Fanfic Series - Tumblr Posts
DEATH HAS ITS WONDERS
. . . Chapter Guide!
Green: posted! White: Not yet posted/written
+ taglist
+ check out more works here
About DHIW:
Summary: a zombie apocalypse takes over the school. Riki and Lyra have to figure out how to survive alongside all of their friends. On top of everything, they start to feel attracted to each other and aren't sure how to go about it in such a situation.
+ y/n is Lyra
+ content warnings: descriptive gore, angsty, death, 18+ implications (not riki), multiple groups are mentioned, kiss scenes
+ beomgyu x readers bsf
+ avg w/c per chapter: 2300
Chapter 1/6
(8/30/24)
. . . w/c: 2800
Chapter 2/6
(8/30/24)
. . . w/c: 3300
Chapter 3/6
(9/6/24)
. . . w/c: 2031
⚠️ gore scenes are very descriptive
Chapter 4/6
(9/21/24)
Chapter 5/6
(10/11/24)
Chapter 6/6
(10/21/24)
hello everyone! it's your fellow artist Lolo and I'm glad to inform that we are open to new members for the rainbow neighbourhood proyect! we have four roles free for casting and searching for voices of new talents ready for their time to shine! in canon info there are the voice auditions! we would love to have you in our team for this fan proyect!
with love to all people out there
Lolo
I wanted to share some more information on TRN for those who are wondering!
TRN is very based on the religious as above so below. (Search up as above so below religion to find out more about the as above so below) but it is slightly different. Heaven in TRN is as above. Hell in TRN is so below. Our main character has a lot to do with this religion and it will create a lot of the plot.
TRN will contain gore and very disturbing scenes. I will make another post saying the trigger warnings for TRN.
TRN will most likely be a animated series with a pilot episode and a podcast. I will also be cosplaying a lot of the characters to on my TikTok account ace.0f.spades0. Our voice actors may not be 100 % accurate to the canon voices so please be kind to us we are really trying to put this together. We also use Gacha life 2 to make TRN stuff since animation is hard!
The official 1 year of TRN will be on May 23rd 2024!
I will make a post talking about the boundaries of TRN!
Thank you so much for reading this. Me and my friends put a lot of work into this and we can’t wait for this to come out to the public!
HEEEYYY, LOVELIES!!
I do apologise for the lack of updates in the fanfic!! Anyhow, I am pleased to say slow progress is being made on Ep. 13!!
Thanks, all!! ☺
Does anyone wanna ask me any questions relating to Cloudy I.e. the movies, series or my fanfic series!! Would love to answer some questions!!!
Good news for fans of Before the food storm!!!
I will be uploading chapter 15, Halibut Hills P.2 tomorrow!!! ☺
IT`S HERE!!! AN UPDATE ON BEFORE THE FOOD STORM!!! :)
I do hope you enjoy reading, Halibut Hills part 02!!
INTELLECTUAL CRUSH
ep. 2 | ep. 3 | ep. 4 |
a multi-part series centered around the anonymous exchanges of namjoon and a literature girl. a separate but related installment of the halley universe (see Cupid Operation)
Books Nine Lives Company
Eco-friendly and sustainable trade of old books. Where we repurpose the neglected.
Namjoon pushes his weight into the swinging door and the store sign rattles.
A bell rings overhead - a jaunty, youthful chirp - as he enters the familiar bookstore to be encased in the scent of aged leather, the subtle-sweet vanilla essence of lignin wood-based parchment and the musty scent of carpet that has endured soiled shoes, coffee spills and bladder accidents from the part of the resident senior dog sleeping by the shop window.
He takes a practiced sharp left down a thin hall lined with mahogany-variation shelves, all crammed with books, without a single cubic inch to spare. The walls seem to encroach in on him, the further he disappears into the shop. Hardcovers and paperbacks - some surprisingly intact in condition, others faded, sun-bleached, tearing at the spines - spill from the shelves, pour into unstable, uneven stacks on either side of his legs.
Over the terrain of an old tapestry carpet, his worn logger-lace-up boots part a sliver of shuffling space.
His eyes dart over the labels meant to trim the seams of unrelated sections. During some point in the lifetime of the store, it proved effective. Now there's impractical irony to it. The books spill over their borders, congregate into uncategorized mounds, beg assortment and the inquisitive human graze.
Non-fiction, Poetry, Modern Poetry, Classical Philosophy . . .
"Kant...Kant...Kant," he recites beneath his breath, whilst drawing the tip of his forefinger over the lined spines. The ribbed feel of it in conjunct with the continued drum of his touch reminds him of sliding a hand across piano keys. An unattended grand piano on the courtyard of a local mall, the sound inflating beneath his hands, swirling up and around, diffusing through empty space and through an idle mind.
"Ka-" his finger halts, and shortly after, so do his steps.
He shuffles back to trace down the spine.
Namjoon saunters towards the front desk, skimming the dorsal face of the book cover with a furrowed brow.
There's a golden - well, once-golden, now-rusted coppery bronze - call bell that he would have once rang and been met with silence. He would have questioned ringing it once more at the risk of irritation.
Now, he only sets the book by the register and folds down to greet the senior dog curled into a ball over its dented, worn pillow. Grey, melanin-deprived hairs shade the corners of its snout, and highlight its brows, the tips of his billowing ear-lobes.
"How are you today, Apollo?" he whispers.
The dog lifts its head groggily to sniff Namjoon's outstretched palm. It scrunches and wrinkles its cracked nose and slightly parts the drooping lids of its eyes. Murky white clouds greet Namjoon.
"You make twenty the new twelve."
At the beep of the scan gun, Namjoon starts to rise.
The shop owner, Ruki, has a near-psychic ability to sense the presence of a customer within the maze of shelves. The call bell is for formalities, as is the dainty one hanging off the entrance frame. Uses them as fail-proofs while he disappears into the storage closet towards the rear of the store and pastes barcodes onto the covers of new arrivals.
Namjoon fishes a hand into the internal pocket of his winter coat for his wallet.
Ruki, behind the desk, mirrors the grey, melanin-deprived complexion of the dog, who once had been golden. The old man drums his knuckles on the wood counter and stares out the shop window contemplatively. It looks like it might snow today.
"Stray dogs," he voices, puckering wrinkled lips into a slight frown. "Invincible little creatures, aren't they? At this rate, I fear the damn dog will outlive me."
Namjoon thumbs the lined green bills nestled into his brown wallet.
"2.50's the sum, kid."
Namjoon folds the cash onto the counter and slides it into the man's wrinkled, patchy, outstretched hand.
"Everything alright, Ruki? With you, your family?"
"Yeah, I suppose." He shrugs. "Cancer's back." In a swift and practiced motion, he slips the receipt between the book pages like a bookmark. "I guess I can't be too upset with this fate. I only ever wished to live 'til 85. 84's not bad. Not bad at all." He slides the book face-up toward Namjoon, lets out a dry, humorless chuckle. It doesn't quite reach the point of crinkling the lines strewn around his eyes.
Namjoon grabs the book, taps it on the edge of the counter, as if gathering a deck of cards or a pack of printer paper. "I'm sorry to hear that."
"Don't be, kid," he slices right through the platitudes, having felt sorry for too long, having learned how much of a waste it is to live in regret and pity. "We all die at some point. It's nature. No use defying it."
"What about treatment? Technology, nowadays, is so advanced. I read a paper discussing the transplantation of a pig heart into a human recipient. Promising developments."
Ruki shakes his head markedly. "Can't go through that all over again. I won't spend whatever time's left - months, maybe a year, if I'm lucky - rotting because of chemo, not being able to tolerate my favorite foods, bleeding from my gums, in hospital rooms surrounded by people in the same death-bound state as me. I wanna be out here, where life is, all types of it. The pretty kind, sweet kind, the ugly, the morose, rude, and real kind. I wanna make memories with my daughter while there's still time."
Namjoon absent-mindedly frays the edges of the book with his thumb, liking the fluttering friction of the thin corners against the pads of his fingers. Tries to think of something better to say but realizes that sometimes silence holds more meaning. Ironically, his words fall short of any value, even amidst a bookstore overflowing with them.
Instead, he voices his unbridled curiosity. "What'll happen to Apollo?" He looks down at his left, at the dog. Very faint golden strikes up its flanks, transitioning into colorless white. "The store, too?"
"Ask myself that daily." He lifts his brows and lets them fall just as quickly, as if he's at a loss for a response himself. "I've been trying to persuade my daughter to assume my position. I even offered her the compromise of opening the shop only two days a week, so that she'll have the rest of the time to dedicate to her studies - wants to be a doctor, my little girl. I have no doubt she will be. Unfortunately, I likely won't be there to see it, to see her pledge her Hippocratic oath, get her white coat."
Namjoon sits at the bus stop, string earbuds in his ears, the book held splayed by the sturdy hold of his right hand over his crossed lap.
He draws the flame of his lighter to the cigarette balanced between his lips before slapping the case over the amber, extinguishing it swiftly.
Ashes descend onto his denim lap.
When the snow starts to glide through the sky, the grey nicotine ashes blend with the pale blanket by his feet. It is clean and fresh, yet untarnished by scruffy boots or bicycle tracks.
He'd read once, a statistic accusing nicotine as the leading cause of lung cancer. Quickly and half-mindedly brushed it off, like burdensome lint on a freshly-washed sweater. Plucked the doubts from his mind one by one before they could poison the rest of his thoughts.
It wasn't because he found it hard to believe. He was certain of its validity, the statistics were convincing, as was the logic, rather he didn't care. Cared more for taunting death a little, daring the universe to kill him the way he predicts. It's a little morbid but something deep inside him knows that life is rarely predictable or tamable.
He could do one action, and the opposite would unfold. It's not hypothetical. He'd tried to refute his hypothesis with trials; the amount of times it was supported soon became too burdensome to track.
Life isn't straight-forward. Good people get sick, die; the evil persist. The talented go unrecognized in the shadows, ghost writers; the connected thrive. It's all pointless to try and make since of any of it. It's all absurd, as Albert Camus would put it.
He tosses the butt of the cigarette to the ground as the bus pulls up, comes to a screeching halt before him, and squanders the faint amber with the sole of his boot pressed into the snow.
It fizzles a little through the worn-thin sole.
The bus shudders to a halt, and Namjoon shakes the slumber from his head, unfolds his lap, stuffs the book into his back pocket while he starts up, swaying clumsily, sleep-drugged. It was a routine practiced enough that he didn't need to count the stops, or read the street signs to know when to hop-off. There's some internal clock in his subconscious that starts ticking away at the minutes as soon as he climbs the steps up the bus before Nine Books.
The gates unfold and slide across the frame of the bus. It drives away with a long draw of its engine, and a squirt of inky smoke from its exhaust.
Replacing its sight, a vintage-style diner comes into view across the street.
Namjoon crosses the striped pedestrian markings towards it.
At the door, he tugs on the sign, hung around a snagged nail, twists it from displaying a scribbled "Closed. Come Again!" to a "Welcome!"
He strolls in, heavy boots echoing dully across the vacancy. Dispersing muddied snow on impact.
On the trajectory towards his quaint square office space towards the rear of the facility, he can't resist the nagging urge to flip the chairs resting on tabletops. He's got a chronic case of twitchy hands, likely a result of the incessant nicotine crave. Makes his mind race, his legs unsteady, unstill.
At first, he means only to flip one, and scratch the mental itch.
It persists.
After the second chair he starts circumferencing the table, figure eights in swift motion towards another table.
The chatter of the legs on tile is enough to fill the buzzing vacancy of his mind. Enough for his hands to clasp onto and anchor themselves.
But just as quickly, his focus starts to blur. Eyes skit over the distant counter in search of the next thing to occupy his time. His mind.
He's been down this road before. Has made it until noon stil in his winter coat, robust keychain clanking rhythmically against his belt clip. Goes hours without eating anything of substance. The gnawing of an empty stomach numbs before he circles back around to the first intention of the day: visiting his office.
"Office first," he reminds himself today. Inhales deep into his diaphragm and holds it lest it escape his dominion, like the rest of his thoughts and intentions.
He slips the jagged teeth of a golden key into the lock and twists the rusted knob. The door lets out a long groan as it swivels on tired hinges.
Nearing the disheveled surface of a wooden desk pressed against a wall, he plops down his latest read over an assortment of folded papers, receipts, stacked notebooks of moleskin and annotated promotional pamphlets. Try as he might to assign each item its designated square space, it never remains organized long enough. The universe tends towards entropy, he'd justify, it's just the law of nature.
Upon shrugging out of his winter coat, he drapes it over the backrest of his office chair.
His eyes habitually trail over a circular frame standing on the desk's edge. The textured frame accentuates a black-and-white image of his grandpa and grandma caught in a side-embrace, hands clasped over one another's at grandpa's breast.
Gingerly, his tremoring hands collect the frame. He draws his pointer finger over the smooth glass preserving the image, the single moment solidified in time.
He shakes his head clear of some dense sensation and places it back on its designated place, indicated by a square frame of gathered dust.
Shutting the creaking office door behind him, he fishes the carton of cigarettes from his back jean pocket. Plucks a single cylinder from its place and plants it between the groove where his ear adjoins his scalp.
He meanders into the vacant kitchen. Starts a pot of coffee. Nostrils flare as the acidic aroma starts to permeate the empty lot.
The brew drips and bubbles as he strolls to the dormant jukebox on the far end of the establishment. He bends down to plug its chord and starts up. Digs a spare coin out from his front pocket and slips it into the slit on the machine.
In response, it illuminates to life, flickers neon in a hypnotizing pattern.
Pressing a neon green button, he flips through the title slips. He's not registering any of them, though. Just lets his eyes become oversensitive by the mechanized motion of the slips. Defaults to inputting "1-2-4" on the selection panel.
Inside the glass, a wheel of two-hundred discs spins in search of the selection. It slows until it halts and a robotic arm upends a record disc from the rest, lays it out over a turntable.
In a synchronized choreography, as the record is laid over the turntable, a needle descends over its grooves and holds steady pressure.
The machine emanates a crackle that falls into a single voice: [The Song]
Namjoon shuts his eyes in that moment. Allows the familiar tune to send him back in time. An easier time, a more innocent one. Where his only worries consisted of finishing school assignments and coming home by the parent-designated curfew.
His grandparents would dance circles in the diner, hands clasped together, heads leaned to this very song. The customers would cheer, eyes sparkly. They'd submit petitions for the next songs by holding up a shimmery silver coin.
Namjoon would collect them, have them whisper the desired track into his ear. He'd skip back towards the illuminated machine and recite the corresponding track numbers until the current song would come to a cadence.
He sighs. Thinks, I should visit them while they are still there to visit.
It's not something he looks forward to, however. To come to terms with how much time has changed them. To accept that those fond moments are never coming back.
Circling around the kitchen, he procures a metal bowl from the cabinets. Tugs open a drawer and clasps a whisk, its metal cool to the touch.
Opening the fridge door, and bathed in its sterile light, he grabs a couple of eggs, skims the container counting the ones that remain. Provisions should arrive today.
While there, he grabs the tub of butter. Flings the door close with his boot and swivels to pour the ingredients over the counter space, next to the shimmering bowl.
He turns and leans over his head, grabs the flour and sugar from a high shelve. A bit of flour escapes a tiny hole on its bag and dusts his cheek.
Instinctually, he crinkles his eyes, coughs. Shakes his head.
As the batter inflates under the warm luminance of the oven, he grabs a broom propped against the wall inside a storage closet.
His boots clunk rhythmically over the tile floor when he makes his way towards the entrance. Props the door open with its embedded door stump. Starts to part a walkway through the compacted snow. Can't have customers slipping.
It's a cold day in January. The merciless kind of cold that can't be nullified by the festive spirit of the holidays. There's mutable wind changing directions immediately as it blows into him. Delivering the caress of winter and just as quickly withdrawing it.
The muscles of his back and shoulders tense in anticipation for the next gush of frigid wind. The hairs on his exposed forearms prickle.
He starts to envy the batter heating in the kitchen.
He thinks of burning the cigarette nestled over his ear. Imagines how the smoke would warm him up from the inside out. As though a steaming chimney lived inside him.
When he balances the cigarette between his chapped lips, he becomes aware of an approaching figure, strolling up the walkway. She's bundled in a coat, hunched in on her small figure. Raven black hair blowing in the wind.
Namjoon nods in her acknowledgement as he digs around his pocket for his lighter. It's clumsy and desperate and hurried, so the lighter slips his grasp on multiple occasions.
The incomer doesn't slow or detour.
"Morning, boss" the girl quips. Plucks the white cylinder from his lips.
He grimaces at the sensation that a part of his dry lips had been torn along with it. Cups his mouth to verify it isn't true.
"First time I actually get here before you light it."
"You owe me a pack."
"Yeah, well, you owe me the two years of extended lifetime I've gathered you."
"I don't think that's the actual math."
"I've saved you time. Can we just leave it at that."
Namjoon resumes brooming. Still cold. Still tense and prickled. Nicotine deprived.
She shrugs her shoulders out of the billowing coat to reveal at least three more layers of clothing beneath. Long sleeves tugged over her wrists to keep her fingers from tingling.
Norah's armored herself with a black apron, her name affixed to the collar with a pin. She pops out of the doorframe long enough to hand Namjoon a mug of steaming coffee, no sweetener, light milk, but not long enough to allow the wind to ripple a shiver through her.
Namjoon gratefully accepts. Holds the broom handle beneath his arm to allow himself to cup the mug with both hands and derive warmth from that. "Where's your partner in crime? Sleeping late, again?" He mumbles against the ceramic rim, steam billowing up his nostrils.
"En route," she responds over her shoulder. She rounds into the kitchen. Grabs the glass coffee pot and pours herself a black.
Namjoon chortles, accidentally inhaling a gulp of the hot drink. Dissolves into a coughing fit before he's finally composed enough to verbalize "From where? Mars?"
"Actually..." she sets down her drink on the counter. Loses her gaze out the front windows, ravaging her mind for recollection. "No. I think he mentioned it was from Saturn." She angles her head pensively. "Got caught in the current of those spinning rings or something like that."
Namjoon translates, "He's stuck in rush-hour traffic."
[thought of henry's place in addy larue while writing this so thank v.e. schawb for the imagery inspiration]
Does anyone know of a K-pop omegaverse series where the main character isn’t an Omega? Not that I’m complaining, but it feels like that’s all there ever is. I would love one if they were an alpha or a beta. Let me know if you’ve read one or even written one.