figmentedink:

growing environments by figmentedink

The first that went was Nu’nak.

I feel it, friends, it said to them the night before. It is coming. Tomorrow, it will be here. I can feel it. Oh, if only you knew how glorious it is, all warm and tingly inside me. My leaves are so empty, I need to stretch them, and tomorrow I will.

are you sure, little Qukul wanted to know. It was the only one that was not perfectly round, because it was still so young and a soft grey instead of black, and the other two felt very responsible for it.

If Nu’nak feels the call, Rona decided calmly, then it is the call. After a bit of hesitation, it added: But I will miss you still, friend, even if your Dark Air has finally found its way here. 

what’s it like? Qukul interrupted. tell me. tell me. i wanna know. does it really burn? does it hurt? i don’t wanna hurt.

You have time. Nu’nak was not listening. It tugged at its leaves, expanding until it filled the glass, blinking into the quiet night of the flower shop around them. You will not go soon, your plant is small.

Qukul shrunk until it only filled a corner of the glass. good, it said. the dark air sounds mean and dangerous. it will open our jars and let things in.

One day, you will understand, Rona said. It was watching Nu’nak. Gentle shivers ran through both of their bodies. Yours will come, too.

The next day, the old witch picked up Nu’nak’s glass and gave it to a young man with copper hair and sadness in his sunken eyes. He only returned once, after a month, to hug the old witch and cry tears and whisper thank you.

A month later, Rona went.

There was no warning. The call came in the morning, jolting both of them awake, Qukul by Rona’s sleep and Rona with a delighted little melody thrumming in the glass of its jar. 

don’t leave me, Qukul cried. It pressed against the glass until the jars touched, and the leaves of its plant quivered so hard that dew began to fall all over the floor. rona, please. i’m so scared. don’t leave me alone.

The Dark Air, Rona said before a hand reached out and the old witch lifted its glass. Qukul had never seen Rona’s black body glow with a shimmer like this. Its plant was a magnificent violet, more beautiful than any other flower in the shop.

Then, Rona was gone.

A week later, Qukul heard it.

Its call felt different from what Nu’nak and Rona had whispered about. It was a tiny tickle running through its body, soft and at times uneven like the breeze that used to brush into the shop and rattle the glasses during summer nights. Qukul had never felt anything like it. And when the call rose, its volume filling Qukul with yearning for something it had never known, the shop’s door opened.

Qukul had seen the other’s Dark Air, but its own was so much more wonderful, it thought to itself.

The human girl was tiny. Her hands barely fit around the thick golden door knob, and Qukul didn’t know how she’d pushed it open. Her dress was pink and faded from sunlight, her braids were blacker than Rona’s body had been, and her shoes were green like Nu’nak’s round leaves.

She was beautiful. Qukul pressed its face to the glass. It would be hers.

The old witch looked at his jar, blinking twice. Then, she just smiled (never had she spoken a word to them since their birth half a year ago), took it off its shelf and gently put its jar into the girl’s hand.

“Here, take this. It will help.”

The girl’s eyes were huge and filled with tears. Qukul already loved her so much that it hurt. “What?” she sniffed. “I – no, I just need f-flowers. For a grave.”

“Pick them up tomorrow,” said the old witch, already turning away. “I’ll have them ready then.”

“But… I don’t understand. What is this?” The little girl lifted the glass. Qukul could look into her face now. It was dark too (gorgeous, she was so perfect) and her breath made a fog against the jar’s wall that had Qukul’s body growl in hunger. She couldn’t see Qukul, never would, but it would still love her until it died. It would help. It would be hers.

It would devour everything that hurt her, and grow it inside its body.

“It’s a Purifier,” said the old witch, halfway up the stairs to her attic. She opened the door and turned over her shoulder to wink at the girl. “I think this one’s called Qukul. It’ll drink your sadness and eat the mourning out of your breath. Take the lid off and let it grow. When you’re not sad anymore, it’ll die off and turn into a seed. Bring it back when you’re done.”

The girl looked like she wanted to say something else, or even a lot else, but then the witch was gone and so was the door to the attic. 

Qukul kept its eyes firmly closed until something touched the lid of its jar. There had been a lot of being thrown around and thundering footsteps and almost falling to the ground, but the girl was still there and Qukul had been put onto a flat surface. It dared to blink when the glass parted over its head.

The air that came rushing in filled the jar.

A mighty shiver, bigger than any sorrow over Rona, spread through Qukul’s little soul. Air, it thought. My air. My little human is feeding me. She loves me, too. She’ll let me be hers.

The girl put the lid aside. “What a strange lady,” she said. The plant inside the little jar she’d been given was very small, and it looked like nothing special. But she put the glass onto her nightstand, gave it a bit of water, and breathed a kiss onto one leaf.

She still cried that night, and she still went to buy the flower for dad’s grave the next day. But every day, after mama had said good night to her and tucked her in, she reached for the glass and breathed a kiss into it.

And somehow, that helped. Slowly, and only bit by bit. Slowly, and bit by bit, Qukul grew. Its little leaves became fans of emerald, its stem a strong tower that soon needed a bigger glass, and its shadow reached through half the girl’s room and watched as she slept.

And the day after the girl’s mother laughed once again, months later, and the girl smiled at her best friend, two years after she’d bought funeral flowers, Qukul closed its eyes for a last time.

Maybe it had not helped a lot, it thought.

But something had grown out of it.

writing-prompt-s:

You are a NASA scientist with the budget of the U.S. Military.

“What changed?”

“I’m sorry?”

The alien waves three of their hands around impatiently. “On Earth, that is what I wonder. What changed. They did not want to let you to us, in the beginning?”

The scientist shakes her head. “Not back then, no.” She watches her crew stumble off the ship and into the worried hugs and environmental adaptation injections of the natives. The alien has stopped administering her own medication, and just looks at her now.

“So they changed their minds, then. About us. About other planets.”

“No.”

“I do not understand.”

The scientist smiles. Which is good, but the alien knows that liquid coming out of her eyes is a bad sign, and the mix of signals is highly alarming. “Please, do explain. We waited fifty years for you, and you come here hurt like this.”

“None of them changed their mind. We just acquired the – let’s say, we finally got the means to come here.”

“That is good,” the alien nods, clearly relieved. “Then they believe you now. They will come here too?”

“You have to understand.” Suddenly, the scientist is very quiet. Her eyes are shiny and wet, and the alien finds that she looks more human than ever, more emotional than any scientist the alien knows. 

“You have to understand,” the human says again, a drop of liquid slipping down her cheek. “I wish we couldn’t have come here. I wish we’d still be there. I wish there was still war and pain and, you can hate me for this if you want to, I wish there was still someone suffering and waiting for it all to be better.”

“Why would you ever want that? Nobody should be in pain, no living thing.”

The human looks at the alien. Her face is wet all over now. Tears, the alien remembers, that is what the liquid is called.

There is not scientist anymore when the human whispers softly:

“We wouldn’t have to be here if they were still in pain. We wouldn’t have been able to go here if there was anyone left to wage a war. We wouldn’t have needed to go here if there was anyone left to die.”

Will we leave something behind?

Will they still know me tomorrow, next year, a century or a hundred after this?

Will our bodies echo through time like a wave along the ocean? Will our souls connect to the universe at an infinite numbers of points, each a touch, and still sing our songs when all else is gone and darkness is the only one to listen?

Maybe not. We could become nothing.

Or we could become part of everything.

We just may. 

dadvans:

mikazuki-hage:

thats-so-roentgen:

yuurisviktor:

icebergstromboli:

yuurisviktor:

theother9tenths:

yuurisviktor:

when u find a spicy meme and gotta show ur boyfriend even tho it’s 3 in the morning

Why the fuck does Victor have a statue in his room

this is the fourth addition to this post abt the statue leave homeboy alone if he wants a statue let him have a statue in peace smh

That looks like a got damn king sized bed all to himself. Victor. Babe.

listen dudes if viktor nikiforov, olympic medalist and five time world champion, wants a bed fit for a king let him Rest Alone on a bed fit for a king why must u all judge him so

listen as a certified Dog Owner who is also a member of the Let Your Fur Babies Sleep In The Bed With You club, that poodle is the one and only reason viktor owns a king sized bed i mean have you ever slept with a big dog before my dudes when they stretch out in the middle of the night they are savage af and will push you onto the floor.

I’ve never watched YOI before but I can confirm that even little dogs will try to push you onto the floor. Especially if they’re part staffy. Then they push against the wall with their chunky legs all stretched out for maximum pettiness

Okay so my favorite part about this is thinking about Victor packing up his apartment for Japan.

Victor Nikiforov’s Go Surprise Move In With Your Boyfriend Checklist:

• dog
• bed
• favorite lamps
• marble bust u commissioned of urself at age 20
• all figure skating outfits worn from years 1999 through 2014

And being like, I’M SET, and then getting to the airport and having to call Yakov because he forgot his passport.

If you’re Viktor Nikiforov, voted Most Dramatic Man Alive seven years consecutively, member of the No Pajamas My Beauty Only Sleeps Free association, you can also absolutely not travel anywhere without bringing along your very own set of Matryoshka dolls and setting them up in perfect casual proximity to a bust that could very well be Alexander The Great.

and no matter how lost i was, how afraid and small and broken the world had left me; the books of my past and future welcomed me in ancient halls as their child, and taught me about storms and stars and life’s paths as their student, and made my fingerstips into quills so that ink could lace my veins for the paper that waited for me.

their words and their worlds have always been, and will always be, my home.

and when i leave that home one day, it will be because i have been called:
for my own world, and all its stories and syllables, whisper for me and my ink to bring it to life.

The Boy Who Was Not Like Them, I Promise, He Is Different

He gathers all his courage, every last bit, and sits next to his beautiful girl. “Hey there,” he says. He’s loved her for so long, and she likes him, he knows that. “How are you?” 

But she likes where he loves. She’s friend where he’s obsession, and he needs more. He needs it all.

She is looking into the distance, out the window. He’s used to it. He keeps talking. “Can’t believe you’re single again. What is it with you and the guys? I mean of course none of them deserve you, only the best man does. Someone who’s close to you. Who’s honourable and good and treats you well, and I suppose that last guy didn’t do that – “

Her hand touches his shoulder. “Please don’t,” she says quietly. Her eyes are so dark, oh, he wants to drown. “Don’t ask me out. I cannot reject you forever.”

“Then don’t.” There it is. His chance. “All your boyfriends, they only stay with you for a week and then I never hear of them again. I’m not like them, I promise. I’m different, I’ll treat you like a queen. You can be mine, baby. Sweet baby.”

Maybe, if he’d been paying attention, he would have noticed. How the other boys (and a few girls, too) shy away from her as soon as their hands get sweaty and their eyes dreamy around her. They sense it. He doesn’t. “Please. Go out with me.”

She’s silent for a long time. Her fingers are long and oh they’d feel so good on him, he thinks and tries not to lick his lips, he could kiss her with it. He’ll do it, soon, when they’re a couple. Finally, she sees him as he is.

“Come home with me after class, then.”

He’s never heard sweeter words. And during class, he stares only at her, hoping, imagining how it’ll be in a few hours. 

They walk home. She takes his hand, and he almost cries out. It’s cold as ice. How strange, that he only notices now, but then again he’s never touched her skin before. Weird, that he hasn’t realised that before. Something feels different.

Her flat is on the ground floor. The door is white. Her hand is tight around his now, and his knuckles start to hurt. “Wow, you’re strong,” he jokes, or tries. His tongue is thick in his mouth, filling it like a swollen wound.

“Come on in.” It sounds like an offer. It’s not. She pulls him in like he’s a child, a jolt of pain rushes through his wrist. “Ow, what the hell!” His resistance is late, but he pushes his heels into the ground, cries out once, they’re in the bedroom.

He screams.

The bones on her bed are white as pearls. She has sorted them, by type first and then by size, and the skulls sit on the headboard in an arch of hollow ivory. His girl, his beautiful girl, puts her soft mouth on his hurting wrist. 

“You could have been a friend,” she tells him softly. “I loved you so dearly, my friend. But you couldn’t. You wouldn’t love me as I was, free and kind and by your side. We could have been so good, my friend. We could have been companions, hadn’t you looked at me like I was meat for your tongue to lick into and eat up and tear apart.”

“Please.” His vision blurs when he starts crying. “Oh God, please.” The fear is coming just now, as he drinks it all in, his mind roaring – piles of boy clothes, a container with red liquid, and the gorgeous darkness of her eyes as she leans down to rip off his hand with her teeth.

While he wails until his throat goes hoarse, she sits on his legs, turning him from one into many parts, and says: “Now you’ll be torn apart by the queen.”