Friendship Prompts

comingfromastatechampionasshole:

I’ve seen a lot of these for OTPs, now here’s one for your BroTPs! Send in two characters and a line!

  1. Babies
  2. “What’s your probl–” “YOU. YOU ARE MY PROBLEM.”
  3. Caring for the other when sick/hurt
  4. “You just might be the love of my life”
  5. Karaoke night
  6. “I’m gonna hug you now.”
  7. Together for the holidays
  8. “I won’t leave you.”
  9. Learning to drive
  10. “I brought over 2 pizzas and an entire package of oreos”
  11. Competition
  12. “I need someone”
  13. On vacation
  14. “That’s not how I remember it”
  15. Helping each other get ready
  16. “You did this for me?”
  17. Snuggling
  18. “What the hell is wrong with you?!”
  19. Double Date
  20. “Well that just happened.”
  21. Fake thanksgiving date
  22. “I’m going to give you the best birthday ever”
  23. Found family
  24. “Oh, NOW you want to talk.”
  25. Taking the hit
  26. “It’s not any fun when you agree with me that you’re useless, you know.”
  27. Sleepover
  28. “I made it for you!” “I can tell”
  29. A secret
  30. “I have a complaint to file with you.”
  31. Helping you move on
  32. “Please don’t have an emotion in front of me”
  33. Matching costumes
  34. “I think I’m dying.” “Tell me you’re being dramatic, please”
  35. Losing a bet
  36. “It began when s/he died”
  37. Giving you away

Dear New York,

So this is it, huh? Six years and change– not a bad run. When I came, I knew that I I was going to be something. I wasn’t just another girl from the Midwest. And you know, you showed me that was true, but not in the way I expected. You didn’t prove I was destined for greatness. The city gave me space to lose the conceptions of who I had to be and it turns out, I was very different than the girl who lived in the Midwest. Gay. Butch. Kind, instead of angry. I left Michigan brilliant. As I leave you, I think people would say hardworking instead. Efficient. Witty, maybe. And I’m all the happier for it.

I’ve had my greatest triumphs and failures here. You’ll always be the rejection phone call from my dream job on the way to meet my grandparents at the airport, the man who spit at me when I was canvassing to try and make ends meet. You’re meeting the love of my life at a bar, and the first time I got a promotion, and getting contacted by an agent after reading a piece I wrote for school. You’re the slow disappointment of being unable to write more the agent liked. You’re the friends who will never be matched. The girls who turned me down. You’re losing my virginity with my socks on.

You’ll always be my first love. I remember the first time I saw it rain here. The streets became rivers and the city noise dulled down and you were more beautiful than even the movies made you look. That’s how I’ll think of you. Your skyline and all the millions of lights. To do that, I have to go. Right now all I can see is how tired I am, how hard I work to claim my place in this picture postcard of a city, how small I’ll have to live to stay in your heart. (It’s easy to think you won’t miss me. And maybe you won’t, but the guys from the deli will and the metro security guards will and the event regulars will and my coworkers will, and isn’t that the same thing?)

So here I say goodbye. Go well into the future, and take care of everyone I leave with you.

All the best,

Sam

A Wedding, For Love

Michiru’s mother visits her on the morning of her wedding. A pretty short companion to A Wedding, For Real at just 900 words.

She’d sent Rei away on a series of menial missions—- call
the caterer one last time, check on their bouquets, go to the hall early to
ensure Haruka was in no amount of trouble. Setsuna, she told she wanted to be
left alone. The truth always worked with her.

Michiru stared herself down in the mirror. She was supposed
to be feeling things, she knew. She was supposed to be happy and dewy with
tears over the day and how beautiful she looked. But her reflection looked like
a doll, the fitted bodice of her dress and the arrangement of her hair too
perfect to be quite real. She’d been a doll for all her childhood. The urge to
be real and the need to be a beautiful bride worthy of marrying Haruka battled
within her. If she loosed just one strand of hair, snagged just one edge of
lace…

The door opened with a creak.

“I assure you I’m fine, Rei, and I do need you to—“

“You’ll find I can’t be kept away so easily.”

Michiru stood straighter and cleared all emotion from her
face. “Mother.”

“You look beautiful, though I do wish you’d let us help pick
the designer.” She came close and smoothed the lace over Michiru’s collarbone. “I
suppose I should be happy she didn’t take you to a department store.”

“If this is what you’re here for, I will have you removed.”

Her mother smiled. “You are still the woman I raised after
all.”

MIchiru said nothing.

“I merely wanted to get a picture with you before the
ceremony.”

“I’m to expect a photographer stationed outside the door,
aren’t I? The shot will be in the papers before I say ‘I do.’”

“Well, Michiru, there’s very little we’ve been able to put
out, lest anyone look into your choice of… partner.”

“Yes, I know I’ve quite ruined your plans. It’s so appalling
that I’ve fallen in love with someone who works for her living, isn’t it?”

“Have I taught you nothing? Love isn’t what’s important
here.”

Michiru let herself have a derisive laugh. “Yes, mother, if
there’s one thing you’ve taught me, it’s that.”

Her mother sighed and sat down, folding her hands over her
lap just so. “I suppose it’s easier for your kind.”

Michiru watched her in the mirror. “I’m not sure what you
mean.”

Her mother gestured vaguely with her hand, oddly
uncharacteristic. “To throw it all away for love. You all put so much into
getting marriage, you must feel like you have to marry whomever you want.”

Michiru froze. This was territory she’d never entered with
her mother.

In the mirror, Mrs. Kaioh rubbed her thumb against her
wedding ring. “It’s standard, for the rest of us to marry for other reasons.
Even people like your partner. You see it in the papers all the time. They
marry for insurance, or for tax reasons. It’s always been a business
transaction.”

“Did you love someone?” she dared ask, very quietly.

Her mother looked off, away from the mirror and away from
Michiru. “There was a boy, yes, before I met your father. Looking back, it was
very juvenile. He played polo with my brother. It was all a great secret. We
believed in it then, that we would find a way to bring the idea to our parents.
He wouldn’t have been a terrible match.”

“But then father came.”

“Neither I nor my parents could say no to his proposal.” She
ran her fingers along the hem of her dress, just as she had chided Michiru for as
a child. “I always thought we would find a similar proposal for you. It being a
woman is no great obstacle. You have an acquaintance, even, who is the daughter
of a senator…”

Michiru laughed—genuinely laughed in front of her mother for
the first time since childhood—unsure if it was funnier to hear her maid of
honor called her acquaintance or to hear it suggested that she could marry Rei.

Even her mother smiled. “I do suppose, with what I know, the
two of you would have a messy and expensive divorce.”

“That would only be if there wasn’t a messy and expensive
murder first.” Their eyes met in the mirror. “Haruka has something better than
money or status. She’s going to take care of me, even if you can’t understand
how.”

“You’re certain?”

“More than anything.” Michiru pressed her lips together,
mindful not to smudge her lipstick. “I thought for a long time I would marry
your way, and then hoped that I would not marry at all. But she… she shows me
there’s something more to life. There’s something worth it under the charade
and under the horror. I love her, and for that love I’m going to marry her.”

Mrs. Kaioh closed her eyes and sighed with the slightest
smile. “With all my love for you, I wish you the greatest happiness.”

“Thank you.” Michiru turned to face her.

Her mother immediately straightened in her chair and crossed
her ankles. “Well then, are you quite ready to leave? I will not have you cause
the spectacle of being late for your ceremony.”

Michiru turned back quickly, loosing one strand of hair near
her ear. She made sure that side faced the photographer as they passed him
outside, but she squeezed her mother’s hand tight, knowing they’d never have a moment
like this again.

Ahhhh I haven’t even really had feeling about ending work and probably never seeing most of my coworkers again because I’ve been too busy freaking out because I’m suddenly worried we don’t actually have the apartment because I only got a phone call about it over a week ago and I don’t have anything in writing and they haven’t cashed my deposit so I’m going to call tomorrow to check in and also my wife wrote me a check to help me get a car but it hasn’t gone through yet, I went to an actual teller thinking that that would be safer but now looking at the receipt the account number doesn’t match any of mine so I’m terrified they somehow deposited it to someone else’s account? I’m going to go back and ask tomorrow too. Now I’m wishing I’d just gone and asked about loans instead. And also I have to do a ton of laundry and pack for my bus trip up tomorrow and I leave the next day and I’m just. largely terrified.

ETA: well shit the car dealer I liked isn’t open until my wife is back anyway so that doesn’t really matter

Sam you got any Harumichi or Seiusa (or both) winter headcanons?

Yessssssss. Also lmao these are so different in tone,
whoops.

Harumichi

  • Winter is the hardest season for them
  • Haruka gets RESTLESS. Running and driving are technically
    things she can still do, but they’re not the fast freedoms she needs. She can’t
    just drop everything and run. It’s a process.
  • (Do not suggest Haruka get on a treadmill when it’s snowy. She
    can’t explain why it doesn’t work for her, but it makes her feel even more
    stuck.)
  • Once she’s working as a mechanic it gets a little easier,
    because she has so much to throw herself into at work in the cold
  • (She accidentally charms so many young women as she puts on
    their snow tires. A lot of business comes her way through word of mouth.)
  • For Michiru, winter has always been the time of year her
    family cared most about putting on a good face for each other and the public
  • The Kaioh family Christmas shot somehow always gets “leaked”
    to the press
  • Michiru has zero interest in playing along once Haruka is in
    the picture, especially since the rest of the family does not want Haruka in
    the literal picture
  • It’s a fight every year. Every single year.
  • Whenever she can convince Haruka to leave the mechanic shop
    in someone else’s hands, she jets them off to some distant, warm vacation spot where
    she “doesn’t get service” and screens all her family’s calls until well into
    January
  • It’s healthier for both of them. Haruka runs on the beach
    while Michiru relaxes by the water
  • (They’re always back in time for Haruka’s birthday though.
    Michiru treats it as the only real holiday)

Seiusa

  • Can you say SNOW BUNNIES
  • These two love winter
  • To Usagi the season is all about cookies and hot chocolate
    and snuggling and those are three of her favorite things
  • Seiya is the SNOWBALL FIGHT CHAMPION
  • (That no one WANTS to be in a snowball fight with her is not
    important)
  • They are the couple that always builds ridiculously detailed
    snowmen together
  • It gets to the point that Usagi actually shops for
    accessories. They have a whole drawer of snowman hats and scarves and knickknacks
    that no one but Usagi would think of even putting on a snowman
  • The moment they go back inside is Seiya’s favorite, Usagi’s
    all rosy cheeks and cold hands and Seiya just always scoops her up in her arms
    to warm her back up
  • They have so many matching ugly sweaters, because Usagi
    thinks they’re cute and Seiya thinks they’re funny
  • Usagi is also a gift-giving champion. Seiya is STILL flabbergasted
    everytime she comes home on wrapping day and sees the carnage of Usagi wrapping
    everything for all her friends and family
  • Usagi has to give Seiya gifts in private because Seiya tends
    to get “just a bit teary” over her thoughtfulness and never wants anyone to
    know
  • Also just picture these two losers falling asleep on the
    couch under a big flannel blanket, Seiya slumped down with her head nuzzled
    into Usagi’s shoulder as the snow falls outside

rhiorhino replied to your post “Coworker: your new job sounds boring Me: yeah but it also sounds like…”

I’m so happy for you getting sleep and your weekends back! Hell yeah that’s the good shit

People often didn’t believe me when I said this as all I wanted from a job, but it’s really what’s important to me. I’M NOT GONNA HAVE TO LEAVE WORK AT 10:30PM AND BE BACK AT 8:30AM AND RANDOMLY WORK 10 DAYS IN A ROW EVER AGAIN.

Also I’m going to get to have consistent meal times, which I never really thought about but it going to be so nice. And I won’t be on my feet all day. And I’ll get to plan ahead because my schedule will be the same every week. Like. If I want to have dinner with friends or see a movie or go somewhere for a weekend I DON’T HAVE TO WAIT UNTIL MY SCHEDULE IS POSTED I CAN JUST DO IT.