happy daddys day i love you
Interesting way of showing it.
YOU ARE THE REASON
trying on a metaphor
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Andulka
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
hello vonnie

Discoholic 🪩

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home

★

Janaina Medeiros
will byers stan first human second

Origami Around
ojovivo
Game of Thrones Daily
wallacepolsom
Claire Keane
DEAR READER

Kiana Khansmith
Xuebing Du
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Colombia
seen from Chile

seen from Malaysia
seen from Lithuania
@v-mystery
happy daddys day i love you
Interesting way of showing it.

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just gonna stand there and watch ur boyfriend die 😒
:)
i love and miss youuuuu ❤️ come back please
… I haven’t left.
Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
A wide grin splits his face, seeming to bare all his teeth at once. The villain is a little bit miffed to see that the other brought a mask of all things, but it doesn’t matter.
“Welcome, welcome,” he greets cheerfully, gesturing to the chair opposite him on the ornate table. Two long, black dinner candles abruptly light in the middle of the table, illuminating his scarred face. “Have a seat.”
His sightless gaze is trained through the mask and right into the other villain’s eyes, and perhaps through those as well.
“Our guest will be with us shortly,” he assures, waiting patiently for them to sit down.
“I’ll remain standing.”
The urge to jerk their head away, to turn it, to snap themselves right at the neck just to avoid such a direct gaze forever is far too strong to allow anything else. They writhe inside.
They don’t want to ask. They feel seconds from biting through their tongue, just to keep the words from blurting from their mouth.
What do you know?
They know. They know.
It’s always the same. it always starts and ends like this. It’s all for this one moment after moment after moment.
They’ve been waiting so long.
And they’re so tired.
“You should have brought them from the start,” they snap, voice a low and hissing whisper.
What do you know?
“Was there something you wanted to say to me? As we’re still alone?”
Do you know how this ends?
“Because I’d rather this be fast. I have somewhere I’m supposed to be.”
“So impatient.”
He clucks his tongue disapprovingly.
His smile shrinks. Just a little.
“You’ve always been so impatient.”
It’s been all but confirmed, now.
“Sit.”
There’s a force behind the word. A force beyond the other villain’s control. No matter what they do, they are irresistably compelled to sit down in the chair opposite him. Once satisfied, he continues immediately.
“Let me get right to the point.” He leans forward, steepling his fingers and nesting his lips against them. “I want you to join me.”
They sit.
Their next breath is accompanied by a fiery agony. Their hands explode into a violent ache. Their skin begs to be flayed, to dissolve, to rip. Their head bursts. Bursts and bursts and bursts like a star expanding out, falling apart in a catastrophic boom.
They just barely keep themselves from trembling.
They hold it all in.
And nod.
Flexing their fingers once, they exhale out the hurt and rage and glance away, staring at nothing.
“Why.”
“You already know why.”
He says it with cold certainty. Even as the other villain glances away, he continues to stare.
Stare.
Stare.
Stare.
“We’re the same,” he says, delight coloring his words. “Think of everything I could give you. What you could give me.”
He clears his throat, gathering himself.
“It’s common sense. It’s destiny.” An off warmth radiates from him. “Don’t you think?”
Destiny.
Like they weren’t already trapped within the cessation of their fate. Like the abeyance of their condition wasn’t one of constant devouring, severing themselves through and growing anew, again and again, all at once. Like the culmination of all their suffering hadn’t been completed ages ago!
They’re so tired. A god’s weight bears down on their body as they flex their fingers again. So much power inside them, all begging and begging to finally, finally be used in a way that’s true. That’s specifically them.
Destiny.
“You’ve already given me plenty,” they whisper, miserable, cold and growing colder. “And you still owe me...”
He doesn’t stop smiling. In fact, he looks amused. Maybe a little sad.
“Together, we could have so much.”
He sighs.
“Fine,” he says, sitting back. “But you know what’ll happen if you can’t play nice.”
He doesn’t move, but there’s a powerful shift in the air. Characteristic sludge starts forming a few feet away from the table, far enough away that it doesn’t ruin his delightful dinner arrangement, of course.
“Hello,” he greets cheerfully, as soon as their guest can hear him. “Why don’t you come take a seat?”
It’s inevitable so why is he so scared?
His throat constricts. Monoma lets a small choking sound leave him as an inky black forms in his lungs. It swirls around his heart, flooding through his guts, forcing its way from his mouth, blocking out... everything. The room disappears around him, its sturdy walls and guarded form absolutely useless in protecting him like the hero side had so hoped.
He knew it’d be this way.
So why is he so scared...?
He lands, immediately collapsing to his knees and coughing as the last of the sludge slips out of him, splattering on the otherwise immaculate floor around him. He doesn’t even have to look up, he knows where he is, every atom of the air around him so cloying and disgustingly familiar. He can smell him. He can practically taste him in the room, ash and sticky tar and the tang of old, old blood, the filth from such a revolting quirk still clinging to his tongue.
Monoma doesn’t lift his eyes. He can’t. He’s not ready to face this again. He’d been so, so happy just a short while ago, it seems...
He fights the urge to sob, broken and close to begging already.
“...”
“Look at me, Monoma Neito.”
There it is again. There’s power behind his words, tugging Monoma’s face up, forcing him to look into Shigaraki’s sightless gaze. He smiles brightly.
“I’ve missed you,” he purrs, getting up to stand in front of him. He drags his rough hand through Monoma’s soft, silky hair, and cups his cheek. “We have a guest, Neito. Will you play nice?”
Under the guise of helping him up, the villain lifts Monoma up like a kitten and leads him to his chair, making him sit down with no effort at all.
“Okay, you two,” he says, turning and walking towards the entranceway. “Daddy’s going to finish supper. No killing, alright?”
And he’s gone, turning his threatening, warning gaze away from them as he goes to what is very unlikely to be a kitchen.
He leaves them alone.
He looks.
And he’s carried.
And he sits where he’s placed, limp and lifeless, skin burning from Shigaraki’s touch. When Monoma looks up at the abyss of a figure in front of him, he can’t... force a reaction out. It’s an old and primal terror that doesn’t even bother to freeze his blood or drain the color from his face, skipping straight to hollowing out every organ in his body and replacing its contents with pure dread.
As Shigaraki walks away, he’s horrified to feel a plea for him to stay nearly leaving him.
But he holds it in. He keeps quiet.
He stares at the nameless presence in front of him.
“...’
...
They stand slowly.
“He touched you.”
What’s held inside them is indescribable in this moment.
“Did you take his quirk?”
They put their gloved hands up against the table.
“Do you have his power? Have you tried again and again and again to even come close? To even have a fraction of what he has...? Do you even understand yet...!?”
They’re losing control. It’s too easy to. They shake. Writhe. Explode.
The table is clutched hard until its suddenly thrown. Wine douses the floor, candles clattering, fire sputtering out as glass breaks.
They surge forward, coming close in a second.
“What didn’t you do right; what didn’t you give him that makes him keep ASKING ME THAT!?”
“I- I don’t know!!”
Monoma finds himself crashing to the floor in a fright, immediately scrambling back as the table breaks before him. As Mystery comes close, he skitters back, cowering and whimpering, utterly powerless. His thoughts are panicked staccatos of images, searching frantically, trying to understand.
None of it makes sense. He doesn’t know what the one in front of him seems to know.
“P-please,” he whimpers out again, backing away another step. “I n-never... I never asked for this... I don’t know where it went wrong, I...!”
Tears start to skim down his cheeks. His head hurts, hurts, threatening to burst, cramming itself full with desperation.
“I’m sorry... I’m sorry for whatever I did... t-to you, t-to make you... hate me... p-please don’t...”
He quickly starts to sob, still crawling back. “Please don’t kill me...”
“... Kill you?”
Mystery laughs. It’s an insane sound, a milennia of agony stitched into one piece.
“Killing you would be too easy.”
They grab him, hand grasping hard to the front of his face. And they squeeze, digging in and shaking with glee and malice and grief and and rapture and everything they’ve been holding inside since they landed in this godforsaken universe again.
“I’m going to make you cease to exist. You’ll be nothing, forever. You’ll beg for the simple pain of before. For the fucking pleasure of being treated just like this. And it will never end. It will never... end... Ha! HAHAHA...”
They grin under the mask, their smile curling their lips so violently they threaten to split as they start to summon what’s inside of them.
“Oh, it’s... going... to... hurt...”
Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
A wide grin splits his face, seeming to bare all his teeth at once. The villain is a little bit miffed to see that the other brought a mask of all things, but it doesn’t matter.
“Welcome, welcome,” he greets cheerfully, gesturing to the chair opposite him on the ornate table. Two long, black dinner candles abruptly light in the middle of the table, illuminating his scarred face. “Have a seat.”
His sightless gaze is trained through the mask and right into the other villain’s eyes, and perhaps through those as well.
“Our guest will be with us shortly,” he assures, waiting patiently for them to sit down.
“I’ll remain standing.”
The urge to jerk their head away, to turn it, to snap themselves right at the neck just to avoid such a direct gaze forever is far too strong to allow anything else. They writhe inside.
They don’t want to ask. They feel seconds from biting through their tongue, just to keep the words from blurting from their mouth.
What do you know?
They know. They know.
It’s always the same. it always starts and ends like this. It’s all for this one moment after moment after moment.
They’ve been waiting so long.
And they’re so tired.
“You should have brought them from the start,” they snap, voice a low and hissing whisper.
What do you know?
“Was there something you wanted to say to me? As we’re still alone?”
Do you know how this ends?
“Because I’d rather this be fast. I have somewhere I’m supposed to be.”
“So impatient.”
He clucks his tongue disapprovingly.
His smile shrinks. Just a little.
“You’ve always been so impatient.”
It’s been all but confirmed, now.
“Sit.”
There’s a force behind the word. A force beyond the other villain’s control. No matter what they do, they are irresistably compelled to sit down in the chair opposite him. Once satisfied, he continues immediately.
“Let me get right to the point.” He leans forward, steepling his fingers and nesting his lips against them. “I want you to join me.”
They sit.
Their next breath is accompanied by a fiery agony. Their hands explode into a violent ache. Their skin begs to be flayed, to dissolve, to rip. Their head bursts. Bursts and bursts and bursts like a star expanding out, falling apart in a catastrophic boom.
They just barely keep themselves from trembling.
They hold it all in.
And nod.
Flexing their fingers once, they exhale out the hurt and rage and glance away, staring at nothing.
“Why.”
“You already know why.”
He says it with cold certainty. Even as the other villain glances away, he continues to stare.
Stare.
Stare.
Stare.
“We’re the same,” he says, delight coloring his words. “Think of everything I could give you. What you could give me.”
He clears his throat, gathering himself.
“It’s common sense. It’s destiny.” An off warmth radiates from him. “Don’t you think?”
Destiny.
Like they weren’t already trapped within the cessation of their fate. Like the abeyance of their condition wasn’t one of constant devouring, severing themselves through and growing anew, again and again, all at once. Like the culmination of all their suffering hadn’t been completed ages ago!
They’re so tired. A god’s weight bears down on their body as they flex their fingers again. So much power inside them, all begging and begging to finally, finally be used in a way that’s true. That’s specifically them.
Destiny.
“You’ve already given me plenty,” they whisper, miserable, cold and growing colder. “And you still owe me...”
He doesn’t stop smiling. In fact, he looks amused. Maybe a little sad.
“Together, we could have so much.”
He sighs.
“Fine,” he says, sitting back. “But you know what’ll happen if you can’t play nice.”
He doesn’t move, but there’s a powerful shift in the air. Characteristic sludge starts forming a few feet away from the table, far enough away that it doesn’t ruin his delightful dinner arrangement, of course.
“Hello,” he greets cheerfully, as soon as their guest can hear him. “Why don’t you come take a seat?”
It’s inevitable so why is he so scared?
His throat constricts. Monoma lets a small choking sound leave him as an inky black forms in his lungs. It swirls around his heart, flooding through his guts, forcing its way from his mouth, blocking out... everything. The room disappears around him, its sturdy walls and guarded form absolutely useless in protecting him like the hero side had so hoped.
He knew it’d be this way.
So why is he so scared...?
He lands, immediately collapsing to his knees and coughing as the last of the sludge slips out of him, splattering on the otherwise immaculate floor around him. He doesn’t even have to look up, he knows where he is, every atom of the air around him so cloying and disgustingly familiar. He can smell him. He can practically taste him in the room, ash and sticky tar and the tang of old, old blood, the filth from such a revolting quirk still clinging to his tongue.
Monoma doesn’t lift his eyes. He can’t. He’s not ready to face this again. He’d been so, so happy just a short while ago, it seems...
He fights the urge to sob, broken and close to begging already.
“...”
“Look at me, Monoma Neito.”
There it is again. There’s power behind his words, tugging Monoma’s face up, forcing him to look into Shigaraki’s sightless gaze. He smiles brightly.
“I’ve missed you,” he purrs, getting up to stand in front of him. He drags his rough hand through Monoma’s soft, silky hair, and cups his cheek. “We have a guest, Neito. Will you play nice?”
Under the guise of helping him up, the villain lifts Monoma up like a kitten and leads him to his chair, making him sit down with no effort at all.
“Okay, you two,” he says, turning and walking towards the entranceway. “Daddy’s going to finish supper. No killing, alright?”
And he’s gone, turning his threatening, warning gaze away from them as he goes to what is very unlikely to be a kitchen.
He leaves them alone.
He looks.
And he’s carried.
And he sits where he’s placed, limp and lifeless, skin burning from Shigaraki’s touch. When Monoma looks up at the abyss of a figure in front of him, he can’t... force a reaction out. It’s an old and primal terror that doesn’t even bother to freeze his blood or drain the color from his face, skipping straight to hollowing out every organ in his body and replacing its contents with pure dread.
As Shigaraki walks away, he’s horrified to feel a plea for him to stay nearly leaving him.
But he holds it in. He keeps quiet.
He stares at the nameless presence in front of him.
“...’
...
They stand slowly.
“He touched you.”
What’s held inside them is indescribable in this moment.
“Did you take his quirk?”
They put their gloved hands up against the table.
“Do you have his power? Have you tried again and again and again to even come close? To even have a fraction of what he has...? Do you even understand yet...!?”
They’re losing control. It’s too easy to. They shake. Writhe. Explode.
The table is clutched hard until its suddenly thrown. Wine douses the floor, candles clattering, fire sputtering out as glass breaks.
They surge forward, coming close in a second.
“What didn’t you do right; what didn’t you give him that makes him keep ASKING ME THAT!?”

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
A wide grin splits his face, seeming to bare all his teeth at once. The villain is a little bit miffed to see that the other brought a mask of all things, but it doesn’t matter.
“Welcome, welcome,” he greets cheerfully, gesturing to the chair opposite him on the ornate table. Two long, black dinner candles abruptly light in the middle of the table, illuminating his scarred face. “Have a seat.”
His sightless gaze is trained through the mask and right into the other villain’s eyes, and perhaps through those as well.
“Our guest will be with us shortly,” he assures, waiting patiently for them to sit down.
“I’ll remain standing.”
The urge to jerk their head away, to turn it, to snap themselves right at the neck just to avoid such a direct gaze forever is far too strong to allow anything else. They writhe inside.
They don’t want to ask. They feel seconds from biting through their tongue, just to keep the words from blurting from their mouth.
What do you know?
They know. They know.
It’s always the same. it always starts and ends like this. It’s all for this one moment after moment after moment.
They’ve been waiting so long.
And they’re so tired.
“You should have brought them from the start,” they snap, voice a low and hissing whisper.
What do you know?
“Was there something you wanted to say to me? As we’re still alone?”
Do you know how this ends?
“Because I’d rather this be fast. I have somewhere I’m supposed to be.”
“So impatient.”
He clucks his tongue disapprovingly.
His smile shrinks. Just a little.
“You’ve always been so impatient.”
It’s been all but confirmed, now.
“Sit.”
There’s a force behind the word. A force beyond the other villain’s control. No matter what they do, they are irresistably compelled to sit down in the chair opposite him. Once satisfied, he continues immediately.
“Let me get right to the point.” He leans forward, steepling his fingers and nesting his lips against them. “I want you to join me.”
They sit.
Their next breath is accompanied by a fiery agony. Their hands explode into a violent ache. Their skin begs to be flayed, to dissolve, to rip. Their head bursts. Bursts and bursts and bursts like a star expanding out, falling apart in a catastrophic boom.
They just barely keep themselves from trembling.
They hold it all in.
And nod.
Flexing their fingers once, they exhale out the hurt and rage and glance away, staring at nothing.
“Why.”
“You already know why.”
He says it with cold certainty. Even as the other villain glances away, he continues to stare.
Stare.
Stare.
Stare.
“We’re the same,” he says, delight coloring his words. “Think of everything I could give you. What you could give me.”
He clears his throat, gathering himself.
“It’s common sense. It’s destiny.” An off warmth radiates from him. “Don’t you think?”
Destiny.
Like they weren’t already trapped within the cessation of their fate. Like the abeyance of their condition wasn’t one of constant devouring, severing themselves through and growing anew, again and again, all at once. Like the culmination of all their suffering hadn’t been completed ages ago!
They’re so tired. A god’s weight bears down on their body as they flex their fingers again. So much power inside them, all begging and begging to finally, finally be used in a way that’s true. That’s specifically them.
Destiny.
“You’ve already given me plenty,” they whisper, miserable, cold and growing colder. “And you still owe me...”
Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
A wide grin splits his face, seeming to bare all his teeth at once. The villain is a little bit miffed to see that the other brought a mask of all things, but it doesn’t matter.
“Welcome, welcome,” he greets cheerfully, gesturing to the chair opposite him on the ornate table. Two long, black dinner candles abruptly light in the middle of the table, illuminating his scarred face. “Have a seat.”
His sightless gaze is trained through the mask and right into the other villain’s eyes, and perhaps through those as well.
“Our guest will be with us shortly,” he assures, waiting patiently for them to sit down.
“I’ll remain standing.”
The urge to jerk their head away, to turn it, to snap themselves right at the neck just to avoid such a direct gaze forever is far too strong to allow anything else. They writhe inside.
They don’t want to ask. They feel seconds from biting through their tongue, just to keep the words from blurting from their mouth.
What do you know?
They know. They know.
It’s always the same. it always starts and ends like this. It’s all for this one moment after moment after moment.
They’ve been waiting so long.
And they’re so tired.
“You should have brought them from the start,” they snap, voice a low and hissing whisper.
What do you know?
“Was there something you wanted to say to me? As we’re still alone?”
Do you know how this ends?
“Because I’d rather this be fast. I have somewhere I’m supposed to be.”
“So impatient.”
He clucks his tongue disapprovingly.
His smile shrinks. Just a little.
“You’ve always been so impatient.”
It’s been all but confirmed, now.
“Sit.”
There’s a force behind the word. A force beyond the other villain’s control. No matter what they do, they are irresistably compelled to sit down in the chair opposite him. Once satisfied, he continues immediately.
“Let me get right to the point.” He leans forward, steepling his fingers and nesting his lips against them. “I want you to join me.”
They sit.
Their next breath is accompanied by a fiery agony. Their hands explode into a violent ache. Their skin begs to be flayed, to dissolve, to rip. Their head bursts. Bursts and bursts and bursts like a star expanding out, falling apart in a catastrophic boom.
They just barely keep themselves from trembling.
They hold it all in.
And nod.
Flexing their fingers once, they exhale out the hurt and rage and glance away, staring at nothing.
“Why.”
Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
A wide grin splits his face, seeming to bare all his teeth at once. The villain is a little bit miffed to see that the other brought a mask of all things, but it doesn’t matter.
“Welcome, welcome,” he greets cheerfully, gesturing to the chair opposite him on the ornate table. Two long, black dinner candles abruptly light in the middle of the table, illuminating his scarred face. “Have a seat.”
His sightless gaze is trained through the mask and right into the other villain’s eyes, and perhaps through those as well.
“Our guest will be with us shortly,” he assures, waiting patiently for them to sit down.
“I’ll remain standing.”
The urge to jerk their head away, to turn it, to snap themselves right at the neck just to avoid such a direct gaze forever is far too strong to allow anything else. They writhe inside.
They don’t want to ask. They feel seconds from biting through their tongue, just to keep the words from blurting from their mouth.
What do you know?
They know. They know.
It’s always the same. it always starts and ends like this. It’s all for this one moment after moment after moment.
They’ve been waiting so long.
And they’re so tired.
“You should have brought them from the start,” they snap, voice a low and hissing whisper.
What do you know?
“Was there something you wanted to say to me? As we’re still alone?”
Do you know how this ends?
“Because I’d rather this be fast. I have somewhere I’m supposed to be.”
Calmly, he sets up.
A round, sturdy table with a deep red table cloth. Three glasses of his finest wine. Plates for three as well. He’s alone, but the smell of food cooking is unmistakably coming from his kitchen. Whether or not food will actually be served remains to be seen.
The excitement bubbling in his body can hardly be contained as he relaxes into his seat, crossing one leg over the other as he tucks a napkin into his shirt collar.
He’s not wearing his mask.
There’s no need.
He’ll be among friends shortly.
@v-mystery
Disgusting.
All of this, disgusting.
They arrive, slowly seething under the black that covers them. Unlike the other, their usual mask is in place. It’s hardly a comfort as it usually is.
In fact, it seems rather useless, at this point.
They know what’s coming.
They know how this always happens.
They approach the table slowly, an echo trailing behind each step, loud.
When they stop, they eye the wine, the plates, the seats. Glaring at the third. Hating that third guest so much.
They clench their jaw, raising their eyes to the villain.
“Shigaraki,” they greet.
I don’t know how much longer I can last.
Hello.
I don’t believe we’ve formally met, which is rather rude of me. I’ve been watching you for quite some time.
I have a proposition for you.
Care to discuss over tea?
…
“Tea”.
Haha.
Dinner, then? I have a fine collection of wines that I’m sure you’d enjoy.
If you know me so well, you’d know what condition I’d expect to have met if and when I arrive.

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I don’t know how much longer I can last.
Hello.
I don’t believe we’ve formally met, which is rather rude of me. I’ve been watching you for quite some time.
I have a proposition for you.
Care to discuss over tea?
...
“Tea”.
I always last. I don’t know why I ever think I won’t.
I don’t know how much longer I can last.
I’m a liar.
I’m never ready.

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Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Distracted.
It’s like this every time.