Embers in the Hearth

docholligay:

A really short, dumb, AU of Mystery and Shadow Christmas thing, to cheer up @keyofjetwolf 968 words. 

The fire crackled and popped, and Rei could not help but look over at the shades of red and orange, where she had seen the future so many times as it descended upon them, and now saw nothing.

It wasn’t quite nothing, she supposed. She and Michiru had shared that, in quiet murmurs inside dark wine bars, that everyone had lost what it was that made them Senshi, and yet, still sometimes Rei knew the phone would ring before it did, or what the special would be in her company cafeteria, or a thousand little things she could not possibly know. We have not lost it all, I suppose, Michiru had said. But that wasn’t right either.

It was just that the spark of Sight was something of theirs, enhanced by being a Senshi but not the cause of it. She held that close, that something special about her was all her own.

However, sometimes, it made Christmas a bit anti-climactic.

But she beamed at the gift all the same, a large picture of Kimi, M.A. and Rei, leaning up against a fence at the zoo. Rei remembered that day, the way the sun warmed the dark cascade of her hair, Kimi’s giggle as the seals did all their tricks for their handlers, the crisp snap of the chocolate-dipped ice cream bar in her mouth.

“It’s big so you can see it, Aunt Rei!” M.A. spilled out in her free and unrestricted way.

“M.A..” Michiru chided gently.

“Shhhh,” Mina stage whispered, “she doesn’t know she’s half-blind.” A tightly-packed ball of wrapping paper struck her in the face, and she laughed and turned to Haruka, “Hey,” she pointed at her, “Any minute now, I’ll tell you you’re crippled and crush your soul.”

“What???” Haruka’s eyes widened in mock horror. “But I just ran 3 miles this morning!”

“Oh stop it, the both of you.” Michiru playfully swatted Haruka’s shoulder.

Rei brought the frame close to her face and studied the bits of gold leaf painted on the edge of it in wobbling lines, the rhinestone hearts, the wooden letters, glued on the bottom, spelling out, ‘WE heart YOU AUNT REI’

“The girls decorated it all themselves,” Michiru touched the top of M.A.’s head lovingly, “I think they did a rather exquisite job.”

“Papa put on the letters.” Kimi added quietly.

Haruka put her arm around Kimi. “Only because you’re too little for hot glue.”

“Do you like it?” Kimi leaned forward, nervous that somehow she might have failed at Christmas.

“Of course she likes it, Kimi!” She knitted her eyebrows in irritation at her meek sister. “Why wouldn’t she?”

Rei smiled at Kimi. “Come here.”

Kimi slipped off the couch next to Haruka, carefully picking up her blanket as she left, as Mina padded into the kitchen in her thick new slippers.

Michiru took the opportunity to move, sneaking in behind Haruka’s back and putting her arms around her, kissing the top of her head.

Haruka nuzzled softly into Michiru’s neck. “Excuse me, madam, you’re in my personal space.”

“Oh?” She closed her eyes and leaned her cheek against Haruka’s forehead. “My mistake. I shall remove myself immediately.”

“Well, I didn’t say that. You just might have to pay the rent in kisses.”

“Ew, gross.” M.A. stuck out her tongue and jumped off the end of the couch, scampering toward the wooden train set in the corner, with its freshly painted details in the little town that Haruka had spent hours creating, declaring the flat colors it had some with not good enough for her girls.

Kimi sleepily crawled up into the chair with Rei, pulling at her sleeve and depositing herself neatly beside her, curling up into her side.

“Aunt Rei?”

“Mmm-hmm?” She drew Kimi into her lap.

“Do you really like it?” She lay her head on Rei’s shoulder.

“Kimi, I love it, I’m going to hang it in my office first thing. It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.” In way, she thought, it was the truest thing she’d ever said.

Mina walked back into the living room with a platter full of hot chocolates, extending one to Rei. “I can’t wait to see your vice-president stare at it during meetings.”

“He’ll fall over himself to compliment it.” She took the hot chocolate, and sipped a bit off the top. “What did you put in this?”

Mina dramatically bowed, still balancing the platter gracefully. Rei hated to admit it, but even after all these years, she held an appreciation of Mina’s catlike fluidity of motion.

“Fireball for my fireball,” she winked at Rei, who sighed, and then set a mug down next to Haruka, “Basic peppermint for my basic b–” she looked over at M.A. in the corner, “buddy,” she set another mug down next to it, “and Grand Marnier Cuvee for those of us who can’t drink anything that costs less than 20 dollars a glass.”

“Well,” Michiru smiled picked up the mug, with it’s elegant gold rim, “we are what we eat, so they say.”

“You’d think Haruka’d be a little classier, if you know what I mean.” She smirked as Haruka blushed heavily, scowling.

The sounds of Mina and Michiru’s sniping, more playful than it had ever been back in their military days, faded against the gentle crackle of the fire again, Haruka and Michiru snuggled warmly on the couch, soft and quiet and happy. M.A. played in the corner, and Mina knelt beside her, the two of them chattering about mock worlds. Kimi shifted against Rei, falling asleep, and Rei held her close as she stared back into the soothing warmth of the fire.

The future wasn’t in the fire now, not the way it had been. It didn’t need to be.

She was happy enough to simply warm the present.

And The Snow Sparkles like Diamonds

docholligay:

docholligay:

My sparklee is the illustrious @sittingoverheredreaming! I combined two prompts: “Haruka and Michiru and their first Christmas with a child” and “Haruka and Michiru get snowed in somewhere” as well as your love “Michiru being cute with kids.” SO I HOPE YOU LIKE IT. 6,125 words

“Miss
Kaioh, the entire airport is grounded. I assure you your plane will
be one of the first to depart once safety has been established.”
 He was firm, but Michiru noted the anxiety in this eyes. He was
used to dealing with rich. Rich was nothing. Billionaire heiresses,
however, still didn’t visit his counter every single day, and her
French was the kind of perfect he never expected outside of the
country.

“This
is Zurich. I can’t imagine this is the first time snow has
magically appeared on the runway, left by frost fairies.” There was
no anger her in her voice, only judgment, and somehow that was all
the more terrifying.

“Ma’am,
it’s an emergency level blizzard.”

Haruka
had no idea what the French patter meant, but she knew enough of
Michiru to recognize the look in her eyes, the one that said, ‘I
could have your entire family killed and no one would ever question
it.’

Keep reading

The closest thing i really have to a “Christmas” fic. I wrote this…2 years ago? last year? I can’t remember, for the Sparkle Exchange. 

kramergate:

how to get cool matte textured nail polish with no work at all

1) paint your nails the desired color

2) wait hours until you are 100000% sure they are dry

3) go to bed

4) wake up with your nails fucked to shit! congrats on your fucked nails! what happened while you slept is between your nails and god!

Does anyone know how to begin doing commissions?

misselaney:

thekurohime:

I want to offer commissions to earn money for school and I figure I should offer a product with a skill I have

So how do you do that? I know it’s more complicated than simply listing prices and pictures. How do you set up the paypal? Do you need an existing bank account?

Howdy Kurohime! I do not know a lot about you but I do see your art reblog gallery and your other stuff, so I thought I’d put this together for you: 

1.) Find out what your time is worth!

Here’s a trick ripped straight out of the the Graphic Artists Guild Handbook: Pricing & Ethical Guidelines book. 

Sit down and add up all the expenses that you have to pay each month. Consider things like house note/rent, insurance and other bills (and add in a food bill). Multiply that by 12 to get how much you “cost” in a year.

For me personally, I have shell out about $2.5K a month so I have to scrounge up $30,000 a year, and that’s buying nothing extra, going nowhere but work and straight home. No gain. No progress.

Add a salary to this figure. If you are shy about a number, at the very least give yourself what is minimum wage for your area. You must add additional money to this figure because otherwise you would not be able to deal with taxes or spend money on more than staying alive (new clothes, a nice night out for a change!)

For me, minimum wage is $15,000/year. $15,000 + $30,000 = $45,000. This will be my goal salary for this example.

Now, do two things:

1.) Your Daily Rate: Divide the goal salary by 230. Write that down.  Multiply this by 1.15 (this figure is a profit margin; treat yourself). 

Ex: 45,000/230 = 195.65. 195.65 x 1.15= $225 an (8 hour) day.

2.) Your Hourly Rate: Divide the salary by 1125*. Then multiply the result by 1.15. 

Ex: 45,000/1125 = 40. 40 x 1.15 = $46 an hour.

*I wrote 1125; the Handbook suggests between 900 and 1350, so I gave you the average of the two.

Are you going to charge people these hard numbers? Not unless you want to. However, you do need to know how much you are worth so you can answer the question every beginner asks: “How much should I charge?”  When you know what your time is worth and you know how long it takes you to do something, it’s easier to answer that question! 

“Isn’t $46 an hour lofty?!”, you might ask.  If you made $46 an hour working 9 to 5, you’d be livin’ it up!  Surely since I’m just starting I should charge minimum wage?!

NO.

Minimum wage is for people who work finite schedules, whether full or part time.  Minimum wage is for the 9 to 5 world; the predictable world. You are not in the 9 to 5 world.  You are in a world where you will rock-hop from client to client and can go from showering in moolah Scrooge McDuck style to suffering a workless dry spell for what seems like eternity. 

Whatever you do, do not let anyone swindle you into paying you minimum wage.

2.) Put together samples of your work and tell people you’re ready for commissions! 

Don’t put price tags on your work if you don’t want to. People will come to to ask what your prices are; you can haggle with them! 

3.) Work on a ½ up front, ½ later basis. 

Most people are awesome to work with! However, there will be bad eggs. There are those rare, but still distressing times people will take advantage of you if you do the work before they pay you, like running off without paying you. To get around this, you should ask your customers for ½ up front (and don’t start until they pay you!).  

This works two-fold. First, you, the artist, know that at least you got paid something! And for the buyer, it’s easier, trust and money wise, to commit to a half-payment rather than the full thing.

4.) If you use PayPal, remember to send an invoice rather than accept gifts, and remember to use a Paypal Fee calculator!

PayPal will turn $15 into $14, and once or twice this is no big deal, but if you want to make good money (and I think you can), you will want to make sure that you actually get paid for what you need to be paid for! Account for PayPal fees in your invoices.

The way people do sometimes try to get around the fees is by sending money through gifts, but since the fees is how PayPal gets paid, they can/will also boot you for “suspicious activity” if you get paid via gifts. 

5.) Keep records of all your transactions and a percentage of what you make set aside for taxes.

Assuming you live in the United States, this money you make on the Internet is income, and you get the wonderful thrill of paying taxes (JOY OF JOYS). You have to report them yourself, and if you don’t, you might can get away with it for a while, but, it’s best not to find yourself in a big fat audit.  

Now I can’t give you financial advice in any legal capacity. However,  assuming you live in the US, you are going to have to anticipate paying about a fifth of everything you make in taxes.  The type of tax form you will be looking for is a called a 1099.

6.) Never stop!

Good luck! 

– Elaney