position nearly rivaled the season following the Champion battle between the two of you the year before. It was a testimony to Green’s fame, as well as another boost in profits for the League, which always made for a happy Lance.
Your rival had a way of elegantly beating aspiring trainers into the ground. Sometimes, it was the breaking point for journeys, and others, it drove home just how determined they really had to be to continue. The average rate of Earth Badges actually being given out per season dropped with Green as the Viridian Gym Leader when compared to Giovanni, but Lance had agreed with you—Green was every bit the better gym leader.
Until, at least, he seemed to get bored.
Viridian Gym fell to the wayside some time during Green’s second year of running it. Your rival had openly complained about paperwork, about guest lectures and special appearances, about the banquets and meetings and get-togethers whenever someone would spare him a second on the topic. It wasn’t a surprise to see Lance pulling Green away at all those gatherings to scold him, and you weren’t surprised by the way Green would always let it roll off his back either. 
Green Oak operates by no one’s rules but his own when he can get away with it, and if the worst repercussion Green was going to face was Lance being disappointed with him, you knew nothing would change.
What snapped Green out of his funk was some cocky brat from Johto. His name was Gold, you learned, when Green complained to you at some banquet. He spoke about Gold bugging him at Cinnabar, about how the kid wanted to fight him right there, on top of all the ash and cinders. You had smiled wryly at him, and had told him, “I bet you would have if you were still twelve.” 
Green snorted in response, lifting his glass of champagne to his lips as he spoke. “Good thing I’m not twelve anymore then.”
Gold tore through Green’s gym when he finally arrived, about a month later. 
You heard about it from your mother first, who apparently had been keeping up with Gold’s journey after the boy came through Pallet and charmed the little town with his familiar and nostalgic ambition. Your immediate thought upon hearing the news was how Green would want a rematch without the League rules he was required to follow as a gym leader weighing him down. When you saw Green the following morning, he voiced that exact sentiment to you. You laughed at his predictability.
Shortly after Gold had bested you a few weeks later, Green stepped down from Viridian Gym. He had an internship in Kalos under Professor Sycamore, as well as a scholarship to some college there for evolution sciences. Apparently, he spoke enough Kalosian to get by, and hearing him speak it to some lab assistant over the phone while dining at a cafe with him rattled your brain. 
Green kicked your shin under the table, and, belatedly, you realized you had been staring. Cheeks rosy, you settled on staring at your drink instead.
League meetings were insanely boring without Green there to take your mind off them after he left. Gold had won the title of Kanto Champion, yes, but he had already besieged the Johto title, and held the responsibilities that came with it. He had stepped down from any sort of toe-in-the-water as far as Kanto went, and thus, Lance had kept you around. Besides, after a rematch a month later, you had beaten Gold anyway. The two of you were on pretty even footing.
These meetings though—they were boring. Green somehow never paid attention and yet always could summarize them for you afterwards. Now, with him halfway across the world, you had to struggle to keep your eyes open alone under Lance’s droning voice. At least you could find comfort in Erika, who always fell asleep at some point in these meetings without fail.
Unova was where you saw Green next. The Champions Tournament was an event entirely too flashy for your tastes, but you could see the way Green shined under the attention. His battles were magnificent and dramatic while still being calculating and precise. You ate up the way he directed his hand towards the camera with a blinding grin on the tiny television in your hotel room at the start of one battle, and from the tinny shrieking blasting through the shotty speakers, so did everyone in the arena.
Your battle against one another was apparently referred to as the highlight of the tournament, and while you understood why everyone screamed in delight as Green’s Aerodactyl took down your Charizard, you couldn’t quite place why they practically deafened you upon your victory. You had nowhere near the showmanship Green did, but when Green shook your hand post-match, the way he looked at you… His smile was soft, proud in a way that could only be directed at someone else, and with his eyes locked with yours, you realized his pride was placed in you. That was a rush of emotions not even ten thousand people chanting your name could ever hope to give you.
He was on break, Green told you later in your hotel room. He was doing fine in school, which you knew meant he was acing every one of his classes, the bastard, but the highlight for him was the data collecting he was doing for Sycamore. It took him all over Kalos, from rocky shores to snowy mountains, from quaint little towns so similar in feel to Pallet, to eternally autumn forests. Green had stated somewhere between his descriptions of the aquarium in Ambrette Town and the sundial in Anistar City that he would love to show you the region one day. When the two of you turned in that night, with Green passed out in his day clothes on the other side of your bed, you dreamt of summer days exploring a new region with your oldest friend. Maybe, after Green had finished his research under Sycamore, the two of you would make up for your childhood journey.
Your chance came nearly two years later in the shape of a man named Kukui.
He was a professor from the Alola region, a region famous for its beautiful shores and stunning flora. Your mom had vacationed there once upon a time, you knew, back when your dad was around. The way Kukui described it was from the view of a man in love with his home. When he asked for your notoriety to draw in more than just vacationers to their region, you almost gave in due to his passion alone.
Convince Green Oak first, you managed to tell him. If he had your rival on board, you’d go too.
Alola was humid, you found out. Humid and hot, forcing your clothes to stick to your skin as you trudged through the wilds of the routes. The benefit, you discovered quickly enough, was that Green would unbutton his polo down as far as the shirt would let him when the sun was at its peak.
He was a view, under the glow of the Alolan sun, no matter the hour of the day. Even the moonlight felt like it knew how to accentuate his features for you to admire as the two of you camped along routes. His hair lightened with the weeks, and his skin took on a sunkissed complexion that suited him so nicely. He had teased you for staring multiple times at first, but between weeks of Mantine surfing, battles with locals who only had passing knowledge of yours and Green’s fame, and evenings spent talking softly between the two of you, you had noticed his eyes on you just as much.
You’re not sure when your relationship with Green Oak changed, but, as you kiss him in the evening light, cool ocean waves lapping at your waists, you don’t think you particularly care.
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txtniipped · 3 years
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hello ! it’s the green/reader anon im out here and i’m glad you’re back 😁 patiently waiting, take your time :)
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATIENCE
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txtniipped · 3 years
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IM GETTING INTO THE FLOW OF FIC WRITING AGAIN........... green/reader anon if you’re out there know i have half of it written, and now that i actually know how to outline things, IM GOING TO FINISH IT
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txtniipped · 3 years
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ode to flower and cloud
genshin impact -- childe/zhongli, childe & venti, venti & traveler, traveler & paimon, paimon & venti
(2680 words)
ao3 version
With the Windblume Festival in full swing, love is in the air. Who better to teach the art of waxing poetry than the Windborne Bard and his two faithful assistants?
Though… tutoring the Fatui’s Eleventh Harbinger on such a topic was not something the three of them were expecting to be doing.
“Well, now that all that’s settled, we have some time to waste until their two hours are up,” Venti says as he turns towards the Traveler and Paimon, a grin blooming across his face. “Let’s go get a drink, shall we?”
The Traveler smiles awkwardly at the bard as they begin their march from under the city’s Barbatos statue to Angel’s Share, Paimon huffing indignantly as she floats along. “You know they don’t drink, bard! You only suggested it because you don’t know how to do anything else!”
Venti laughs, jovial and completely lacking any shame, which only further riles up Paimon. “So? A good drink always tastes better in good company! You can get grape juice or something.” The bard hops down the steps, two at a time, the traveler following in suit as to not be left behind. “Besides—” Venti pauses near the bottom of the staircase, turning himself back towards his companions, gazing cheekily up at them— “what else are you going to do while we wait to check up on our students? Those commissions no one has posted since the festival began?”
Paimon’s cheeks puff, her little hands balling into fists. “You—!!”
“Ahaha, there you are! Figures I’d find you two mixed up in the sprite’s shenanigans.”
Venti’s cheekiness drops the moment he hears that laugh, a thin smile taking its place as he turns to the presence at the bottom of the staircase. The Traveler’s attention snaps to the Harbinger below just as quickly as Paimon’s, who gasps loud enough for them both. “Childe?!”
“Hey!” The Harbinger greets the three of them with a wave, his smile genuine as far as any of them can tell.
“I thought the shame of losing our little contest would have driven you back home by now!” Venti lilts, bounding down the rest of the steps to land in Childe’s space, that forced smile still plastered on his face.
“Ahh, no, see—” Childe grins at Venti, a little too toothy, this smile much more fitting with the dangerous man the Traveler and Paimon now know him as— “a loss leads to more practice, and more practice leads to more polish, and more polish always warrants another go.”
Venti levels the Snezhnayan with an unimpressed stare. “So you’re here for a rematch,” he states.
Childe laughs, pleasant and warm, the epitome of friendliness. It’s so easy to be drawn into that sound if you know little of the man.
“Not yet! Rather, I heard you’re offering the masses lessons in poetry?”
The question catches both the Traveler and Paimon off guard, and if the silence between the four of them singing louder than any cricket is capable of is anything to go by, it’s surprised Venti too.
“You actually, uh...” Paimon starts after a beat, fidgeting her hands as she speaks, “just missed—.“ 
The sudden clap of Venti’s hands coming together cuts the fairy-creature off, his tone much more amicable than it just was. “I am! And these two are my assistants!” Venti gestures over to the Traveler and Paimon, who have now finally joined the other two at the bottom of the stairs. “You did actually just miss our assignment period though,” the bard stresses, offering a pitying expression that clearly irks the Harbinger. Paimon saw his fist curl.
Childe laughs mutedly, lifting said fist to his torso, casually smoothing it out over the front of his uniform. “That’s... unfortunate.”
“But!” Venti chimes, switching his demeanor in a heartbeat, leaning forward enough to force Childe back a step. “I’d be willing to let you join late, as long as you’re willing to pay the fee!”
The laugh that falls from Childe’s mouth this time is much fuller than his previous one, amusement dancing across his face. “Sure, sure. How much is it?”
“Welllll~” Venti’s index finger comes to rest on his chin as he turns his head conspiringly towards his two assistants, the corners of his mouth curled up in such a way that it practically screams mischief. 
“Since you missed the beginning of the class,” Venti begins as he turns a more scholarly expression towards Childe, his index finger tapping against his chin, “we’ll have to catch you up one-on-one. On top of that, you’re cutting into our break time, which we were really looking forward to after all our hard work with our other students...”
Paimon suddenly seems to brighten up in her spot next to the Traveler, catching onto the scheme the bard is putting forth. The Traveler can practically see her vibrating with her habit of greed. “Seriously! Paimon had to explain the ins and outs of poetry so much, Paimon’s jaw hurts!”
Childe’s eyebrows raise as he appraises the bard and the fairy, and when he glances to the Traveler, they can tell he’s not convinced. However...
“Well, why don’t I just owe you double and we move on?” the Harbinger suggests, his attention returning to Venti.
Venti laughs, delight ringing through the air. “Sounds good to me!”
The trio filled Childe in on what information he missed from their earlier class within a few minutes, despite how long both Paimon and Venti alluded to it taking beforehand. Childe didn’t seem bothered over paying double for something that hardly took five minutes, but knowing his spending habits after witnessing everything in Liyue, the Traveler wasn’t surprised.
By the end of it, they assigned Childe a poem to be read and critiqued by the bard as they did the others, and soon enough, the four of them parted ways with an agreement to meet at the Goth Grand Hotel later in the day.
The trio’s idle time passed by swiftly, mostly due to the hilichurl camps nearby the city they decided to clear instead of day drinking. The walk back into town and to the Fatui delegation’s temporary place of residence ate up their remaining time, and though they were clearly invited to the building by the Harbinger earlier, the guard at the door seems unconvinced.
“‘Poetry lessons’ hardly seem in the realm of the Lord Harbinger’s interests,” the doorguard, Luke, states in response to the explanation he’s been given regarding the trio’s presence.
“Well, what else do you expect him to be doing during the Windblume Festival?” Venti asks as he tilts his head curiously, a teasing smile on his face.
Luke scoffs, haughtily turning his head to the side. “The matters of the Lord Harbinger’s love life aren’t mine to divulge. Besides—“ the Traveler raises a hand to cover their sudden smile as Luke continues on, amused over the guard’s predictability. Always a talker, this one. “—last I heard, his partner is in Liyue anyway. What use would he have for the festivities of a Mondstadt festival?”
The mention of a partner has Venti perking up like a dog offered a treat, Paimon now joining the Traveler on covering a smile of her own. “Ohhh, his lover is in Liyue, huh~?” Venti sing-songs. “He must be wanting to send them an authentic piece of his time in another country! How romantic!”
The Traveler and Paimon are both left giggling behind the bard as an embarrassed flush blooms over what’s visible of Luke’s face, the Fatui man clearly only now realizing he’s once again shared too much. “Shut it, you twerp,” Luke spits, trying to reign the conversation in his favor, “unless you want the Lord Harbinger shutting you up himself!”
“Must you threaten my guests, Luke?”
Four heads turn towards the amused voice of said Lord Harbinger, who currently has his upper body partially leaning out a window of what can only be assumed is the foyer. His head is propped up on one of his hands, leaving him looking picturesque under the warm sun and soft breeze.
Venti cackles unabashedly as Luke stammers out an apology in Childe’s direction, Childe’s amused smile pulling into a grin.
“Let them in before you spill more of my secrets,” Childe waves as he pulls himself back into the building, tone light. Luke mumbles an affirmative to the no-longer-present Harbinger and opens the doors of the hotel for the three guests, Venti happily making his way inside with the Traveler and Paimon close behind, the doors softly thudding closed once they’re through.
The foyer of the Goth Grand Hotel hosts two sets of socializing spaces to the left and right of the rug running through the room, decorated with high quality rococo couches, loveseats, and chairs. At the back of the room is the counter, most likely vacant of staff due to the occupation of only Fatui here. On either side of that, stairs leading up, the space required for that leaving the room quite open.
Childe is seated in the room alone, in a chair to the left of the entrance, watching his guests with thinly-veiled amusement. He’s perched so one elbow rests against the armrest of the chair, that hand providing support for his head. He’s leaning heavily to the right, his left leg crossed over the thigh of his right, left hand loose and casual in his lap.
“Someone looks comfortable,” Venti comments good-naturedly as he makes his way over to the couch angled perpendicular to the armchair, the Traveler and Paimon following his lead.
“I am!” Childe laughs as he lifts his head from his hand, regarding the three of them with a bright smile. “Mondstadt is just so lovely right now, what with all the vitriol your people have for us Fatui.”
Paimon huffs, crossing her own legs in the air as she mimics Childe’s positioning, only a lot more balled up. “Well, can you blame them? You guys are always up to something!”
“Ahaha, a fair assessment,” Childe muses as he unfolds himself, planting both feet on the floor as he leans towards the coffee table in front of him. There, he snatches the top paper from a stack of several and offers it in Venti’s direction. “Well, shall we? You’ve more students to see, after all.”
“That we do,” Venti hums, taking the paper from the Harbinger. He sits up properly in his seat then and turns his eyes to the paper only briefly, quickly returning them to Childe. “Would it bother you if I read this aloud?”
Childe grins and waves a hand through the air, casually dismissing the need for permission. “By all means.”
The bard smiles and nods, then once again settles his gaze to the paper, clearing his throat before beginning.
“‘Words come easy to me,’” Venti begins, voice light and pleasant. “‘Over dinner, drinks, the shore. But there are some far more challenging, said aloud than written down.’”
The room is quiet save for Venti’s soft countenance. Childe’s gaze has drifted down to the rest of the pages on the table, where the Traveler can clearly see scribbles and scratches of other versions of the poem Venti’s currently reading.
“‘Surely you know by now, how irreplaceable your presence is, to a man so solitary.’”
Paimon looks to the Traveler then, head tilted in a silent question of who the Harbinger could possibly be talking about—at least until—.
“‘How every word that falls, from your lips and graces my ears, is a sweet treasure, more decadent, than any wine or dessert.’”
Paimon’s eyes widen, and she starts rapidly smacking her hand against the Traveler’s shoulder, pieces being put together. She’s excited, despite how hostile she may or may not be towards the Harbinger. The Traveler can’t help but laugh silently at her antics.
“‘Mondstadt prides itself on freedom, but the freedom you’ve given me, will forever be the envy, of the City of Wind.’”
Venti pauses here, though with a brief glance, the Traveler can see another verse written, just two lines. The script is just messy enough to keep them from making out the words before Venti’s laughing stiltedly, catching the attention of all those in the room. Childe’s eyebrows raise in a silent question, and after a beat passes without an answer, he lifts his upper body to sit up straight.
“What?” Childe laughs, the lightest dusting of color painting his cheeks as he leans back into the chair, the iron grip he’s taken up on the armrest betraying his calm. “Don’t want to finish it, little sprite?”
Venti huffs out a laugh of his own and tosses the paper back in Childe’s direction, who catches it out of the air like it’s a precious thing. Which, honestly...
“To be honest, I was expecting the same sort of mess as your form with a bow, but that was actually well done!”
Childe’s smile turns tight, mirrored perfectly back at him by Venti. The tension is palpable. Concerned, the Traveler turns their attention to Paimon, who meets their gaze with a mildly alarmed look of confusion.
The moment passes as Childe breaks eye contact with the bard, folding the paper in his hands. “Well, as unhelpful as you were, I do owe you,” Childe says as he places the piece of paper on the coffee table. He reaches under the jacket of his uniform after, pulling out a hefty pouch of mora and tossing it carelessly into Venti’s lap. It doesn’t take much thought to how much is in there when the Traveler can practically see Venti’s eyes sparkling—most likely, it’s much more than their efforts today are worth.
“Now,” Childe hums, regarding the three of them with a pleasant smile, “get out.”
Luke was more than happy to doubly unwelcome them as the trio stepped out from the hotel with a shout of scram! for good measure, since he apparently decided his Lord Harbinger’s icy dismissal wasn’t enough.
Venti pockets the pouch of mora with a guilt-free grin despite their initial critiquing session lasting a grand total of five minutes max, turning his attention to the Traveler and Paimon.
“Well! Next stop is the Knights of Favonius’s headquarters!” Venti announces with a clap of his hands.
The nighttime scene during the Windblume Festival mostly seems to consist of lovers holding hands, playing music, feeding one another food, or in that unlucky instance where the Traveler picked the wrong side path, being tangled together.
The PDA is near unbearable, but Paimon’s never ending hunger has driven them out in search of festival food. Admittedly, everything they’ve tried so far has been mouthwatering, and almost makes up for the trauma both the Traveler and Paimon now have with that one path. Luckily, they’ve wandered into a quieter section of the city, most of the festivities contained to the main street and surrounding areas.
“‘...is a sweet treasure, more decadent, than any wine or dessert.’”
The words coming from somewhere above the duo are immediately recognizable as the work of one Eleventh Harbinger they had already heard earlier in the day. The Traveler and Paimon share a startled look as the voice continues—one they just as easily recognize as Childe himself.
“‘Mondstadt prides itself on freedom, but the freedom you’ve given me, will forever be the envy, of the City of Wind,’” Childe recites, to the sky or to another, they can’t tell. Then...
“‘I love you, dear consultant.’”
A low, rumbling laugh floats down upon the duo then, and the Traveler and Paimon both freeze up.
“I never quite took you as the ‘waxing poetic’ type, Ajax,” Zhongli comments, voice something too tender for these two intruders to be hearing.
“When in Mondstadt,” ‘Ajax’ replies, his tone fond.
“Indeed.”
There’s a quiet moment that neither the Traveler or Paimon are quite sure what to do in, until they hear a deep purr of Childe’s given name. That scares them away immediately, the sound of the Traveler’s footsteps rushing back down towards the main street. 
Another beat of silence, and then Childe’s warm laughter rings out from where he and Zhongli are seated against the railing of an upper layer of the city, as innocent as ever. “I cannot believe you,” he says to the consultant through his laughter. Zhongli offers his partner an amused smile in return, his eyes crinkling in delight.
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txtniipped · 3 years
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hello! perchance could i get a blue/green oak (the boy, whatever name) x reader? i just feel like there are none anymore and your writing is so good 🥺
yeah, sure!! is there any sort of specific scenario you want? like do you want the reader to be the player character, or someone just in the world, or someone else?
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txtniipped · 3 years
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unfortunate how badly i need a fe3h p4 au
like where its the investigation team as a house bc ugh. UGH. maybe professor yu??? maybe just house leader yu?????? both are stellar options. either way i just need it and im too tired to brainstorm anything for it right now no matter how much i want to
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txtniipped · 4 years
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rainy day aches
persona 5 -- akira kusuru/ryuji sakamoto
suggested by @ride-the-bifrost: “Ryuji’s leg acting up and Akiren caring for him?” (633 words)
ao3 version
“S’just…” His head rolls, eyes opening back up to look down at his friend, who’s knelt on the attic’s floor before him. “It’s a normal thing, yaknow? Hate botherin’ others with it.”
“You really need to speak up about this, Ryuji.”
Ryuji sighs, letting his head smack against the top of Akira’s couch, eyes closing. “I know,” he starts, face twisting up as Akira presses his fingertips into the meat of his thigh through his pants, massaging. “S’just…” His head rolls, eyes opening back up to look down at his friend, who’s knelt on the attic’s floor before him. “It’s a normal thing, yaknow? Hate botherin’ others with it.”
Akira lifts his eyes from where his gaze has been boring into Ryuji’s leg, eyebrows drawn down, set in his patent scolding position Ryuji knows all too well. “Well, bother me. You know I’ll let you sit out once I know.”
The scowl that comes onto Ryuji’s face is automatic at the phrase, hackles rising. “I don’t wanna sit out. Nothing’s worse than sittin’ out.”
“Ryuji.” Leader voice, ouch. “I just meant you need to rest,” Akira stresses, staring Ryuji down for a beat before returning his attention to Ryuji’s thigh. “You push yourself too hard. I appreciate your strength; we all do—” Ryuji scoffs, which immediately earns him another scolding glare, which jeez, okay— “but you never let yourself breathe. I’m afraid something’s going to go wrong one day because you’ve pushed too far, and I can barely stomach the thought of that, let alone it actually happening.”
Ryuji bites his lip, gaze falling to his lap, where it wanders to Akira’s hands, fingers still methodically pressing into the fabric. Ryuji’s had the same thoughts before, but about their leader. There’s no telling how exhausting having all those personas in his head must be, and the fact that the team would be practically useless without Akira scares him. Sure, Ryuji’s assets can be covered by their leader if he’s not on the front line, but that means Akira’s taking the exhaustion Ryuji could be handling instead, and that’s not anything Ryuji feels great about. He can shoulder all that, there’s no need for Akira to do it instead.
He lifts his eyes back to Akira’s face, mouth opening to start explaining why he can’t take a breather, when the expression he sees stops him. Akira’s stare has always been intense, but coupled with the knitted eyebrows, the soft frown on his face… Ryuji can’t bring himself to continue this.
“Okay.” Ryuji pulls his hands from their places on the armrest and couch cushion, scooping up Akira’s from his lap. His fingers curl around Akira’s palms, grip firm. He squeezes as he returns his eyes to Akira’s. “I’ll— I can do that.” Nerves spike under the stormy grey gaze of his leader, so Ryuji’s eyes dart to the side as his cheeks begin to color. “Bother you, or whatever.”
Akira smiles, then twists his hands to hold Ryuji’s properly, fingers lacing. Ryuji looks back towards him as Akira squeezes their palms together, the flush of his cheeks deepening as Akira speaks. “Thank you.” 
Ryuji flounders for a response, his mouth opening and closing several times over as Akira keeps their gazes locked. It’s disarming as hell, and there’s nothing coming to Ryuji’s rescue. Is it hotter up here suddenly? He thought it was raining— it definitely was when they got here.
Another beat, and Akira lets go, dropping his own gaze back to Ryuji’s lap— no, his thigh. “Anyway,” Akira begins as his hands return to the fabric of Ryuji’s pants. “Call your mom. I don’t want you walking any more today.”
Ryuji blinks, then huffs out a laugh, moving to pull his phone from his jacket’s pocket. “Oooh, you gonna wait on me tonight?”
“Yeah,” Akira answers, throwing Ryuji one of his other patent expressions: the Joker Smirk. “Curry sound good?”
Ryuji laughs, warm and happy as he pulls up his mom’s contact. “Always, man.”
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txtniipped · 4 years
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eyes on me
persona 5 -- ryuji sakamoto
character exploration (214 words)
Attention was something he felt he couldn’t live without. It’s validation at its purest; proof he’s alive.
Attention was something he felt he couldn’t live without. It’s validation at its purest; proof he’s alive, that he exists, that he’s visible to everyone else. It’s part of the reason he talks the way he does, in a way that has people giving him looks. Looks are good— lets him know people can hear him, even if they think he’s dumb or annoying for the way he blends his words or drops uneccessary curses into his sentences. 
The attention keeps him going, even when it’s negative and bouncing around the halls of Shujin like pinballs in an arcade cabinet after he punches Kamoshida and loses his future. They’re still talking about him— he still exists, even if it feels like he really shouldn’t because what more does he have to get out of life now that he’s been stripped of all his plans, ruined the only thing he was ever good at?
He’s pathetic, he knows; it’s exemplified by how desperate he is to be in the limelight again after the initial shock of his misstep is swept away in favor of the newest drama of the week. So he bleaches his hair; makes himself stand out once again, because if he’s anything, he’s the kid with a desperate need to be seen.
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txtniipped · 4 years
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souyo moon/sun gods au part 2 (first post here)
yu ‘moves’ to inaba similar to the game, arriving at the start of the school year but no one was aware he was coming. just suddenly in inaba, and the dojimas seem unfazed by this teenager staying with them, and the school is unfazed too
yu’s inserted himself into some residents’ lives out of necessity for how human society would function for a teenager, meaning his ‘family’ while he ‘visits’ behave like they always knew yu was going to be staying with them this school year despite never mentioning any sort of family from tokyo to anyone. the school also has records yu concocted that created a schooling background for him, so he transfers into the school flawlessly as well
anyone who knows the dojimas question who this kid is, why they’ve never mentioned him or his mother, why he’s here— they have solid reasonings for everything (same reasons given in-game, just as something yu fabricated in this case) so, despite the kid seeming to have appeared out of thin air, there’s really no reason to doubt the story they give, or yu himself
as for why yu’s REALLY here in inaba: he’s been watching yosuke’s mortal life from the comfort of whatever god plane he lives on, and saw several outcomes leading to yosuke’s early demise at various points in his life. yu’s decided, since yosuke is his everything, that he’ll intervene and do his best to ease yosuke’s burdens as well as help him just survive. the bike incident from the last post is just one of those events that could have spelled yosuke’s death
behavior-wise, yu leans heavily into those asshole answers/choices you can give in game; the kinda smartass, rude ones. i just want to stress that yu is a god with no interest in humans beyond listening to yosuke blab about them. the only human he cares about is yosuke (and with time all the other social links), so he’s kinda a bitch. but he’s still yu, so he’s got that quiet, mysterious air about him that attracts everyone’s attention. the only thing is he’s kinda hugely weird, like he’s never done most mundane activities before. he ends up finding major delight in feeding the stray cats, fishing, and origami
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