ok I find this so f*cking funny when saw in the news scrolling in my phone, and inmediatly reminds me our bois pre-regression and some fanfics I read where SH literally picks up the homeless HY from the streets (I love them)ā¦. and I want to see him like girls so ĀÆ_(ć)_/ĀÆ
Here's the real meme:
It says the same as the draw "She found true love: woman picks up homeless man, marries him and they have two children"
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Listen I'm not going to tell you not to invite the Hero over for dinner or anything, I mean you can probably get him to run a bunch of annoying errands for you if you frame it as a quest, and feeding him for his trouble is frankly the least you can do. I'm just saying, don't use any of the fine china. The guy will steal anything that's not nailed down, this is a fact. Also if you invite him into your house once you can reliably expect he's just gonna show up there whenever he feels like it later on. Sometimes he'll sleep in your bed. Yeah I mean being a Hero is tiring work so I'm not gonna hold it against him but it's for sure a Thing. Also do not invite anyone else whose good opinion you are concerned with, there are decent odds he'll show up in full plate, nearly naked, or possibly dressed in cabbage armor. No I don't know what the cabbage armor actually is. At this point I'm too afraid to ask. It might in fact be made of cabbages and I don't know how to process that.
The thing about the Hero is that he's great. If you got rats in your basement or goblins in your fields, he is your man. The gods made him many things and not a one of them are ordinary. I once saw him shove an entire whole dressed ham down his gullet in the middle of a fight. He will drink anything, and I mean including things you wouldn't ordinarily consider a liquid. One time I swear I saw him riding his horse across a bridge and the horse just, it just, I don't even know what happened one moment it was a normal horse and the next the Hero was standing on the bridge and that animal was flying sideways off into the sky and carrying on to the far horizon.
He's a good man though. I won't hear a word against him. Every eccentricity he more than makes up for in keeping this village safe. Dawn 'till dusk he's out there. Sometimes I wonder if he even sleeps. I mean, I mean I'm not actually sure he does? At least not every night. Obviously he does sleep but I swear I've seen him run miles and miles without pause and carry on as if he's not even winded.
He can carry more goods than even the best pack mule in town, though! As long as you don't mind him being his way about it. I'm not sure where he puts it all, but he can take any number of things, and it doesn't seem to even stagger him. Until he hits his limit. Then he just stands there, not moving at all, until he drops something right on the ground at his feet. But as soon as he decides what to drop, he'll be right off again!
The Hero is a generous soul. If you ask him for something, he'll probably bring it right to you. It might take him a while. It can be hard to say how long. Sometimes he gets on it right away, barely an hour will pass before he's back with even the most rare plants or monster parts or lost items. Sometimes weeks and even months go by before he'll turn up with the book you asked him to fetch from the library just two doors down. But I mean, he's a Hero, I'm just happy he makes time for us little folk at all.
He's usually pretty prompt with my own requests, which is good of him. I can't say that it's favoritism, I think that's just his nature and I've been lucky enough to catch him at the right times.
I don't know who told him I like mince pies, though. He always brings me one. It's very kind of him, and I don't have the heart to explain that I hate mince pies, in fact, so I just take them and pass them along to some of the less fortunate neighbors. Keeps everyone fed. I suppose in that light I do like mince pies, though!
Truth be told I'm just happy to talk to him every day, even when he's taking an odd turn. A few times he's woken me up in the dark of night, just minutes before midnight, looking like he must have fought a whole pack of orcs and carting around some bloodstained trophy, just to make sure he's said his hello to me for the day. It was frightening the first few times but you get used to it.
Don't ever try to help him fight, though. That's key. I know it might seem like the neighborly thing to do but the fights that man gets into are the business of gods and wizards, not humble village folk. I've seen what happens to people who get stuck in the crossfire and there's no sugarcoating it, if you're lucky it'll be a quick death. Just stay well back and let him do his work, and maybe keep a reward handy for when he's done. That's all he ever seems to want.
Grave offerings and burying the dead with tools and goods is actually such a deeply human thing to do. It's not really even necessarily about how much you believe in a literal afterlife or them taking the tools with them. It's also just going Wait, I'm Not Done Taking Care Of You, let me make you one more pair of socks so your feet won't be cold when you go wherever it is where I can't follow.
The Goblin Emperor is a book about a guy unexpectedly becoming emperor, then trying to do a good job and be nice to people. I am almost halfway through and so far most of this book is this guy going to meetings. The most exciting thing that has happened is he met with an eccentric artisan to pick out his signet. AND IT IS SO GOOD. This book is so much better than it seems like it should be?? I am HOOKED and FUCKING DELIGHTED.
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You, an overworked S-Class esper with the survival instincts of a damp sock, catch the eye of SSS-Class guide Vil Schoenheit. He decides youāre his personal fixer-upper project. Shockingly, itās the best thing thatās ever happened to you.
or: Guideverse AU!
Series Masterlist
The world was already hanging on by a thread ā economic collapse, melting ice caps, influencers starting cults via TikTok. It was a mess. Youād think that would be enough. Youād hope that would be enough. But no. Some ancient cosmic being ā probably named something dramatic like Tharāzul the Chronovore ā looked down at Earth and said, āYou know what this needs? Fun.ā
And by fun, it meant Gates.
Gates are like if cursed portals, radioactive sinkholes, and a haunted Etsy store had a baby. They pop up anywhere and everywhere: in libraries, parking garages, yoga studios, even in the middle of someoneās wedding ceremony. (āDo you take thisāOH MY GOD WHAT IS THAT?!ā)
These glowing tears in the fabric of reality are basically open invitations to every monster, demon, and unholy abomination in the neighborhood. And if left unchecked, they break, releasing those nightmares into your already-taxed existence like a hellish game of whack-a-mole.
But don't worry! Humanity, against all odds, did not die out immediately.
Because the universe, in its infinite chaos, also gave rise to Espers. Special little guys. Think emotional time bombs with telekinetic temper tantrums and the ability to level buildings if they stub their toe too hard. Espers are the only ones who can suppress Gates and fight back the monsters. They're strong, fast, powerfulāand also dangerously dramatic.
Like, ācries during dog food commercialsā dramatic. āBlew up a vending machine because it ate their dollarā dramatic. If they donāt have someone helping them regulate their powers (and by extension, their feelings), theyāre a walking nuclear disaster waiting to happen.
Which brings us to Guides.
Guides are born with the power to soothe, ground, and stabilize Espers before they turn into emotional IEDs. They go through rigorous training. They meditate. They are the human equivalent of āhave you tried deep breathing?āāexcept instead of calming down toddlers, theyāre keeping an Esper from melting the freeway with their grief-powered fireballs.
This entire survival system hinges on compatibility between Espers and Guides. Sounds romantic, right? Itās not. Itās mostly screaming, paperwork, and sometimes unspoken sexual tension.
So, to recap:
Gates = Bad.
Espers = Powerful but emotionally unstable.
Guides = The only thing standing between civilization and utter monster-induced ruin.
Together, Espers and Guides form the first ā and only ā line of defense between humanity and total monster-induced annihilation.
Unfortunately for everyone involved, this system hinges entirely on two people getting along.
Which, as anyone who's ever been in a group project can tell you, is a complete joke.
The Gate had been rough. You were bleeding, caked in monster goop, and running on exactly one granola bar, four energy drinks, and pure spite. Monsters just kept comingāone after another like it was a clearance sale on eldritch horrorāand now your knees were shaking, your head was pounding, and you were 99% sure you were hallucinating the talking goat that told you to āgo into the light.ā
You stumbled out of the Gate zone, vision blurry. There were Guides waiting beyond the perimeter, crisp in their uniforms, radiant with that āI got 8 hours of sleep and drink waterā glow. Unfortunately, most of them had already been snagged by the other Espers, who were quicker, cleaner, and not currently dripping ectoplasm from their sleeve.
You blinked. The only one left was⦠well, no. That couldnāt be right.
Standing a few feet away, untouched and oddly pristine, was a man who looked like heād walked straight out of a high-end fashion magazine shoot titled "War-Torn But Make It Couture."
Tall, composed, and stunning in a way that made your brain short-circuit, he was clearly someone Importantā¢. The other S-Ranks had actively avoided him, which shouldāve been a clue. But your frontal lobe was melting. You didnāt have the bandwidth to care.
You wobbled forward like a dying Roomba, grabbed a handful of his sleek uniform, and mumbled, āGuide. Thatās you, right?ā
And then you slumped forward and face-planted directly onto his collarbone.
There was a pause.
āā¦Do you have any idea who I am?ā he asked, incredulously.
You groaned. āYeah. Youāre a Guide. Youāve got the badge.ā
Another pause. Longer, this time.
He sounded⦠offended. And faintly intrigued.
āā¦You donāt recognize me?ā
āShould I?ā you mumbled into his neck.
You didnāt see the expression on his face, but if your ears werenāt lying, he audibly gasped. Like someone had just told him dry shampoo was canceled. Like the very idea of not being recognized was a personal attack.
But instead of pushing you off, he slowly brought a hand up, fingers grazing your temple. You felt a wave of warmth radiate through your skull like a breath of fresh air had crawled into your ribcage.
It was⦠good. Too good.
A jolt of relief punched through your nervous system. Your heart rate settled. The Gate static stopped screaming in your ears. Your whole body sagged, weightless and calm, and you barely had time to mutter āholy shit youāre good at thisā before your knees gave out completely.
You passed out in his arms.
And Vil SchoenheitāSSS-Rank Guide, national treasure, and walking perfectionāstood there holding your limp, grime-covered, unconscious form with a complicated look on his face.
You came back to consciousness the way a phone boots up after being thrown into a wall. Slow, glitchy, and confused.
Something was warm under you. Something was very firm. You blinked a few times, trying to make sense of the strange sensation of not being in pain anymore. The Gate headache was gone. Your soul no longer felt like it had been sandpapered. You were, inexplicably, comfortable.
Thatās when you realized: you were still wrapped around the fancy Guide like a human backpack.
Face: mashed against his shoulder. Legs: around his waist. Arms: locked in a desperate hug like a koala going through a rough breakup. And he⦠was just sitting there. On a recovery bench. Completely calm. Holding you like this was something that happened to him all the time.
āOh,ā you mumbled, sleep-dazed. āMy bad.ā
He tilted his head, glossy hair catching the light like it had a sponsorship deal with a shampoo brand. āAre you done?ā he asked, voice sharp. āOr shall I assume youāve permanently relocated to my clavicle?ā
You peeled yourself off him with all the grace of wet laundry sliding off a countertop. āThanks for, uh, not letting me die,ā you offered, scratching your head.
He stared at you for a long moment. āDo you know who I am?ā
You blinked. āā¦A Guide?ā
He inhaled. Visibly. Offended on a spiritual level. The look on his face couldāve soured milk. āUnbelievable,ā he muttered. āAre you actively trying to offend me?ā
āWhat? Youāve got the badge! Thatās all I need, right?ā
Vil Schoenheitāas he introduced himselfāflicked you on the forehead. It was somehow both dismissive and full of judgment. āRecover. Properly.ā he snapped, standing in one fluid, graceful motion. āYouāre lucky Iām magnanimous.ā
He swept out of the room like a disgruntled ballerina.
You blinked after him, rubbing your forehead. āWhat the hell was that about?ā
A nurse walked in and immediately gasped like she'd just witnessed a royal birth. āOh my Sevenāwas that Vil?!ā
āVil⦠who?ā you asked, trying not to sound like an idiot.
She turned to you so fast her clipboard flew off the counter. āVil Schoenheit. SSS Guide. Heās a legend. Do you have any idea how many Espers have tried to bond with him and been turned away in tears?ā
You stared at the door where heād just vanished. āNo? He just kinda⦠guided me.ā
The nurse screeched. āYOU JUST KINDA GOT GUIDEDāare you INSANE? That man once made a Grade-SS Esper cry because they wore Crocs to an informal debriefing!ā
You slowly sat back against the pillow, eyes wide.
āā¦I told him āoops sorry lol.āā
You were still internally combusting about the whole āOops sorry lolā situation when you finally worked up the nerve to go to Vilās office. Not to bondāyou werenāt delusionalābut at the very least, to apologize. Maybe offer him a thank-you fruit basket. Or one of those luxury hair masks. Something.
Espers were better paid than Guides. That wasnāt a flexāit was just how the system worked. Youād always thought it was kind of unfair, but now, standing outside his office, you suddenly felt even worse. Because if Vil was being underpaid to deal with Espers, plural, like you? He deserved hazard pay.
You raised a shaky fist and knocked on the door before pushing it open.
The door opened, and you were hit with the distinct scent of wealth, vintage cologne, and spiritual intimidation. The office looked like it belonged in a magazine titled Power & Passive Aggression: Interiors for the Elite. It had velvet chairs. A chandelier. And on the floor, sobbing, was an SS-ranked Esper.
āPlease,ā she was whispering, clutching Vilās coat like he was the last lifeboat on the Titanic. āPlease, just once. I know Iām not SSS, but my compatibility score is so closeāā
āI donāt guide based on some arbitrary number,ā Vil said coolly, extracting himself with the same disdain you'd use to avoid stepping in gum. āI guide based on worth.ā
You were already edging away when his eyes snapped upāand softened.
āā¦What are you doing here?ā he asked, voice shifting so drastically in tone it gave you whiplash.
āIāuh. I just wanted to apologize. For, you know. The slumping. And the drool. And the calling you āa Guideā like youāre not the Guide.ā You laughed nervously. āAlso. Uh. I can repay you?ā
He stared at you like youād offered to give him pocket lint.
Then, without even glancing at the SS Esper still on the floor, he waved a perfectly manicured hand and said, āLeave.ā
She looked up, stunned. āW-what?ā
āI said leave.ā His voice sharpened like glass under velvet. āNow.ā
You watched her scramble out in silence. Then Vil turned to you, posture relaxing like you were an entirely different species of Esper.
āSit,ā he said, pointing to the velvet chair.
You obeyed. Of course you did. Your legs moved like they belonged to someone else.
āI didnāt come here to be guided,ā you said quickly. āI just thought Iād offer some compensation since you took care of me back at the Gate, andāā
āHush.ā
You blinked.
āI didnāt guide you for compensation,ā Vil said, moving closer, āand I certainly donāt require repayment.ā
āBut Iāā
āDo not interrupt me,ā he said smoothly, placing his hand just under your jaw and tilting your head with two fingers. āClose your eyes.ā
You did.
And just like before, the storm in your chest went still.
He hadnāt even made full contact yet, and already your frayed nerves calmed, your aching muscles relaxed, and that hollow echo left by the Gate quieted.
You opened your mouth to speak againābecause, honestly, who wouldnāt panic under that much raw focusābut his voice cut in before a single syllable escaped:
āDid I say you could talk?ā
You shut your mouth.
Vil smiled. Like heād just won something important, and wasnāt ready to tell anyone yet.
āGood. You learn quickly.ā
You staggered out of the Gate like a soldier crawling back from the front lines of a war no one believed in. Your clothes were singed, your limbs were shaking, your skin was buzzing with leftover energy that had nowhere to go, and your brain was running the Windows 95 shutdown noise on loop. You had fought monsters for the past hour with all the grace of a dying blender.
Everything hurt. Your body felt like it had been used as a battering ram. Your soul felt like it had been microwaved.
So when you saw the sweet, merciful glow of a Guide badge ahead in the crowd, your instincts took over. You staggered forward like a half-dead Roomba on its last cycle, locked onto the nearest beacon of safety.
The Guide in question had orange hair and the smug look of someone who thought they were Godās gift to humanity despite the fact they were clearly holding a vape pen and a clipboard.
You didnāt care.
You lurched toward him, arms outstretched like a cryptid emerging from the woods.
āBRO NO,ā he yelped. āDUDE, IāM NOT CERTIFIED FOR THIS LEVEL OF TRAUMAāDONāT PUKE ON MEāā
But before your forehead could connect with his very punchable shoulder, a blur of movement swept in.
You were yanked back by the collar like an untrained dog trying to bolt into traffic.
āAbsolutely not,ā a cool, smooth voice said with the unmistakable tone of expensive disdain. āYou are not grounding with him.ā
You turned sluggishly to your new captor and immediately forgot how to breathe.
Vil. Hair perfect despite the apocalyptic weather conditions of a gate zone. Wearing a coat that probably cost more than your entire existence and looking at you like you were a particularly unfortunate stain on said coat.
You blinked at him. āAm I in trouble?ā you mumbled.
Vil arched a brow. āYouāre seconds away from slumping onto a Guide who once tried to ground an Esper by playing lo-fi beats through his AirPods. Yes, youāre in trouble.ā
You were too tired to be offended.
He sighed, took your hand, and suddenly, bliss.
Like every nerve in your body was dunked in lavender oil and told to shut up. Your breathing evened out. Your vision cleared. Your bones climbed back into their sockets like, āOur bad, weāll behave now.ā
You let him guide you to a nearby bench, too dazed to do anything but follow the magical angel who had just saved you from the worst decision of your life.
Vil sat gracefully. You slumped next to him like a dying cactus in a thunderstorm.
āPost-gate recovery is non-negotiable,ā he said, like he hadnāt just watched you nearly expire in public.
You closed your eyes and focused on the cool, steady rhythm of his guidance, and thenā
A crinkle.
You opened one eye to see him pull a juice box from his bag. With a bendy straw.
He inserted the straw and handed it to you like you were a toddler whoād just had a very bad day at daycare.
You stared at the juice. Then at him. āIs this for me?ā
āNo,ā he said dryly. āItās for the other S-class Esper currently drooling on my coat.ā
You blinked, deeply touched. You took a sip.
It was⦠heavenly.
You made a soft noise, somewhere between a whimper and a sigh.
And thenāyour eyes stung.
āNo,ā Vil said immediately, without looking at you. āWhatever emotional reaction youāre about to haveādonāt.ā
You sniffled. āBut you brought me juice. Nobodyās brought me juice since I got classified. Everyone just shoves me into Gates and tells me not to die.ā
He flicked your forehead. āIf you die, I have to find another Esper whose personality doesnāt give me hives. That sounds exhausting.ā
āAre you⦠saying you like me?ā
āIām saying your emotional resilience is marginally less pathetic than average,ā he said, adjusting your posture so your head leaned more comfortably on his shoulder. āAnd I donāt hate your voice.ā
You sipped your juice box, trembling like a Victorian child given a warm meal for the first time.
No one had treated you like this since you joined the system. Youād been weaponized, categorized, and told to sit still and kill things on command. You were a tool. A number. A sharp object.
But Vil wasnāt afraid of your sharp edges. He looked you in the eye and said, āThatās a guide badge youāre drooling on, potato. Not a chew toy.ā
And then gave you juice.
You sniffled again.
āIf you sob, I will end you,ā he muttered, but his hand never let go of yours.
And you knew, deep in your wrecked little Esper heart, that you would fight a thousand more gates just to be guided by him again.
Even if he bullied you the entire time.
So apparently, post-gate recovery hadnāt just been juice boxes and emotionally confusing hand-holding.
No. It turned out you had to take something called a Routine Compatibility Check for āguidance efficiency optimization.ā
You hadnāt known what any of that meant, but someone had shoved a clipboard at you and told you to āgo sit in the glow room and donāt touch anything,ā so there you were. Sitting in a sterile white room that smelled like hand sanitizer and despair. Waiting to meet your newly assigned āguidance match.ā
A door creaked open.
You turned aroundāand in walked a guy who looked like he hadnāt seen direct sunlight since the invention of the lightbulb. His shoulders were hunched, hoodie too big, blue glowing hair all mussed like heād lost a fight with a hairdryer. He had eyebags for days and the posture of a raccoon caught mid-fridge-raid.
He looked at you.
You looked at him.
He looked at you harderāand visibly recoiled like youād just bit him.
āā¦Uhhh,ā he said, voice high and trembling. āYouāre the S-class?ā
āYup,ā you replied.
āOh no.ā
This man looked like he was seconds from writing āHELPā on the window with a dry erase marker. His hand was already twitching toward the panic button. He was mentally Googling āwhat to do when assigned a battle demon.ā
You opened your mouth to say something reassuringālike, āHey, I only explode on some guides,ā or āIāve never actually flattened a building during a meltdownāā
ābut the door slammed open behind you.
āAbsolutely not.ā
You turned around.
Vil Schoenheit stood in the doorway like the wrath of God dressed in Gucci. Impeccable coat. Sunglasses indoors. Holding a coffee cup that you knew wasnāt from the office vending machine.
He eyed the situationāyour tentative shuffle toward your new guide, the way the poor guy was gripping his ID badge like a rosaryāand his lip curled like someone had just handed him expired tofu.
āIām taking them,ā Vil said flatly to the Guidance Office rep standing nearby. āThis is non-negotiable.ā
The rep blinked. āBut, Mr. Schoenheit, the matchāā
āāwas laughable. Theyāre mine.ā
Your poor assigned guide looked so relieved it was almost insulting.
āThank the stars,ā he mumbled, already gathering his things like you were a bomb thatād just been safely disarmed. āNo offense, but I really donāt do well with⦠uh⦠physical contact or eye contact or conflict orāā
You were too stunned to reply as Vil grabbed you by the wrist, effortlessly pivoted on his heel, and strode out of the room with you in tow like a high fashion tornado.
You stumbled after him. āOkay, hi, hello? What was that?ā
āI saw your assignment,ā Vil said coolly. āI couldnāt, in good conscience, let that continue.ā
āButāI thought you werenāt accepting new matches?ā
āIām not.ā
You blinked. āSoā¦?ā
He glanced over his shoulder at you, slow and deliberate, like you werenāt quite connecting the dots fast enough.
āI didnāt consider you ānew'.ā
You shut your mouth because your brain was full of static. Something about the way he said that made your knees consider filing for divorce from the rest of your body.
He guided you all the way to the elevator, in silence, while you tried to process what had just happened.
You, apparently, had been claimed.
And worst of all?
You thought you might have liked it.
It all started with a noble quest. A simple dream.
You just wanted a hoodie.
Not a fancy one. Not a designer one. Not a limited edition āinspired by the blood of fashion victimsā collection. No, no. You wanted one of those oversized, marshmallow-soft hoodies that whispered ālay down and give up, my liegeā every time you put it on. The kind of hoodie that could absorb emotional damage.
So there you were. Financially stable (thanks, murder gates), emotionally unstable (thanks, murder gates), and elbows-deep in a display bin labeled ā3 for 2: Emotional Support Wearā, when fate struck.
Or rather, sashayed past in four-inch heels and an aura of contempt.
Vil.
You froze. He looked like heād just walked out of a fashion spread. Every strand of hair in place. Jacket tailored within an inch of its life. Cheekbones that could slice open a space-time rift. And where was he going?
Naturally, you turned the other way. This was not your world. You were not dressed for it. You were wearing sweatpants and a t-shirt with a questionable graphic of a goose wielding a knife. You were simply a humble raccoon-person in search of softness.
But thenā
āYou.ā
Oh no. Oh god. Oh no god.
You turned around slowly, hoodie clutched to your chest like a shield. Vil stood there with shopping bags and the expression of someone whoād just discovered a stray in his favorite restaurant.
āCome. I need hands.ā
āSorry,ā you said. āI left mine at home. Canāt help you.ā
He blinked. Then, with all the confidence of someone who didnāt hear nonsense, he handed you his bags and turned around, fully expecting you to follow.
And you did. Because unfortunately, curiosity was stronger than shame.
The next hour? Was⦠actually kind of amazing.
Vil didnāt shop. He conquered. He moved through stores like a well-dressed storm, flinging judgment at poor fabric choices and muttering dark things about asymmetrical hemlines. Store staff parted for him like he was royalty. Other customers wilted under the weight of his gaze.
You, meanwhile, trailed after him like a high-end goblin, carrying his many, many bags, dressed like a sleep-deprived college student who had just lost a fight with a laundry machine.
It was great.
You watched him try on outfits with the kind of reverence usually reserved for museum pieces. He was graceful. Efficient. Disgustingly photogenic. You felt like you were witnessing a documentary: āThe Endangered Fashion Icon in His Natural Habitat.ā
And then, miraculously, he let you live.
He suggested a coffee break and even let you payāprobably out of pity. You made a mental note to deduct it as a business expense under āaccidental deity encounter.ā
Sitting across from him, sipping overpriced lattes, you made a joke. Something dumb. Something about a pair of jeans you'd seen that looked like they'd been personally attacked by a cheese grater.
Vil laughed.
You were not prepared.
It was real. Warm. Shockingly cute. Like, āIāve been guiding murder monsters all week and now suddenly I believe in joy againā kind of cute.
You stared. He looked at you. You looked away, sipping your drink very intently, trying not to say āplease laugh again, it heals my soul.ā
You didn't say it out loud.
But you thought it really hard.
You walked into Vil's office like a responsible little murder gremlin, fully prepared for your weekly check-up guidance session.
What you were not prepared for was the sheer atmospheric rage brewing inside.
Vil was pacing like a cat who'd just realized its favorite toy was in the hands of a toddlerāabsolutely done with life. He was muttering to himself under his breath, phrases like, āEspers with zero gratitude... how dare they ask for guidance without a thank-you,ā and, āI swear if one more person thinks my time is free like it's some kind of community resourceā
He saw you, exhaled the deepest sigh known to man, and pointed at the couch like he was casting a curse. Not a word of greeting. Just The Finger of Sit.
So you sat. For about three seconds.
Then, something in your little gremlin heart said: No. He is cranky. He is suffering. This is a job for Emotional Support Esper.
You got up, walked behind him, andāwithout a wordāstarted massaging his shoulders.
Vil tensed like a cat about to fight god. Then slowlyāslowlyāmelted into it.
āThis isnāt part of your session,ā he grumbled, but it lacked bite. His head tilted forward, giving you better access. āYouāre not guiding me, you know.ā
āIām aware,ā you said, digging your thumbs in just right. āYouāre welcome.ā
He didnāt reply. Just⦠breathed. It was weirdly serene. You, massaging one of the most powerful and terrifying guides in the country. Him, finally looking like he wasnāt five seconds away from incinerating someone with nothing but his glare.
Eventually, you sat back down on the couch. And thenāshock of all shocksāVil slumped down next to you.
No dramatic speech. No biting commentary. Just one very exhausted, very overworked guide leaning on your shoulder like gravity had personally betrayed him.
āā¦Donāt say a word about this,ā he murmured, eyes already closed. He reached for your hand, like it was the most normal thing in the world, and held it tight.
You stayed there for a long time.
You didnāt move. You didnāt speak.
You just sat with him in silence, wondering how the hell youād gone from emotional demolition expert to comfort pillow. And, weirdly, feeling kind of honored.
You werenāt sure how you got home, but judging by the trail of blood, sludge, and crushed energy drink cans leading up the stairs, you had clearly made the journey using sheer spite and possibly a small miracle. Your legs moved on autopilot, powered by rage, trauma, and about four remaining brain cellsānone of which were cooperating.
Youād just come back from a gate that had gone so poorly, it might as well have been cursed by the gods, the devs, and your second-grade math teacher. Breach. Casualties. Screaming.
There was definitely a moment where you almost flung a monster into a building and then screamed louder when you realized it was the emergency response building. Whoops.
It wasnāt even your assigned gate. It was a last-minute scramble. You and a handful of other S-rank espers were yanked in because the gate was behaving badly. Like, āsnarling, vomiting monsters that defied physicsā badly. And youāfoolish, heroic, caffeine-soaked gremlin that you wereāran in first like someone had dared you.
You fought. You fought so hard you forgot your own name for about two hours. And still, people died. People always died. But this time, it felt like too many. You saw a little kidās shoe and had a breakdown mid-punch. You tried to do everything, and your body just⦠stopped cooperating.
You didnāt even get guided afterward.
Vil wasn't at this gate. The other guides were all assigned or recovering themselves. Some were crying. A few had fainted from strain.
And you? You looked around, felt your knees give out a little, then just muttered āokay coolā and left like a ghost clocking out after a double shift at a haunted Wendyās.
By the time you reached your apartment, you were so dissociated you forgot how doors worked. You stood outside yours for a full minute before realizing the knob turned left. You walked in, left your boots and weapon where they fell, and didnāt even consider locking the door behind you.
Let fate come. Let a gate burst into your living room. Let some criminal wander in and steal your furniture. That was Future Youās problem. Current You was Busy.
You peeled yourself out of your battle gear like a sad, oversized fruit roll-up, leaving it in a heap that would absolutely start growing mold by tomorrow. You wandered to the kitchen, opened the fridge, stared inside for three solid minutes, and then closed it again. There was nothing in there but expired yogurt, an empty ketchup bottle, and the overwhelming sense of despair. Just like your soul.
Your eyes landed on the couch. You made eye contact. It made eye contact back.
You didnāt go to your bed. The bed had too much hope. The couch? The couch knew. The couch had seen things. It was your emotional support furniture, and it beckoned you with lumpy cushions and the faint scent of Febreze and failure.
You collapsed into it with the grace of a dying walrus, grabbed the nearest throw blanket like a life raft, and curled up.
Your muscles throbbed. Your eyes were dry, too tired to cry. Your heart was heavy and hollow, a contradiction wrapped in fatigue.
You didnāt call the Guidance Office.
You didnāt reach for your communicator.
You didnāt even consider getting guided.
Because why would you?
You hadnāt earned it.
Guidance was for espers who did good. Who came back whole. Who saved people and feel okay about it.
You didnāt want anyone to see you like this. Least of all Vilāthe most terrifyingly elegant guide in existence, whose soothing voice could calm a charging bull but whose judgmental stare could reduce you to ash on the spot. You could already imagine it:
āPotato, why didnāt you call?ā And youād go, āBecause I sucked. And also I was busy eating my weight in sadness on my couch.ā
So no. No guidance. No messages. No crying. Just you, your depression blanket, and your ever-growing collection of trauma under a mountain of emotional avoidance.
You passed out like that, too. Face-down, limbs sprawled, snoring gently, still wearing one sock and gripping the couch cushion like it owed you rent.
And in the hallway, your door remained unlocked.
Because honestly?
Let the monsters come.
Youād either sleep through it or invite them in for leftover yogurt and mutual despair.
You woke up feeling like a truck had hit you, reversed, parked on your spine, and left its high beams on just to be petty. Every bone in your body creaked like an abandoned haunted house. Your mouth tasted like regret and half a protein bar. Your blanket was half off the couch, half on the floor, and a mysterious corn chip was stuck to your elbow.
You blinked at the ceiling in confusion. Then your phone screamed.
100 missed calls.
37 texts.
All from: Vil Schoenheit.
Each message angrier than the last.
The final one simply said: āPick. Up. Now.ā
You did.
The moment the line connected, there was a beat of silenceāthen his voice, sharp and low like the edge of a knife:
āAddress. Now.ā
You mumbled something barely coherent, possibly your zip code, possibly the ingredients of a burrito. Either way, you texted him your location, dropped the phone on your chest, and passed out again like a Sims character who ignored every need bar until they collapsed.
The next time you woke up, it was to someone violently shaking you like they were trying to exorcise a demon.
āThe door was wide open. Wide. Open. Are you out of your mind?! What if someone broke in?! What if something followed you?! What ifāā
You cracked one eye open. Vil was kneeling beside your couch in full luxury casuals, flawless hair tied back in a silk ribbon, eyes blazing with a fury usually reserved for war crimes or off-season fashion.
āWhy didnāt you call me?!ā he snapped, voice wobbling between fury and panic.
You sat up slowly. Your limbs felt like wet noodles. You looked at himāactually looked at himāand saw the edges of worry in his perfect posture. You didnāt think. You just leaned forward and wrapped your arms around him, clinging to his surprisingly warm, cologne-scented form like a soggy baby koala.
He froze.
Then he hugged you back, one arm sliding firmly around your waist, the other hand smoothing over your hair with a tenderness that made your throat tighten.
āYou didnāt respond,ā he murmured, voice much softer now, like heād deflated the moment you touched him. āI was at a gate, and youāyou shouldāve called me. You idiot.ā
āI didnāt deserve it,ā you croaked, still clinging. āI couldnāt save everyone. I didnāt earn it. I didnātāā
THWACK.
He flicked you so hard on the forehead you saw colors. You yelped and recoiled, holding your skull like heād smacked you with a frying pan.
āOWāwhat the hell, Vil?!ā
āUse your brain,ā he snapped. āYou donāt have to earn guidance. You lived. You fought. You made it back. Thatās enough.ā
You stared at him, stunned and blinking. Your brain, which had been curled in a ball screaming failure failure failure, screeched to a halt. It didnāt know what to do with this information. It flailed.
ā...butāā
āNo.ā He pressed two fingers to your temple. āQuiet.ā
And just like that, warmth bloomed across your skin. Calm, grounding, steady. His presence wrapped around your rattled mind like a weighted blanket.
You hadnāt realized how loud your thoughts had been until everything went quiet.
You slumped forward again, forehead on his shoulder.
āā¦thank you,ā you whispered.
He made a soft, exasperated noise and squeezed your hand.
āNext time,ā he muttered, āif you donāt call me, I will drag you to a spa against your will and lock you in a bathhouse for six hours.ā
Honestly?
That sounded kind of nice.
You nodded into his shoulder and let the warmth pull you under again.
It wasnāt a thunderbolt moment. There was no dramatic gasp, no heart-skipping beat, no rom-com soundtrack swelling in the background.
No. It happened while Vil was in the middle of passionately criticizing your instant ramen consumption.
āYou donāt even check the sodium levels, do you? Of course not. Why would you? That would require basic self-preservation instincts, which you clearly lack,āare you even listening to me?ā
You were, actually. Kind of. Mostly you were just watching the way his eyes flashed when he got worked up, how his voice lilted, how his hair caught the light like he had a personal filter on at all times. His hands moved a lot when he was madāelegant, precise little gestures like he was conducting an orchestra of outrage.
And somewhere in the middle of him saying something about how your body was ānot a landfill for factory-processed poison,ā you thought:
Wow. Heās perfect.
There was a pause.
A silence that felt loud in your own brain.
Not because he noticedāno, he was still going. But you did. You noticed. And you felt your entire emotional infrastructure collapse like a badly built IKEA table.
You sat there, nodding along, eyes wide and empty like a man realizing heād dropped his phone into lava. Because you knew exactly what this meant.
You were so, so screwed.
You didnāt even try to deny it. You were too tired for that. Too experienced in emotional disasters to think, āmaybe itās just a crush!ā
Nah. You liked him. For real. In the "Iād wear sunscreen just to impress him" kind of way. In the "he could tell me I look homeless and Iād say thank you" kind of way.
So, you just accepted your fate.
You nodded solemnly while Vil insulted your meal plan and thought:
Well. I guess this is my life now. Time to emotionally implode in private.
You werenāt going to tell him. Absolutely not. The man had standards higher than Mount Everest. You were a gremlin in sweatpants. He guided you out of what had to be some misplaced sense of moral responsibility, not because he liked you.
So, your plan was simple: keep it quiet. Let the crush rot in your chest. Maybe it would fade. Maybe Vil would never find out. Maybe youād survive.
ā¦Maybe.
āAre you even paying attention?ā Vil snapped, snapping his fingers in your face.
You jolted back to reality. āYes! Yes. Sodium bad. Body temple. I got it.ā
He narrowed his eyes, suspicious. āYouāre acting weirder than usual.ā
āIām always weird,ā you said quickly. āThatās my brand. Very consistent.ā
He sighed dramatically and pinched the bridge of his nose. āHopeless.ā
You watched him for a second longer and thought, God, Iām doomed.
And then you smiled and said, āYeah. But at least Iām charming about it.ā
He rolled his eyes.
But he didnāt deny it.
You were just trying to survive. Thatās all.
Because being around Vil Schoenheit every other day, breathing the same air as him while he guided you while scolding you, was no longer tenable. Your heart was staging a full-blown coup against your sanity.
Every smirk he threw your way shaved years off your life. Every time he flicked your forehead for being ārecklessā or āinsufferableā or āa walking cautionary tale,ā you internally swooned like a Victorian maiden on a fainting couch.
So, you did what any emotionally fragile raccoon-person would do when faced with unattainable love and regular exposure to flawless cheekbones: you fled.
To the Guidance Office.
You kept your voice steady when you asked for your previous guideās contact. The poor intern looked like heād rather explode than question you, especially once he realized who your current guide was.
Still, he handed over the transfer form and you sat down, heart racing, tapping your pen like a death drum. You were halfway through scribbling your tragic little freedom request whenā
A shadow loomed.
Perfume wafted.
And the temperature dropped ten degrees.
You didnāt even have time to look up before the form was snatched from your hands with all the grace of a man committing a stylish crime.
āUp. Now.ā
Vilās voice was frost and fury and every hair on your body stood up like soldiers called to war.
You stumbled after him, too stunned to protest, as he marched you through the hallways with terrifying grace. You passed several people who were clearly wondering if they were witnessing a kidnapping, but no one dared interfere.
His office door slammed shut behind you, and he turned on you like a beautifully irate weather phenomenon.
Thenārip.
Your transfer form disintegrated in his hands.
āOUT,ā he snapped, voice tight, angry. āIf youāre going to be a complete and utter fool, then get out of my sight.ā
You blinked. āWhatāwhy are you mad? Iām doing you a favor!ā
āA favor?ā he repeated, like youād just spat in a glass of ChĆ¢teau Margaux.
You held your ground, though you were 97% sure he could kill you with a single sigh. āYou didnāt want to guide me in the first place! Iāmālook, Iām making it easier for both of us. No more clingy potato energy. No more⦠emotional spirals. You can guide someone who isnāt a complete mess.ā
He stared at you, eyes narrowed, jaw tense, and then heākissed you.
No warning. No build-up. Just lips crashing against yours like your poor little romantic delusions had summoned it from the abyss. His hands cupped your face, tilting it just right, and youāfroze.
You opened your mouth to say something.
He kissed you again.
This time, slower. Angrier. Like he was trying to shove every word you werenāt letting him say directly into your bloodstream.
āI love you,ā he hissed when he finally pulled away, chest heaving. āYou stupid, overthinking potato.ā
You blinked. āIāwait, what?ā
āOh, now youāre speechless?ā he snapped, pacing. āYou think I guide you because itās convenient? You think I chose to rip you away from that quivering ball of social anxiety just to be charitable? I donāt have to guide anyone. I chose you.ā
You were still stuck on the part where he said āI love youā and hadnāt immediately revoked it.
He pointed at you. āSit down.ā
You sat. Immediately.
He sat next to you, crossed one leg over the other, and glared. āWeāre going to talk about this. Then youāre going to delete the idea of transferring from your thick, tragically underutilized brain. Understood?ā
āā¦Yes?ā
āGood. And drink some water. You look like youāre about to combust.ā
You obeyed. Because frankly? You were.
āYouāre serious?ā you asked, voice a little cracked around the edges, sitting on his plush office chair like you were squatting in a throne you had absolutely no right to. āYou love me?ā
Vil stared at you with the exhausted patience of a man who had been in love with a rock for three years. āYes. Iāve loved you for a while, and youāā he poked you in the forehead again, harder this time, āāhave been blissfully, astoundingly oblivious.ā
āThatās not fair,ā you said, already sweating. āYouāre very hard to read!ā
āIām not,ā he said flatly. āYouāre just emotionally illiterate.ā
āGive me one example.ā
āOh, one?ā He tilted his head and actually laughed, as if he had been waiting for this moment. āLetās start small, then. Remember the time I brought you a silk-lined weighted blanket because you said you liked ābeing squished by fabricā and your apartment āfelt like a haunted fridge?āā
You blinked. āI thought that was just you mocking me with luxury.ā
āI custom-ordered it in your favorite color and personally dropped it off.ā
āā¦Okay, thatās fair.ā
āAnd what about the emergency juice box I carry around exclusively for you, because you tend to spiral into a puddle after difficult gates and refuse to ask for help?ā
āā¦You said that was because Iām āemotionally six.āā
āThat was a joke.ā He ran a hand through his hair, then pointed at you again. āWhat about when I held your hand during guidance and you told me, āThis is wildly intimate,ā and I said, āThatās the idea, darling,ā and you laughed and said, āHa ha good one,ā and proceeded to talk about raccoons for twenty minutes?ā
Your face was hot. Like boiling kettle hot. You were being roasted over the open flames of your own idiocy.
Vil, now fully in his villain origin arc, stood up, arms crossed. āOr the time I made you lunch because you skipped breakfast three days in a row and you cried a little, and I wiped your tears, and you said, āYouād make such a good husband, wow,ā and then called me bro.ā
āI was tired that day,ā you whispered.
He paced. āI took a personal day to guide you after that one breach because you refused post-gate care. I showed up at your house! You were curled up like a soggy blanket and told me you didnāt deserve comfort, and I guided you anyway! I even brought snacks!ā
You were holding your head in your hands now, processing. āOh my god. Iām the clown. Iām the whole circus.ā
Vil sighed and came to kneel beside you again, gentler now. He pulled your hands from your face and took them in his, lacing your fingers together like it was second nature. āI assumed you didn't like me. But this?ā He smiled a little. āThis is honestly worse.ā
āOkay. Ouch.ā
āI love you,ā he repeated, quieter now, thumb brushing over your knuckles. āIāve loved you for a long time. And I donāt want you to change guides. I want you to stay.ā
You looked down at your joined hands. Then up at his face, soft and real and so, so stupidly beautiful.
ā...Can I kiss you again?ā you asked.
He rolled his eyes. āFinally.ā
And he did. And this time, when he kissed you, you didnāt freeze or black out or say anything about raccoons. You just held him closer and kissed him back, trying very hard not to think about how many brain cells youād wasted missing the obvious.
(But you did apologize to him later. After the third kiss. And after asking if heād consider writing a āVil Schoenheitās Guide to Realizing Your Guide is Flirtingā manual for future dumbasses like yourself.)
The first time Vil met you was⦠unfortunate.
You'd collapsed on him like a sandbag flung from the heavens by a god with no taste.
He'd been called in to assist after a gate breachānothing unusual, really, just a high-stress emergency with far too many untrained espers and not enough functioning brain cells among them. His job was to stabilize, guide, and keep anyone from combusting mentally or emotionally, preferably both. It was clinical, routine, and efficient.
Until you.
You stumbled out of the smoke and screaming with wild eyes and your uniform half-burnt, looking like youād just gone twelve rounds with the concept of mortality. You locked eyes with himābriefly, like a bird recognizing glass mid-flightāand then passed out straight into his arms.
Correction: onto him.
He wasnāt sure how you managed to fall with such inconvenient geometry, but one moment he was standing, perfectly composed, and the next he had an unconscious stranger face-planting onto him, limbs sprawled like a freshly felled tree.
His first thought was: Excuse you?
His second: Do they not know who I am?
Honestly, the offense was justified. People didnāt usually touch Vil without permission, let alone treat him like a fainting couch. And yet when the medics arrived to assist, he waved them off with a sigh, brushing soot out of your hair and stabilizing your exhausted psyche with the practiced ease of someone too annoyed to be fazed. You were just another Esper, he told himself. Another mess to be cleaned up.
Then you woke up.
You blinked at him. Groggy. Confused. Soft in the eyes in a way that caught him off guard. āOh,ā you mumbled, voice hoarse. āSorry. My bad.ā
No recognition. No fawning. No demands for priority guidance.
Just thatāthanksālike he was your local neighborhood guide and not one of the most in-demand SSS-ranks in the country.
And that was when it happened: the first crack.
A hairline fracture in his perfectly sculpted composure. Something warm and startlingly gentle wedged itself in his chest. The faint, whispering thought: Theyāre not like the others.
He'd left soon after and that should've been the end of it.
But the next day, you came to his office. Not to request a partnership. Not to ask for more guidance sessions. Not even to praise his skill, as most did when they finally found out who he was.
No.
You walked in with a slightly bent energy drink and said, āHi. Just wanted to thank you again. For yesterday. And, like, if you want anythingācoffee, or uh, a meal, or maybe a really good nap on my couchāI can return the favor.ā
He blinked. āYou're offering me compensation?ā
āYeah,ā you said, like it was obvious. āI didnāt mean to fall on you. Also, you helped me not die. That deserves at least a smoothie.ā
He stared at you. You stared back, unbothered and vaguely hopeful, like someone trying to barter with a raccoon theyād wronged in a past life.
And thatās when the thought struck him:
I wish more Espers were like this.
Earnest. Direct. Not wrapped in ego or desperation. You treated him like a person and not a tool or a celebrity. Like someone who deserved appreciation, not worship.
He didnāt say yes to your offer.
And later that evening, sipping the mango smoothie you left on his desk with a sticky note that said āThanks again, Your Highness,ā Vil caught himself smiling.
Disaster or not, you had⦠made an impression.
And for better or worse, that impression was starting to stick.
Soon, he found himself buying your favorite juice on the way to work.
He told himself it was to bribe you into being less reckless. That he just āhappenedā to know your favorite. That it was a coincidence.
He also started carrying headache meds. And bandaids. And snacks. And spare gloves because you kept losing yours and pretending you didnāt need them.
A week later, he spotted you in the hallway again. You were coming out of a gate looking like youād been mugged by gravity and a brick. But what truly horrified Vil was not your appearance (which was a hate crime against fashion), but the fact that you were about to be guided by someone else.
Some junior Guide with too much gel in his hair and the audacity to step away from you.
Vil's soul left his body.
He didnāt even think. He stomped across the hallway, yanked you away like a cat stealing laundry, and declared, āAbsolutely not.ā
You blinked. āWhat?ā
āGuiding you. Sit down. Shut up.ā
ā...Okay?ā
Heād never been so professionally compromised. He gave you the most aggressive, possessive, emotionally repressed guiding session in history. It was like channeling affection through gritted teeth.
He was doomed.
Vil Schoenheit was a man of control. Precision. Elegance. He kept his calendar color-coded, his wardrobe steamed, and his guiding sessions timed to the minute.
So when he heard through the grapevine that you were about to be reassigned to another Guideābecause of some nonsense about ācompatibility testsā and āemotional interferenceā (rude)āhe did not react well.
No, he did not pout.
He did not sulk.
He marched directly to the Guidance Office, pulled rank in that way that only Vil couldāpart charm, part cold-blooded menaceāand made it very clear that you were off the market.
āThis Esper is mine,ā he said, crisp and cool like a glacier in a fur coat. āOfficially. Put it in writing.ā
The poor intern at the desk blinked up at him, then at the screen.
āUm⦠you mean, you want toā?ā
āYes. I want to take full responsibility for their guiding.ā
āSir, do you mean romanticallyā?ā
āProfessionally.ā A beat. āFor now.ā
Vil was shopping for seasonal essentials, which of course required strategic planning, multiple fitting rooms, and approximately seventeen judgmental head tilts. He saw you wandering out of a soft-clothes store with a hoodie that looked like a blanket and a dream.
You saw him.
You tried to leave.
He grabbed your wrist.
āI need hands,ā he said.
āFor what?ā
āEverything.ā
And then he handed you a bag and moved on like a model on a mission.
You carried his bags for hours. You offered no complaints, just commentary like, āThat color makes your cheekbones illegal,ā and āIf I try that on Iāll look like a deflated beanbag.ā You actually enjoyed yourself.
And it wasnāt polite or dismissive. It was the kind of laugh that knocked loose something in his ribcage. The kind that made him stare at you over the rim of his drink and realize, with full-body horror:
Iām doomed.
Because he liked you.
He really, really liked you.
Not in the āyouāre tolerable and I guess I wonāt smite youā way. In the āI want to wring your neck for not wearing gloves but also maybe hold your handā way. The āI will destroy that junior Guide if he even looks at you againā way. The āplease stop getting injured or I will cry and then deny it until the sun explodesā way.
And you had no idea.
You were still out here calling yourself āemotionally bulletproofā and stealing his granola bars like it was normal. Still calling him āVilbo Bagginsā and poking his forehead like you werenāt holding the shreds of his dignity in your little chaos-stained hands.
So yes. Vil was doomed.
And he couldnāt even blame you.
Because of all the Espers in the world, it had to be youāyou with your messy hair and shiny eyes and stupid brave heart.
Fast-forward to a Tuesday. Or maybe Thursday. Vil had lost track. It had been a day full of Espers with no manners, no boundaries, and one who tried to touch his hair mid-guiding.
By the time you wandered into his office, he was one broken string away from full violin villainy.
And for once, you didnāt joke.
No "Whatās up, Guidezilla?"
No "Did your skincare try to abandon you too?"
You just took one look at him, walked over, andāgentlyāplaced your hands on his shoulders.
Vil froze.
You kneaded the tight muscles there with surprising skill. Still no words. Just the quiet press of your thumbs, the steady warmth of your touch. And when he exhaledāshaky, involuntaryāyou didnāt tease him for it.
You just said, softly, āYou donāt always have to do everything alone, you know.ā
And that was when he broke a little.
Not obviously. But his posture slumped just slightly. His head tilted just enough to rest against your shoulder. Not even for a minuteāmaybe twenty seconds.
But it was enough.
Enough to make him realize: This is the safest Iāve felt all day.
And the fact that it was youāyou, with your chaos and your grin and your glitter stickers stuck to your ID badgeāthat was terrifying. And comforting. And utterly, stupidly addicting.
He didnāt say thank you. Not out loud.
But later, when you werenāt looking, he moved your next few guiding sessions to the prime slot on his calendar. The one reserved for important things.
And in his fridge?
There was already more of your favorite juice.
He told himself it was just being thorough.
He was a liar.
It had started like any other deployment day. You and he had both been assigned to different gates, which wasnāt uncommon anymore. It was annoyingāyes, he preferred to keep you in armās reach like a chaotic, overly affectionate pet raccoonābut manageable. You hadnāt called, hadnāt messaged, so he assumed it was fine. Maybe you were too tired. Maybe youād just fallen asleep.
But then he heard the reports.
Talk around the guidance center was that your gate had gone bad. A breach. Casualties. They'd barely managed to contain it. The kind of mission that rattled even the seasoned Espers.
Vil had frozen mid-conversation, a pen slipping from his hand and clattering onto his desk.
āDid they get guided after?ā he asked, voice sharp.
The other Guide had shrugged. āApparently not. Took off the moment debrief ended.ā
And that was when the spiral started.
He called you. Once. Twice. Ten times. Fifty. A hundred.
Pacing his office like a man possessed, he left increasingly deranged voicemails.
ā"Pick up your phone, I swear to the God, if you are ghosting me because youāre feeling āemotionally crunchyā againā"
āāIf you're hurt, I need to know. If you're not hurt, I'm going to kill you myself.ā
āāPotato, Iām serious. Answer the phone.ā
When you finally picked up, sounding groggy and like someone had drop-kicked your soul, all you said was:
āā¦Vil?ā
And that was enough.
āAddress. Now.ā
You sent him a dropped pin and then promptly passed out again.
Heād never gotten to your place so fast in his life. Nearly crashed into two pedestrians, scared a delivery driver into a full existential crisis, and parked in a tow zone without blinking.
The front door was unlocked.
He burst in like divine judgment, only to find you curled up on your couch like a sad, emotionally fried ferret.
āYou left the door open. What if someone hadā?! You didnāt evenā! I called you a hundred times! Why didnāt youā!?ā
You blinked up at him, slow and a little disoriented. āVil?ā
He was kneeling next to the couch before he realized it, shaking you like an overcaffeinated nurse trying to keep a patient conscious. āWhy didnāt you call me?!ā
Your voice was small. āDidnāt think I deserved to.ā
Something in Vil's chest cracked with a soundless, incandescent rage. Not at you. Never at you.
At the situation. At himself. At the idiocy of a world where someone like youāwho put yourself on the line for people who didnāt know your nameācould think for one second you didnāt deserve comfort.
You sat up and hugged him before he could speak. And Vil, for all his pride and poise, let you.
He guided you right there on the couch, arms wrapped tightly around you like he could anchor all your scattered pieces back into place with sheer force of will. His fingers were steady against your temple, his voice low and soothing.
You didn't fight it this time. Not really. You were too tired. Too raw.
But later, when you were dozing against him and he felt the weight of your breathing even out, he looked at you and thought:
If I ever lose them, I donāt know if Iāll survive it.
And he realized, with an unflinching kind of horror, that this wasnāt just fondness anymore.
This was love. Stupid, all-consuming, feral love.
Oh, when Vil saw the transfer form in your handsāhis potato, his utterly chaotic, absurdly self-sacrificing, emotionally constipated Esperāfilling out a request to switch Guides?
He saw red. No, scratch that. He saw every shade of fury on the spectrum. He didnāt even remember walking; one moment he was across the hallway, the next he had the form in his fist and you in his office, the door slammed shut behind you with enough force to rattle the entire floor.
āWhat. Is. This.ā
You blinked at him like a cat caught stealing food, caught between guilt and indifference. āA transfer form? Iāuh. Itās not a big dealāā
āNot aāā Vil looked genuinely scandalized. If he wore pearls, he wouldāve clutched them. āDo you think Iām running a halfway house for wayward Espers?! I have been guiding you, carrying juice boxes for you, putting up with your ridiculous snacks, and you think this isnāt a big deal?!ā
You stared at him, flustered and slightly confused. āIāI just thought maybe itād be easier for both of us if I wasnātālikeāaround all the time, you know? Iām not exactly low maintenanceāā
Vilās brain short-circuited.
He kissed you.
No thought. Just lips. Panic. Longing. Rage. Chapstick.
Your sentence died like a bug on a windshield.
Vil pulled back just long enough to snarl, āI love you, you stupid overthinking potato.ā
You blinked.
āIāwhatāā
He kissed you again. You werenāt going to ruin this with words. Not today.
When he finally let you breathe, you looked dizzy. In love. Slightly offended. Vil understood.
āYouāve been in love with me?ā you asked, voice very much in the āI missed every single sign like a blind NPC in a dating simā zone.
āOh finally,ā Vil groaned. āYes. For ages. Do you think I just carry juice boxes for anyone? I had to go to a wholesaler to find your weird imported apple-lychee thing. I do not do that for strangers.ā
You looked like the Earth had tilted sideways. āOh my god. I thought you were justālike that.ā
āāLike that?!āā he cried. āI forced you to carry my shopping bags through an entire mall and called it a bonding experience! I let you pay for my coffee! I let you touch me when I was emotionally unbalanced! Me!ā
āOh my god,ā you said again, very softly. āI am Stupid.ā
Vil sighed like he was asking the universe for strength. āYes. But youāre mine now. So unless you want to see what a real tantrum looks like, stop trying to fill out transfer forms like weāre in some tragic rom-com and just stay.ā
You looked at him for a moment, soft and stunned and still processing the part where he said āI love youā more than once.
Then you reached for him, and he let you pull him into a hug, and despite everythingādespite the rage, the confusion, the two destroyed pens on his desk and the emotional whiplashāyou smiled into his shoulder like you couldnāt quite believe your luck.
Vil closed his eyes.
And all he could think was:
If I have to live in this ridiculous, broken world... let it be with you.
You didnāt expect it to come up like this.
You were lying on Vilās fancy designer couch, head on his lap, while he scrolled through his tablet like he wasnāt also playing with your hair and ruining your heart. It was a quiet kind of peace, the kind you didnāt get often, the kind you didnāt want to jinx.
Which is exactly why he jinxed it.
āI want to permanently bond,ā he said, tone casual in the way a gun cocking across the room is casual.
You blinked. āWhat?ā
He looked down at you like you were the idiot for not reading his mind faster.
āI donāt want to guide anyone else,ā he said. āYouāre mine.ā
Your heart made a sound like a microwave short-circuiting.
āYouāre sure?ā you asked, because you had toābecause you needed him to say it again, to look you in the eye and confirm this wasnāt just heat-of-the-moment emotion, or drama, or guilt, orā
Vil gave you a glare so sharp it could slice through reinforced glass. You didnāt even need to hear him speak. The look alone said: If you ask that again I will end you and then raise you from the ashes just to scold you properly.
So naturally, you pulled him closer.
He kissed you like youād insulted him and he was trying to forgive you with his entire mouth. And then he pushed you down onto the couch with all the grace and pent-up need of someone whoād waited far too long to do this.
There was nothing dramatic about the bond itselfāit was warmth, deep and golden, spreading between your minds like a whispered promise. Familiar, grounding, and so right it made you dizzy. You felt him in a way that no one else could ever matchāhis feelings humming beneath your skin, threaded through your heartbeat, echoing in your thoughts.
It felt like falling and landing and being caught all at once.
He didnāt say anything for a long moment. Just pressed his forehead against yours and held you close, letting the bond settle between your chests like a vow.
Then, quietly:
āFinally.ā
You laughed, breathless. āYeah,ā you said, hugging him tighter. āFinally.ā
Life was still mildly cursed. You werenāt about to tempt fate by saying otherwise. The gates still opened at the worst times, your body still ached in places that didnāt make sense, and someone still managed to microwave metal in the guidance office kitchen every single week.
Butā
You had Vil. And that made it survivable.
He had finally, finally reprogrammed you out of your self-destructive nonsense, though it had been a war. You were talking metaphorical trench warfare. It took a thousand forehead flicks, an aggressively color-coded sleep schedule, and a terrifying PowerPoint presentation titled āIf You Die, I Will Be Very Upset (And Also Kill You) ā A Visual Threat.ā
And in return, you had managed to make Vil Schoenheit loosen up. The man who once flinched at the idea of touching door handles with his bare hands now shared hoodies with you and let you kiss him with gate-dust still in your hair.
It was progress.
So when the door to your shared home clicked shut behind you both after another long day, you let out a sigh and slumped like a corpse released from its mortal coil. Vil caught you by the collar before you hit the floor like āabsolutely not, we are not breaking furniture today.ā
You peeled off your jacket, dropped your bag, and turned to him, still stuck in your boots. āIs it bad I want to sleep on the floor?ā
āYes,ā he replied instantly. āGo shower, you reeking gremlin. Iāll order dinner.ā
You blinked. āWill it be salad?ā
āNo. Iām ordering dumplings.ā
You stared at him like heād grown a second head. āWho are you and what have you done with my overachieving nutrient-balanced microgreensāā
Vil shoved you gently toward the bathroom. āShoo. Iāll be waiting here with your emotional support carbs when youāre done.ā
And that was it.
You went to shower, and he ordered dinner. And maybe life was cursed and weird and exhaustingābut it had given you Vil. And now, the worst thing he threatened you with was hydration reminders and forehead kisses.
Being an Esper is hard. Finding a Guide is harder. Somehow, the only one who can handle you is Jade Leech, who is both the best and worst thing that has ever happened to you.
2. Guide Rank: Overwhelmed || Malleus Draconia
Being a high-ranked guide is toughāyouāre basically a glorified babysitter for overpowered, emotionally constipated espers. But it gets harder when Malleus Draconia, the strongest esper in existence, asks you to guide him.
And somehow, despite it all, youāre pretty sure Malleus is the best thing thatās ever happened to you.
3. Unstable Stable || Leona Kingscholar
You were an S-ranked Guide just trying to live your life, but now you're emotionally (and spiritually) babysitting SS-class menace Leona Kingscholarāwhoās decided you're his personal charger and refuses to unplug.
4. Sync or Sink || Vil Schoenheit
You, an overworked S-Class esper with the survival instincts of a damp sock, catch the eye of SSS-Class guide Vil Schoenheit. He decides youāre his personal fixer-upper project. Shockingly, itās the best thing thatās ever happened to you.
5. Workplace Hazards: Romance || Idia Shroud
You're a feral SS-class Esper with no off switch. He's an anxious shut-in SS-class Guide just trying to game in peace. Through lies, HR nightmares, dramatic near-deaths, and one candy ring proposal, you accidentally become soulmates. Government benefits may or may not be involved.
Worldbuilding
1. When do they get their powers?
2. How do bonds work? Types of Espers, Types of Bonds, Forced Bonding, Are Espers just dramatic?
Wow, I was drawing another of my favorite characters as a tarot card again, hehe. Now it's Yoojin's turn (pre-regression), and the card I could best relate to that man is the minor arcana of the Ten of Swords!
The meaning of the Ten of Swords is that of a very painful moment, a tragedy that interrupts some aspect of your existence. It's a tragic failure that appears practically out of nowhere, that wasn't in the calculations, and that surprises you with no chance of defending yourself!
It's associated with betrayals, backstabbing, and the end of a cycle.
This card can also be interpreted as something you must go through to learn something new, and that is the last suffering you will suffer at the hands of that person or thing.
Anyway, another super cool interpretation I read on Tumblr a while back is that "if it took 10 swords to bring you down, it's because you put up a good fight," which I found really funny and brilliant, haha.
Anyway. My beloved Han Yoojin from before going back in time is, in my opinion, this card personified, and once I finish the next one on the pre-regression list (Sung Hyunjae, my beloved), I'll draw the arcana they represent after going back in time.
I hope you like it!!!
Concept: Batfamily-style mob of young sidekicks and hangers-on, except the big name superhero they're ostensibly affiliated with doesn't exist, and in fact has never existed. They just got together and made up a dude based on a synthesis of pre-existing urban legends in order to benefit from the protection of "his" fearsome (and fabricated) reputation. Sometimes one of them puts on the suit and cowl and pretends to be the Big Guy to keep up appearances, which has been a near-disaster each and every time they've tried it; they're constantly two steps away from somebody putting the pieces together and kicking over the whole house of cards.
when I was a kid I read a sci-fi story where some researcher discovers that all crocodiles since prehistory have had the same congenital heart defect, so they set about curing it. when they do, suddenly their research specimen starts getting stronger and healthier and growing rapidly and developing new appendages, and it turns out all crocodilians were actually stunted sickly forms of dragons. that story really stuck with me because it's basically an expression of the "what if I went to the doctor and they discovered I was deficient in one special vitamin and then I took a pill and all my problems and ailments vanished immediately" fantasy.
unrelated, I started taking daily antihistamines this month for the first time in my life,
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Iāve never had a reheading go this horribly before. Iād say Iām pretty good at beheading- I may have broken a neck once or twice, but never any parts I actually liked or intended on keeping, and usually a reheading is the easiest thing, right? Just a little squish and a pop and done, a complete person. But this time it just- it just wonāt go back on the body??Ā Which is incredibly frustrating but also, like, why??
And the funniest thing is, Iām not even swapping a head!! This is a curvy dancer head going onto a curvy dancer body!! They match!! This should have been so simple!! But no, this headās just flopping around like a limp flaccid idiot and my hands are all red and sore now but the head just isnāt attaching all the way!!
Today I did six beheadings and two other reheadings, and I wanted to get this one attached so I could take a picture, but somehow it just isnāt working!! The head is just getting squished around but isnāt stretching over the neck right!! And Iām way too lazy to go and boil the head just to make the slip easier!!Ā And I donāt wanna keep forcing it cuz I might break something but this is!! So frustrating!!
Like, what could I possibly be doing wrong!! Fuck!!
BARBIES. IāM TALKING ABOUT BARBIES. I AM CUSTOMIZING TOYS RIGHT NOW I AM NOT A SERIAL KILLER AND I HAVE NEVER BEHEADED AN ACTUAL REAL LIFE HUMAN BEING OR TRIED TO REATTACH A PERSONāS HEAD BY BOILING IT
So, from time to time I re-read the tarot cards and of course, I have to draw some with my favorite characters and which one I think would fit them best!
And I HAD to draw Han Yoohyun as "The Hanged Man" although it was specifically because of the meaning this card has if drawn backwards in a spread.
the normal meaning is:
"All change is in turn a little death, as the old must die to create the new. It may simply indicate a change in your future which may be beyond your control, and which will be a decision that, for better or worse, you will not be able to take back. The other interpretation speaks of sacrifice.
Although it is not easy to know if this sacrifice is great or small,"
That warning about decisions that can't be reversed reflects well on his relationship with his brother and his decision to unilaterally cut ties. I imagine Han Yoohyun receiving this card on his first reading.
on the other hand, if the card is drawn backwards in a spread, it warns you that the sacrifice you are making is useless. You are giving more than is necessary, falling into false hopes. It can also point to selfish acts.
This reversed card may be warning you that you are taking the wrong attitude, becoming a martyr to lost causes. On the other hand, it may indicate that you should get out of indecision, stop delaying important matters.
and my god if that wasn't Pre-reg Han Yoohyun.
being a self-taught artist with no formal training is having done art seriously since you were a young teenager and only finding out that youāre supposed to do warm up sketches every time youāre about to work on serious art when youāre fuckin twenty-five
when i was in undergrad, it was kind of mentioned in and offhand way that we should do warmups, but we were never shown what that meant. And, yāknow, we were young so it didnāt matter so much.Ā
Being older now and having an art job itāsā¦kind of essential.Ā
So: a quick primer for those of you who are likeĀ āok but how do i actually go about doing this warmup thing.āĀ
1) you may be tempted to doĀ āa warmup drawingā which is just a drawing that will take longer than it needed to and probably be frustrating and kind of bad because you didnāt warm up first. Itās tempting but always a trick your brain is playing on you! Do not trust!Ā
2) warmups will vary based on what feels good to you/what task youāre about to do/what motor skills you want to practice. That being said, some good standbys:
a) circles. Just a whole page of circles on whatever drawing surface youāre going to be using, whether thatās your tablet or your sketchbook or a drawing pad on an easel. For these circles you should make sure that youāre drawing from your shoulder and not your wrist. In fact, you want to be drawing from your shoulder rather than your wrist most of the time! forever! your wrist is delicate please preserve it!Ā
In order to ensure that youāre drawing from your shoulder, when youāre holding your pencil or whatever drawing tool youāre using, the only part of your hand that should be touching the drawing surface is part of the last two fingersāsome people prefer the finger tips, but I tend to favor the first knuckles. Either way, the fingers should really be ghosting over the surface, providing guidance rather than support.Ā
I usually start with big circles and then go to smaller circles and lines of ellipses, and then try to fit circles and ellipses inside other shapes iāve already drawn as a precision exercise, but i donāt do that unless iām feeling loose
b) spirals! i donāt always do spirals, but if iām stiff and the circles just arenāt cutting it, spirals are a good fall back. I start from the center and work outward, going both clockwise and counterclockwise until i feel comfortable with the whole range of motion. Some people really care about getting perfect spirals but for me itās all about making sure iām comfortable with how iām moving so who really even cares about how the spirals look. Not me!Ā
c) lines! straight lines! in parallel! i do a mix of vertical, horizontal, and diagonal. These are often more from the elbow than the shoulder, especially if Iām working on a smaller surface. For this exercise, I recommend holding the drawing tool perpendicular with the surface
d) connect the dots. This is a precision and accuracy exercise and takes two forms. The first is to draw two dots and then draw a straight line between them. The second is to draw three dots and draw the curve that connects them. This sounds a lot simpler than it is in practice. Take time to ghost over the line you plan to draw before actually committing to your line. (I donāt always remember where I picked up my warm up exercises, but Iām pretty sure I got this one from Scott Robertson. His how to draw and how to render books are very technical but also accessible and worth checking out)
e) cubes, spheres, cones, and cylinders. These help get your brain into a more volumetric space. I draw multiples of each, rotating the forms around, and Iāll often take the time to do some rough shading on at least a few of them
f) spidermans! This one is really good if youāre going to be storyboarding or working on dynamic poses. Just fill a page full of spidermans doing all sorts of acrobatics.Ā
g) beans. I donāt do beans too much anymore, but I know a lot of people like it so Iām mentioning it here. Fill an area with different size bean shapes without lifting your pencil off the paper.Ā
h) short medium and long line repetition. draw a short, medium, and long line on your page, and then draw directly on top of them 8 to 12 times, doing your best to exactly trace what youāve already drawing. Repeat with a wavy line. Iām bad at this one, which means I probably need to do it more.Ā
And there are lots more options too! Hit up youtube to see what other people recommend, put together your own go-to list, mix it up when youāre getting bored, etc.Ā
This is a long list, I know, but I usually donāt take more than 10 to 15 minutes to warm up, and I can warm up one handed while Iām drinking coffee, so, multitasking hurrah.Ā
Sometimes Iāll advance to a precision warmup and find that I havenāt loosened up enough yet; itās totally ok to go back to an earlier exercise! Also, all of this has the added benefit of kind of ritualistically getting you into the drawing mode so even if Iām not feeling it before I start, by the time Iāve gotten to the end Iām usually Ready For Drawinā. Brain hacks.Ā
so, yeah! thatās a lot of words, but! Warmups are important! Save your joints, take less advil, do better drawings!Ā
genuinely wild to me when I go to someone's house and we watch TV or listen to music or something and there are ads. I haven't seen an ad in my home since 2005. what do you mean you haven't set up multiple layers of digital infrastructure to banish corporate messaging to oblivion before it manifests? listen, this is important. this is the 21st century version of carving sigils on the wall to deny entry to demons or wearing bells to ward off the Unseelie. come on give me your router admin password and I'll show you how to cast a protective spell of Get Thee Tae Fuck, Capital
Okay, here we go! I'm gonna try and put this in order from least to most technical knowledge required. I'm not responsible if you accidentally create SkyNet etc.
Level 1: browser extensions
This one is basically impossible to get wrong, or at least to get wrong badly enough that it causes any problems.
Get Firefox, or a Firefox fork like Waterfox. If you use a fork, make sure it's one that will let you use add-ons. On a PC, pretty much any Firefox fork will take add-ons, but on mobile devices, many don't. Iceraven is one that does.
Get the add-ons uBlock Origin, YouTube Sponsorblock (if you use YouTube), and FBCleaner (if you use Facebook).
uBlock Origin comes with a built-in list of filters to block ads and trackers, but you can add your own filters to block any specific element of a website you don't like. You know those goddamn floating frames on fandom.com sites that block half the screen? Now you can zap 'em.
Sponsorblock uses crowdsourced timestamps to automatically skip sponsor spots and self-promotion in YouTube videos. Never listen to anyone say "hit like and subscribe" or "Raid Shadow Legends" again.
FBCleaner hides all content from your feed except posts from people, groups, and pages you've actually chosen to follow.
Level 2: leaving enshittified services
The software that's become standard over the years in a lot of fields is steadily selling more of your data, showing you more ads, and pushing you to buy more expensive subscriptions. Time to tell them to get fucked.
Dump Adobe apps for Affinity or Krita. Drop Microsoft for LibreOffice. Change your default search engine from Google to DuckDuckGo or Qwant. Use OpenStreetMaps instead of Google or Apple Maps.
Level 3: network-level DNS fuckery
DNS, or Domain Name Service, is the thing that tells your computer where www.website.com is actually located. By hacking your network's DNS you can force it to tell your devices that ad-hosting domains don't exist at all. Some of the steps on this one can get pretty technical, but because you're doing all the difficult stuff on a dedicated device, you can't really fuck up anything that seriously.
Get yourself a Raspberry Pi (a cheap older one like a model 3B will work just fine for this purpose), and follow a guide like this one to get it set up running AdGuard Home. AdGuard, like uBlock, has built-in filter lists, but you can also add your own if there are specific domains you want to block.
Once it's up and running, you'll need to change the DNS settings on your router to point to your AdGuard service. This is different for every router but will always start with logging into the admin panel with a password printed on a little sticker somewhere on the router.
With that done, every time a device on your home network looks for ads.website.com, it'll get back a message that says "sorry, can't find it", so it won't be able to load any ads.
Level 4: Android-specific DNS fuckery
Because AdGuard runs on your home network, it can't block ads on your phone when you're away from home - and what's worse, your phone will sometimes remember the addresses it got when you were out and about, and ads will get past your AdGuard wall even when you're home.
To avoid this, get AdAway for DNS-based ad-blocking directly on your phone. The easy, but less seamless, way of using AdAway is the "local VPN mode", which doesn't require you to do any mucking about with your phone's operating system.
Level 5: automated media piracy
The best way to stop seeing ads on all your streaming services is to stop using streaming services. There are loads of ways to do this, but the best ones involve setting up what's called an "arr stack" (Google that for setup guides) along with nzbget and a usenet account. Most of the time you'll want to set this stuff up on a dedicated device - an old laptop gathering dust in the closet is a great option, or you can grab something used from a charity shop or a local electronics recycler.
The great thing about usenet is that unlike with torrents, you don't have to do any sharing from your computer, so you're in a lot less legal jeopardy - legally speaking, distributing pirated content is waaayyy more serious than accessing it. I pay about £3 a month for a secure, high-bandwidth usenet service.
Once you start getting your own collection of media on your own computer, use the open-source media library manager Jellyfin to browse and play things from basically any device.
Oh, and don't be a dick. Pirate all you want from big corporations, but please pay independent small-time creators for their work.
Level 6: fucking with Android
Android phones are a lot more locked-down than they used to be, but depending on the device you own you can still do a lot of messing around under the hood. Note that if you get something wrong while doing this, there is always the possibility that it will turn your device into a paperweight.
Before you buy a device, check where it sits on the Bootloader Unlock Wall of Shame. Once you've bought it, check the xda-developer forums for guides on how to unlock it and "root" it (gain admin access) with Magisk.
Once Magisk is installed, you can add modules to do all sorts of cool stuff, including using AdAway in "root mode" which makes it basically invisible.
You can also install YouTube ReVanced, which will do all the ad- and sponsor blocking stuff we took care of in your Windows browser a few paragraphs ago. Be careful: there are a lot of fake sites out there pretending they're associated with the ReVanced project which might be injecting malware into their downloads. This Reddit post has the official instructions and links.
Also, try out the modded version of Facebook from APKmoddone, which will block most of the same shit as the FBcleaner add-on from earlier. There's always a possibility that modified apps like this are doing something dodgy, but I've never had any issues with this one personally.
Level 7: fucking with Windows
This one is scary because it can seriously fuck up your shit if something goes wrong, but some really cool people have actually made it very simple to strip all the bloat, ads, and spyware out of Windows. The tool I use is ReviOS. Start reading at https://www.revi.cc/docs. Basically, you'll need to download a tool called AME Wizard and the ReviOS "playbook" that tells AME what to do. Read the documentation before you do any of this.
Level 8: switching to Linux
I'm not going to pretend this is an option for everyone. Half the software I use on a weekly basis isn't available on Linux. But if you can switch? Do it. These days, Ubuntu - one of the most popular flavours of Linux - is built with people switching from Windows in mind, and a lot of things will be pretty intuitive. It also has great documentation and a huge community you can go to for help if you're confused about stuff.
And that, friends, is a comprehensive approach to banishing the demons of capitalism from your home!
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