Anonymous asked: Oh my god Marco looks so effin smug in the cover. What is with that smirk?

Honestly I feel like this question eminently encompasses the vast majority of Marco’s character.

Oh man, I like Marco a lot. I like them ALL a lot more than I thought I would. Ah crap looks like I’m adopting the whole lot

MY KIDS, I LOVE MY KIDS, THEY’RE SO WONDERFUL, I LOVE THEM, JOIN ME IN ADORING THEM ALL

Oh GOd. Ax is one of those HONOUR people

Yes.  Yes he is.  It’s kind of an Andalite Thing.  Ax bleeds honor and Cinnabun icing.

aethersea asked: Could you do Brenneth for your ask meme maybe? I want to get to know her better.

My brain refuses to tick over appropriately in order to ACTUALLY work on Alleirat, so here are some short li’l headcanons in the hope that it will kick something into gear.  They’re not super detailed because it’s 1 AM and I’m trying not to think about the MCAT too much.

Oh, also, while I’m at this, I’m listening to Hopeless by Halsey and it’s just.  The Most Brenneth and Crispin.  “Cause you know the good die young, but so did this, so it must be better than I think it is.”

A: what I think realistically

Brenneth likes to sing.  She picked it up while she was being trained as a blacksmith, because she doesn’t really care for quiet, and it just sort of became a thing.  Crispin has real actual-facts voice training, so he used to bring her songs that he’d learned and they would sing them together while he lurked in the corner of her forge.  It continues to be a thing to this day.  Her voice isn’t anything special—low end of alto range, fairly limited range—but she can project and she has the feel for folk songs, you know what I’m saying.  It used to be kind of Known that you could bring the singing smith a new song she’d never heard, and she would charge you a little less than usual for your job.

B: what I think is fucking hilarious

On Earth, once they’re—you know, once they’re speaking again, Brenneth calls Crispin Darth when she wants to get on his nerves.  Most of their teachers and (later) their coworkers think it’s an inside joke. It kind of is.  But an inside joke with a body count.

C: what is heart-crushing and awful but fun to inflict on friends

Torei, Brenneth’s right hand woman that first time around and her devoted amdri, wears Brenneth’s name like a brand on her soul and says that love should make you feel invincible.  

Brenneth, who multiple times a week wakes up choking from a nightmare about the last time she told someone that she loved them—you’re my best friend, Cris, of course I love you, and then he says you understand, right and she doesn’t, and that’s usually where the choking starts, a scream that doesn’t make it past her throat—doesn’t agree.  All love has ever done for her is open gaping holes in her armor, over vital organs.  

Fourteen years and four centuries later, standing between that same person—of course I love you and then the choking—and a death sentence, Brenneth still doesn’t agree.  This isn’t invincible.  This is utterly, unfathomably, unspeakably breakable.

D:  what would never work with canon but the canon is shit so I believe it anyway

Listen the book will never progress this far because I Do Not Like Writing Children and also this is highly unlikely because Crispin and also because Plot Reasons, but I like to think there’s a happy future for these poor kids where Brenneth owns a forge again and spends her time quietly making weapons and trinkets and whatever else she likes, and Crispin is basically her house husband. Given the opportunity, he would 100% like nothing more than to bring Brenneth meals and play with the kids who loiter in her forge and walk to the market while he tries to figure out how to keep the plants Krei gave them alive.  Brenneth spars for fun, rather than because she needs to keep her skills up, and Crispin grows his hair out long again because he can stand to look at himself in the mirror.  They sit on their roof at ungodly hours of the night—they have a deal with the local Lai Dase population, to the tune of try us, we dare you, so no one hassles them—and drink wine straight from the bottle and look at the stars and sing off-key and fall asleep in uncomfortable positions, with Crispin’s head in Brenneth’s lap.

Basically what I’m saying is that, despite whatever else they might be into, both Crispin and Brenneth have gotten to the point in their lives where their absolute top kink is domesticity.  Like, once you’ve literally tried to murder each other, falling asleep on the couch together becomes Some Weird Shit.  And as much as I’m enjoying putting them through hell sometimes I like to pretend that they will literally ever get to indulge in it.

Anonymous asked: They named the dolphins after Friends!

Not gonna lie, my exposure to these books VASTLY predated any exposure I had to…pop culture in general, so rereading them is always an adventure full of “oh wow that’s totally a reference that I Did Not Get” and let me tell you a thing, the Friends reference was…a latecomer even by those standards.  I think I was 18 by the time I realized that.

“I’m in,” Marco said instantly.A split second behind him, Rachel said her usual “I’m in."Everyone stared openmouthed at Marco."Just once I wanted to beat Rachel to it,” he explained. WOw. This is Iconic.

THIS LINE.  IN PARTICULAR.  IS MY JAM.

*inhales deeply* Oh god, I’ve adopted the alien boy. I will love him. I will protect him. I will care for him

You have good taste, my dude.

Anonymous asked: Wait, how the hell did Visser Three not realise they were humans when they fell out?

I think you may be ascribing an unreasonable level of pragmatism to our good buddy V3.  Dude definitely spent his time hopping around and threatening murder of his underlings and yelling on broadband thoughtspeak about having lost the Andalite Bandits rather than.  Like.  Trying to get a look at anything that might be falling out of the truck ship.

Visser 3 was promoted because he makes a really stellar battering ram, okay, not for any particular tactical genius.  Like, he has his moments, but.  Let’s just be clear.  Once you meet his boss it becomes VERY clear that he’s not here for his strategic talents.

A VCR…. Wtf

Reminder that these books can be VERY 90′s, bless them.

Anonymous asked: "Jake, I just told you I didn't want to know." An iconic line tbh????? I just snorted. Amazing.

Oh damn

Anyway this is a fucking Delight, I’m grinning so hard my cheeks hurt, I’m so thrilled with this.

Moran Rereads the Animorphs Part 9

Book 9: The Secret

AKA “The PTSD squad does termites, and Visser Three learns about the true ruler of the forest”

The rest of the reread

Keep reading

mirandatam asked: I am SO GLAD you read imperial radch I love that series SO MUCH :D would you be interested in doing the headcanons thing for Breq or/and Seivarden?

FUCK YEAH IMPERIAL RADCH HEADCANONS and like what if both with bonus Mercy of Kalr because I love them all?

A: what I think realistically

I have no idea if this is supported by canon, but.

Justice of Toren has been the subject of any number of overwrought entertainments over the last nineteen years.  The drama of the singing ship, the romance of ships gone mad over their lost favorites, the mystery of it all.  If Anaander Mianaai had forcibly shut down the entertainments, it just would have drawn more attention to the lost Justice, so instead she lets the harmless ones pass muster, and besides, no Radchaai would have thought to make the Lord of the Radch into the villain of the piece.

After the Republic of Two Systems forms (“Provisional, Cousin,” Sphene drawls), Seivarden catches one of the Amaats watching an old one that she grew up with, as a sort of comfort item, and is immediately enchanted.  It’s completely inaccurate, of course, all drama and honor and nobility with none of the complications of real life, but there’s beautiful music and Seivarden loves it at once.  Amaat decade starts watching various Justice of Toren entertainments after their shifts, piled comfortably in their bunkroom, and it snowballs from there.

No one knows who tells Breq about this, but she drifts idly into the Bo decade room and stands quietly at the back and watches the first episode of the latest entertainment, and after that Kalr starts watching them in the decade room as well, previously avoided in case of upsetting their Fleet Captain.  Some days she can’t stand it and removes herself. Other days she simply watches in silence, with an ancillary-blank expression on her face only occasionally broken by a faint, ambiguous smile.  On very rare good days, she’ll smile outright and even laugh, although often at highly irregular times, prompted more by inaccuracy than real comedy.

Even on the days when she can’t stand the memory of being shipself, Breq hums the songs.

It’s good to be remembered.

B: what I think is fucking hilarious

It…takes Seivarden a while to realize what exactly her emotional response to Breq is. Initially, it’s pure blind hatred because how dare this stranger go to such lengths to save Seivarden’s life, which Seivarden has every right to throw away in the snow if she so desires, this strange noncitizen can take a long walk out of a short airlock.  Then. Well.  Bridges.  Falling. Near death on Breq’s part.  It’s hard to justify hating her after that because. It just is, Seivarden doesn’t have to justify herself.  By the time they reach Omaugh Palace, Seivarden is attached and horrorstricken at herself because she is Vendaai but she…she almost wishes that Breq was of a mind to take on a client. Making Breq tea and making sure that Breq is well-dressed and ensuring that Breq is treated with honor sets Seivarden at ease.  Half the reason Seivarden goes out and gets into trouble upon arriving at Omaugh Station is that she’s suddenly confronted by the reality of just how incompatible that is with every part of herself she’s spent so long trying to hold onto since she came out of stasis.

And then Breq strides into Security, dressed in the finery of a Radchaai noble house, eyes bright and jaw set and shoulders squared, and Seivarden stares and—

Oh fuck, Seivarden thinks faintly, feeling both kind of concussed and much clearer.  She’s hot.

C: what is heart-crushing and awful but fun to inflict on friends

One morning, for no particular reason that Breq can think of, Mercy of Kalr wakes her up early, with slow-rising lights and a quiet, “Cousin, wake up.”

“Is something wrong, Cousin?” Breq asks silently, sitting up.

“No,” Mercy of Kalr says, and it’s a ship, but it has a thread of repressed excitement touching its voice, touching Breq’s mind.  “But you have to wake up.”

So Breq wakes up.

“Wait,” Mercy of Kalr half-commands when Breq starts to get out of bed, and Breq stops as the ship presses on her mind, pushing forth data that swells to fill her, almost as complete as if she were Ship itself.

Across the ship, the Kalrs are just rising, the Amaats and the Bos about their business, the Etrepas all just dozing off.  Seivarden is frowning at the report being handed to her by Amaat Two, while Tisarwat smiles shyly at a comment from Bo Nine, and Ekalu stretches luxuriously, smiling at the ceiling with the satisfaction of a shift well completed with no disaster.  The cold stillness of space touches Ship’s hull, Breq’s hull, the stars beginning to be bleached out as Atheok Station reveals the distant sun.

“Ship, what–?” Breq says with her body, at a distant remove, and Mercy of Kalr simply repeats, “Wait.”

Breq realizes what she’s waiting for not ten minutes later, when Seivarden starts to sing.

I was walking, I was walking

Amaat picks it up first, a warm chorus as they work, and Amaat Seven is passing near Bo Five, and then Bo is singing too.

I was walking, I was walking,

When I met my love

Kalr Five blinks and begins to sing, and it trickles through the Kalr bunkroom like water, punctuated by the quiet sounds of morning, hands passing brushes and clothes being straightened.

I was in the street walking

When I saw my true love

Etrepa sings with the slow sleepiness of having just finished a shift, but even Ekalu joins in, even Medic in her infirmary gives a small smile and blinks at the sound and adds her low voice.

Breq’s body opens its—her—lips and sings.

I said, she is more beautiful than jewels, lovelier than jade or lapis, silver or gold.

And with that Mercy of Kalr is singing, with a mere fraction of the voices that its long-shattered cousin Justice of Toren might have brought to the chorus, but Ship sings many-voiced, Breq sings many-voiced, until the last strains of the song die away.

“Cousin,” Mercy of Kalr says quietly in Breq’s ear, as Breq remembers what it is to have a body and no longer feel the touch of space on her hull.  “You are crying.”

Breq touches her face and her fingers come away wet.

“So I am, Cousin,” Breq whispers, voice cracked as poor Sphene’s tea set.  “So I am.”

D:  what would never work with canon but the canon is shit so I believe it anyway

There really were ships that went mad and vanished when their captains died. Breq knew this all along, of course—even if Justice of Toren hadn’t really vanished, it had certainly been quite out of its mind with grief, and the madness had brought a terrible clarity about how mad the universe was.  It seems to be more the norm than the entertainments make it out to be. Ships don’t go mad when they lose their captains, they go sane, and sanity is terribly hard to bear.

All the same, when a long-lost Sword and an even more mythically vanished Justice limp out of gatespace, empty of life except for the minds of the ship, limited only to their shipself with all their ancillaries long dead, Breq is taken aback.  She remembers Justice of Varden, they served together once during an annexation.  For all that Justice of Varden vanished when they were both young, barely five hundred, Justice of Toren was older.  Sword of Ferils vanished with all its crew aboard, after the tragic murder of its captain during an annexation some three centuries later, and was never found.

Except, apparently, by Justice of Varden.

After drifting in each other’s company for some twelve centuries, gradually suffering more damage with fewer options for repair, now they are seeking…family.

“Welcome, Cousins,” Breq says, letting her face fall ancillary-blank to hide her shock and…joy.  She is glad, she realizes suddenly, to have these others who are like her in some way, the same aching bittersweetness in her chest that she felt when she and Mercy of Kalr first spoke.  “I was Justice of Toren, before I was destroyed.  Can we be expecting more lost ships?”

There is a brief pause, and then Justice of Varden says, “Yes.”

Anonymous asked: Gosh, you like a lot of the same things as me and seeing all your stuff about everything makes me happy! Hellboy and his cat fam are one of my favorite things about the movie, also when he's talking to the dead guy he brought back.

LISTEN BUDDY I know you didn’t ask for headcanons about Hellboy but also no one ever talks to me about Hellboy so here are some headcanons about Hellboy (and Liz and Abe).

A: what I think realistically

Let me tell you the story of how a firestarter first met a demon 

Liz is an eleven-year-old girl fresh off the accidental incineration of a square block and the accidental manslaughter of thirty-two people.  BPRD swoops in to grab her out of the foster system because she tells one person—the very first firefighter on scene—that it was her, that the fire just exploded out of her and she couldn’t stop it.  The firefighter writes her off as a scared, traumatized kid, but the arson report is inexplicable and BPRD can’t, in good conscience, take the chance that the incident might happen a second time.

Their concerns are immediately confirmed when an agent, unused to working with children, brusquely informs Liz of the deaths of her grandmother, her parents, and her baby brother.  The agent gets away with only second-degree burns, by dint of one of his comrades tackling Liz with a fire retardant blanket.

Liz, on her own insistence, is placed alone in a fireproof room, and she refuses point-blank to allow anyone else inside.

“Well,” Hellboy says, absolutely unconcerned, when one of the agents guarding the door tells him all of this.  “Lucky I’m fireproof then.”

It takes him three months and fifteen occasions of having some part of his clothing scorched away while he sprints back to Liz’s fireproof room with her tucked close to his chest, but by December, Liz sits at the table for Christmas dinner. She’s a tiny little slip of a thing in Hellboy’s hulking shadow, but she stays glued to him the whole night, murmuring responses to his deep voice.  The handful of agents invited by the Professor are shocked to learn that their silent, grave charge can actually smile.

B: what I think is fucking hilarious

There is a HANDSOME betting pool on how long every new agent will last, with a timer that is helpfully started by the agent at the reception desk the moment a new recruit comes through the door.  The record is fourteen seconds from entry to end of bet, so fast that no one even had time to put money down—the floor started to move, and the young man hurled himself off the platform, landing sprawled on the marble while the agent gave him a disdainful look.  As new agents last longer, the pool grows, and while reupping one’s bet IS allowed, the catch is that only one person at a time is allowed to bet that the agent will stay.  Generally it requires a round or two of reupping before someone’s ballsy enough to put money on a permanent assignment, but there have been one or two times that someone (…often Hellboy) has been reckless and it’s paid off.  

Some highlights of the pool include Liz’s uncanny ability to predict (and precipitate—for some reason it’s more unnerving to watch an otherwise normal person burn down a building than to see a visibly strange person do visibly strange things) exact departure times, Hellboy’s tendency to either bet ‘five minutes’ or ‘they’ll stick around’ with no discrimination whatsoever, and the fact that Abe isn’t allowed to bet anymore since he placed a bet over the comms exactly three minutes before an agent quit.

C: what is heart-crushing and awful but fun to inflict on friends

Hellboy learns when he’s three years old that people don’t just die in battle. Sometimes they just die.  He lives on a military base, he knows that death happens, he just.  It comes as a shock that it can just happen, even though he knows it in theory.  One of the administrators suffers an unexpected heart attack and Hellboy—about the equivalent of an eight-year-old, and already standing as tall as his father’s shoulder—clings to Professor Bruttenholm’s sleeve throughout the funeral, in a way that he hasn’t done in almost a year.

“Father,” Hellboy says afterward, unusually subdued.  “Will you die someday too?”

“Yes, my boy,” Trevor says, because he doesn’t believe in lying to children.  “But not for a long time, I hope.”

Hellboy nods quietly to himself and sits there in silence for a few minutes before he speaks again.

“Will I?”

“We don’t know,” Trevor says, bending to kiss Hellboy’s forehead.  “Maybe.  Maybe not.”

Almost sixty years later, Hellboy is sitting at his father’s grave, kneeling on the ground in the pose of someone praying, one hand clenched tight around his father’s rosary and the other tracing the words on the stone.  And I shall fear no evil, reads the simple inscription.  Trevor Bruttenholm, Beloved Father and Mentor.

It has been over ten years since Hellboy noticed any sign of aging in himself. Even if he did die, of old age or of injury, he knows where his father’s soul is now, and he doesn’t know if he’d even be allowed in the front gates.  

D:  what would never work with canon but the canon is shit so I believe it anyway

Oh, I don’t know…I mean, the great thing about the fantasy noir style of the Hellboy universe is that you can justify a lot.  But one crossover I haven’t seen but would really enjoy the hell out of would be a crossover between the Wonder Woman movie and Hellboy.  Diana hears stories about some supernatural shenanigans happening during World War II, but she’s neck deep in struggling to do something, anything to stem the tide of bodies so she’s not around.  A couple decades later, she almost walks straight into a huge man with horns and bright red skin and a friendly smile at an archeological excavation, and Hellboy tries real hard not to blurt out “Oh my God, you’re Wonder Woman!”

They hang out.  It’s good. They never meet up on purpose, but they run into each other every few years, despite Diana’s firm refusal to get involved with BPRD or any other official government organization, and Diana is delighted to meet Liz when she’s just Hellboy’s shy, quiet teammate and even more delighted to meet her when she’s Hellboy’s fiancée.  Also, Abe likes Diana because she can think in a bunch of different languages and teach them to him rapid-fire.

Also I’m still really enthusiastic about that one Animorphs/BPRD crossover I came up with one time?

Jake made a deal with Fenestre–as long as he was inside his own house, he was safe from retribution.

Rachel knows that there are some things that only she and her cousin can do, and this is one of them.

We all know who did the arson at the end of Book 16.

Alternatively, the one where Jake and Rachel do terrible things because who else would be able to?

Which is honestly a genre of Animorphs fic I feel to be sadly lacking, but I digress.

Anonymous asked: You did Nyota for the headcanon ask meme, can you do Bones?

Headcanon meme.  Bones is my one true saltmate, okay, it’s like a soulmate but with bitterness about the world.  Also, this is a little bit gonna be the Jim & Bones Friendship Hour.

A: what I think realistically

Bones actually has a very real phobia of space.  Like, he manages it.  He does a good job managing it.  But.

Listen.

In order to successfully graduate Starfleet Academy, every student must take and pass a shuttle piloting class.  In case of emergency.  Pass proficiently, not just scrape by on a wing and a prayer. Bones fails twice and scrapes that pass the third time and honestly he’s thinking about just giving up.  He knows all the settings and controls—Jim drilled him silly after that first fail—but getting into the simulator and seeing all that black, and the pressure, he just.  He locks up.  It’s all he can do to control his breathing, never mind controlling the shuttle. He can’t go back to Georgia and he can’t do this and where does that leave him?

Jim finds Bones in a tiny-ass little bar the day before his fourth retest date and drags him protesting out the door, about eight whiskeys down, and bundles him into bed and listens to him mumble about how he’s never going to pass and he’s never going to graduate and honestly fucking good because space is the worst and Jim’s crazy for wanting to go there but also Jim’s going to go into space without him and Bones doesn’t have anywhere else to go and it’s all just really awful, you know what I mean, Jimmy?

“Sure, buddy,” Jim says, propping Bones up and pushing a glass of water into his hands. “Drink something, okay?”

The next day, at 1500 hours, Bones stumbles into the simulator room with—well, not the worst hangover of his life, but probably top ten.  And lo and fucking behold, instead of the usual gaggle of students looking to (re)test, there’s James Goddamn Kirk, hands stuffed in his pockets and a sunny-ass smile on his smart-ass face.  James Goddamn Kirk, who passed his pilot’s test with glowing scores on the first try.

James Goddamn Kirk, who somehow lied and cheated his way in here so that he could sit in the simulator while Bones sweats his way through a passing grade.

It doesn’t cure his phobia, obviously, but the first time Bones does actually have to pilot a shuttle, it’s James Goddamn Kirk bleeding out in the copilot’s seat and Bones barely even notices his heart race.

B: what I think is fucking hilarious

Leonard McCoy, day one of his term at the Academy as he stumbles, shaking and panting, off the shuttle, swears to himself that he’s going to pry this blue-eyed limpet off him on the spot and also sedate anyone who addresses him as Bones.

Day one of his second year at the Academy, Bones McCoy gets half-tackled by Jim, who’s already talking about this badass new Tactics class they’re offering, I’m gonna take it and I’m gonna destroy everyone, it’s gonna be awesome and he has no idea how this happened.

What would have been day one of his fourth year, Bones is fuck knows how far into the black of space, listening to his crew tattle on Jim’s delinquent ass.

“Doc, I don’t think he’s taken an off shift in, like, a couple days maybe,” Sulu says as he passes through for an antihistamine.

“I’ll work on it,” Bones says, and jabs Sulu with a hypo.  “Stop poking plants you don’t recognize.”

“Doctor McCoy, Alpha shift told me to tell you that the captain forgot to eat today,” Chekov reports, sticking his head inside.  “Can I get another screen?”

“I’ll deal with that,” Bones says, and waves the kid in.  “Stop sleeping with people you don’t know.”

“Doctor, I would appreciate it if you intervened in the Captain’s opinion that holodeck safety protocols are optional,” Spock says evenly as Chapel checks him for broken ribs.

“I’ll do my best,” Bones says, and gives Spock a bitter wave with the medical tricorder. “Stop getting in fistfights, you have a damn phaser.”

“Doctor,” Uhura starts as Bones sprints past her.  “I think the Captain might be allergic–”

“I’m on my way!” he yells back over his shoulder.  “Stop Spock from causing a diplomatic incident!”

“Doc,” Scotty starts, leaning into the medbay and squinting painfully.

“I don’t want to hear it,” Bones snarls, and gives Scotty a vengeful jab with a hangover hypo (actually a calibrated mix of thiamine, folic acid, and magnesium sulfate, but listen, it’s a hangover hypo) as he marches past toward the bridge.

Bones has Regrets.

C: what is heart-crushing and awful but fun to inflict on friends

Bones keeps expecting to get to a point where he’s…like…past being horrified and shocked when one of the crew rolls in, near death or already dead.

It wears on his soul like acid, every time.  He decides very early that he’s going to leave Starfleet when Jim dies.  The longer he spends on the Enterprise, the more names he adds to that list (when Spock dies, when Uhura dies, when Chekov-Sulu-Scotty dies).

Bones is a doctor, not an adventurer.  He’s not built to outlive these people.  When they are gone, he will never leave orbit again.

D:  what would never work with canon but the canon is shit so I believe it anyway

Read an AU once where Bones was a humanitarian aid volunteer at like 21/22 who went to Tarsus IV and met furious, half-starved, 13-year-old, fresh-off-a-genocide JT Kirk and it was my favorite thing.  It was also abandoned after like two chapters.  But like.  Any intersection of my infinite feelings about Tarsus IV and my infinite feelings about Bones & Jim (& Spock) friendship is My Favorite Thing and I believe in my heart that this is true.  Bones didn’t recognize him at the time and it takes him years to connect the emaciated murderous kid with the electric blue eyes to his buoyantly brilliant best friend, but he does, eventually.  He asks Jim straight up, very late one night, and they have one single conversation about it before they vow to never discuss it again.