oomfies: π‘œπ‘œπ“‚π’»π’Ύπ‘’π“ˆ (πŸ’š contracts.)
π₯𝐨𝐭𝐭𝐒𝐞 𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧 ([personal profile] oomfies) wrote2020-04-25 07:57 pm
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-10 05:52 am (UTC)(link)
( it feels like it takes a long time for lottie to respond, her expression at first distant and blank, and then hurt. tired. hesitant. marc thinks that this was a mistake, that he should've done the same for lottie as he'd done for reese, taken her to andrea, someone more qualified to deal with everything. someone more qualified to talk and to help and to comfort.

that he shouldn't have brought her here, to grant manor. that it'd been a selfish decision, the sort that marc's good at making, where he decides he knows the best course of action and will take precisely zero input on the matter.

then she speaks and it's the last thing he expects to come out of lottie's mouth, a request to listen to music. his music. music that he doesn't even listen to all that often, only infrequently when he's feeling self-indulgent, when he needs some kind of noise as a distraction which is not often. he's never really been into music — sort of, here and there, as a kid and a teenager, and then there'd been other priorities. listening to the radio or keeping up with what was cool had never been something he'd done.

it's an out of the blue request that has marc's eyebrows arching and his gaze sliding from lottie to the inside of (frenchie's) room, to the sparse decor that marc hadn't bothered to replace once frenchie, like marlene, moved out. there's nothing in there for her (them?) to play music on, and it's his turn to look hesitant, doubtful, not out of a desire to say no, but because he's not sure how to say yes. )


Here? Or—. ( a loose wave, a gesture — vague — at the rest of the house. he could get his laptop, or something—? )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-11 06:20 am (UTC)(link)
( each question and answer feels like it takes an age, a difficult balancing act that's not quite working of silences and words and misunderstandings. it's not that marc wants to keep distance between them, it's that he doesn't know how to bridge it. he never has.

as time had gone on, marlene and jean-paul had both reached the same conclusion, that whilst marc could be a good partner, a good friend, it was infrequent, it was irregular, it wasn't in any of the ways that they'd needed often enough. the first time frenchie had been injured — because of moon knight — marc had gone to the hospital. he'd been there, seen him, spoke to him.

the second time, he hadn't.

the second time, he'd thrown himself into moon knight more than ever because he didn't know how to acknowledge that jean-paul's injuries — the fact that he'd almost died — were because of what marc asked him to do night after night.

he'd tried to tell himself that, given their history, it was only expected. it was just the risk they run. that there were no assurances in lives like theirs, and it'd sounded hollow even in his own mind, so he hadn't gone. hadn't been able to look jean-paul in the face until marlene brought him home, back to the manor. until she'd asked him what the fuck he thought he was doing and marc had muttered something about finding them and revenge, something short and angry before leaving (the conversation, the manor, anything to escape).

he doesn't really know how to do this, to look at the consequences of his actions in someone else. it's one thing, something else entirely when it's him that's dealing with it, him that suffers. that's all part of this, a reminder. this — lottie stood, lost — in the doorway to a guest room in grant manor of all places, is not that.

lottie rocks in her indecisiveness, her lack of familiarity with the manor, with this, with what she's asking palpable. wherever is good to listen to stuff here, she answers, and marc presses his lips into a line. he gestures back towards the stairs and says— )
Downstairs.

( a moderately sized room that might have been a comfortable lounge once upon a time — a coffee table, a few books in a neat pile that have the appearance of being looked at somewhat recently, a glass of something half-drunk. a sofa. chairs. artwork (avant-garde) on the walls, the sort that could very well be a reflection of marc's tastes in a way that some of the more refined pieces of furniture and decorations aren't.

and a record player. a cd player, too, because neither marc nor jake can often be bothered with dusting off records, replacing needles, or anything else that goes into record player upkeep. none of them are anything marc's bought recently, all mementos of childhood because, frankly, marc doesn't really get why anyone would choose to have a record player in this day and age.

marc's music is all eighties. drama and melancholy. synthy new wave and post-punk. jake's is motown and disco, more fun than marc ever is. )


Take your pick.

( he doesn't quite realise, not yet, that some of the awkwardness isn't just because of what lottie's been through. it's not because he blames himself (he does) and he doesn't know how to process that right now, it's because he's brought her back here, to somewhere that's not just his. it's his and grant's and jake's, it's intimate — open — in a way that marc hasn't been with lottie, it's showing her parts of him that aren't just moon knight adjacent, that isn't just their weird little nights of tv and food. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-12 07:20 am (UTC)(link)
( he catches the inhale, the way that she sounds, suddenly, so unhappy, and his gaze snaps towards her, rests on the top of her head in a vain attempt to work out what it is that's bothering her.

(it doesn't work.)

he knows that there's a lot that lottie doesn't know about him, about his situation, about his everything, and he thought she knew that, too. that they were both on the same page about there being so much unsaid between them, a comfort to be found in the fact that neither of them asked questions and so neither of them got answers they didn't want to hear.

he takes the sleeve, lottie's fingers leaving stark spots of colour against the dust, a physical reminder that it's been a long time since marc's done any of this. listened to music like this, spent time in here with something — someone — other than his own thoughts and memories. she's picked out a record that's not quite marc's tastes — he knows it, of course he does, it'd been painfully popular and experienced a brief resurgence in the 2000s after some something or other band had covered the track. it'd been bought for him, he thinks, as a not-quite joke, accompanied by a remark about listening to something a little less gloomy once in a while.

he doesn't quite sigh knowing that the synth pop of a-ha is going to be startling loud, shocking in the silence of the manor, the silence between lottie and him regardless of volume. it'll disturb the uncomfortable not-peace of the situation. he guesses that's what lottie wants.

the infrequently listened to vinyl is slid out of the cardboard, placed on the equally infrequently used record player, needled lifted up and then placed carefully down on one of the grooves near the edge. a soft click and a whir, audible fuzz filling the silence before the first notes of the track start playing.

he looks to lottie, watches her. watches her reaction, studies her expression. he should say something, he thinks, should do something, should be—

—more. )


—Do you want anything else?
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-12 08:20 am (UTC)(link)
( he feels cold. recognises the feeling, vaguely, as dread. recognises it as an unpleasant memory, of marc and marlene in similar positions in the same room. marc returning home after a night of moon knighting, after a night with stained glass scarlet and a night of questioning himself. unsure and indecisive about what he should do, of asking marlene and knowing that something was wrong, of asking her and just being told 'it's fine, forget it, just say what you came here to say'.

he can't see lottie cry but he can hear it, in the way that her words slide together, are enunciated in that slightly watery kind of way and he cringes. shortly after that he'd encountered carson knowles and marlene had left him — really left — for the first time, but not after painfully spelling out all the ways steven (marc, really—, everything she'd said had been about marc) was difficult, challenging. the futility of staying with him and the repetitiveness of his — everything.

the memory is there and he presses the heel of his hand against his forehead as if trying to bury it down, punctuated by a soft inhale of breath that's almost a groan before he makes his way around, to sit next to lottie. a-ha is loud in the silence, technically speaking but it feels the opposite. it feels like the silence is deafening, everything that's unsaid hanging between them like threats.

he looks to her, to the sleeves of his top, the one that's too big for her. laughably so, really, the way the shoulders droop down her arms, the way that the sleeves engulf her hands. )


This is what happens. ( an abrupt remark. he thought about prefacing it with an 'I'm sorry', but—. ) This is why they're gone, ( he adds instead, and he assumes she'll know he means marlene and frenchie and everyone else he's sort of but not really told her about. )

I'm sorry.

( he thinks that's what the problem is — him and the effect he has. everything that happens to the people he loves and cares about.

he doesn't think that the problem is him in an entirely different way, the fact that he doesn't trust enough to talk and to share. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-13 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
( lottie worries that the shifts in her expression will make her easy to read, the way that her hurt and anger is broadcast so clearly in her eyes and the set of her mouth. and she's not wrong, not entirely, but where marc can see the what, he doesn't understand the why.

I bought you slippers is the last thing he expects to come out of her mouth, the emphasis sitting heavily in the air. accusatorily. and marc doesn't get it, and it's broadcast, clear as day, in his face. the way his brows furrow and his gaze lingers on lottie's, searching, before glancing away as if he'll find the answer somewhere in the corner of the room. as if the frankly absurd companionship of a-ha in the background will tell him whatever it is he's missing.

(is it because he's not wearing them? is it because she thinks he didn't appreciate the gesture?) )


I—. ( no. ) They're at the Mission. I don't stay here often.

( surely that's not it? surely that's not what the issue is? steven's good at reading people, jake's better at intuiting them, marc is— not. marc is blunt, simple in his own way, in a way that makes sense only to marc.

(is it the manor? the unfamiliar? maybe they should have gone to the mission, maybe he should have called andrea.) )


—Which is why.

( he waves a hand vaguely at the room and isn't quite sure if he means the dust here, disturbed there where marc's been and gone not quite recently but not that long go either; or whether he means why it looks like this, a capsule of three different people's tastes because marc doesn't have the time (he does) or the energy (emotional) to think about separating everything. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-15 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
I—.

( he looks shocked. surprised. like he can't quite piece the information together or like he can, but he doesn't like how it sits together and he can't answer her question.

every time he thinks he knows what she's upset about, she says something else, provides him with something new and he has to start all over again.

(he doesn't miss the way she uses the over-long sleeve to wipe at her eyes, the way she hiccups but that it sounds more angry than it does upset. the way she throws her hands up to emphasise her point and the way she doesn't quite finish what she's saying. how is he supposed to answer that? he doesn't want to talk about it, has never wanted to talk about it and isn't that their thing? that they don't talk about things like this? for fuck's sake—.)

his expression shifts. sets, and he glances away from her to the room. to the everything she's referring to that she doesn't ask about.

fine.

fine! )


Grant Manor, ( he answers, bluntly. ) You can't think I've always lived at the Mission, Lottie. Believed that was where I had a life with Marlene? ( his turn to ask questions, fixing his attention back on lottie.

he'd prefer to talk about everything else — the night before all of this. the cause of all of this. the reason why he brought her here in the first place, but somehow, for some reason, lottie's opted to start talking about slippers and the manor. he leans back in the brief silence, watching her reaction, watching the changes in her expression, the way that her eyes are still watery with tears, the way that her nose is still running, the way that the lingering signs of her experience earlier in the night is still there in visible blotches across her skin.

it bothers him, but they've started this conversation now, so—. )


How would that go? 'By the way, I've got a house that I—' ( hate going to, hate for the memories, ) '—don't live in anymore, that I used to share with staff that no longer want anything to do with me, with a girlfriend that no longer wants anything to do with me, and a friend that no longer wants anything to do with me'?

( uttered in a way that sits between challenging and dismissive, a breath of a pause and he asserts— )

It's not important.

( no, it is important and that's the problem. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-15 06:42 pm (UTC)(link)
( she goes off on a rant about sunny and about him being able to escape the lingering reminders of everything by having the mission and if he was the laughing type, it'd be his turn to laugh in disbelief, to scoff, but instead he's silent. she really, truly thinks that by him being able to leave here, he's not reminded of any of it? moon knight — marc spector! — had been the problem, and he has to face that every day.

she tells him about what sunny would do, about how she remembers him and doesn't get a choice in leaving it all behind (he thinks that if she really wanted to, she could), tells him that her knowing about this was important, voice high and loud and somewhere between dramatic and, for lottie, desperate.

(she'd been in no fit state to say anything about where they could go — hotel, her apartment, the mission, or anywhere else. he doesn't say that, but the sentiment — skepticism — lines his face as he ignores the remark.) )


So what is it? ( he asks, gaze shifting away from her to the record player then back again as the song resettles into its groove (in more ways than one). ) What about the manor is so important? What are you upset I didn't tell you?

Because none of this is important to me.

( he doesn't think of it as a lie because it both is and isn't true. the manor's important, the memories are important, what it meant was important, but the now, the who and what he has instead, is more important. the friends he has now, the little found family he's formed of people still learning but leaning on each other all the same. the place — a little corner of manhattan, more of a community than the vast, sprawling manor on long island had ever had around it.

the manor is difficult and uncomfortable, part of a past he can't quite let go of and can't quite articulate as to why, but—.

(marc has never quite been able to let go of his past, has clung to the idea that if he does and does and does, it'll let go of him and maybe somehow he'll find respite and — internal — peace.) )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-15 09:01 pm (UTC)(link)
( his response, the one about how had she expected him to bring it up, had been meant on face value: they haven't had any conversations, bar the one about marlene and sunny, where neither of them had been quite what marc would describe as sober (though marc moreso than lottie, certainly, lottie who'd barely drank anything alcoholic before that evening), where it'd fit into the conversation organically.

of course, that's not to say that marc could've have brought it up. couldn't have mentioned it in relation to his almost endless assortment of issues, few of which he's shared with anyone, let alone lottie. how is he supposed to admit that it'd taken him years to open up — properly — to marlene? that he'd been friends, close, would-die-for-you friends with jean-paul but there had been innumerable (important) facts they hadn't known about each other.

(no, facts that marc had missed for starters. others he'd never considered important enough to ask about, and frenchie had indulged him in kind, had known marc well enough not to ask, known him well enough to know that asking would just result in an argument.)

she knows that marc wouldn't have told her about the manor. she knows because that's the type of person marc is. he attempts to decide what is and isn't important for other people based off his own feelings. he has to have it explained that just because he feels a certain way, doesn't mean that everyone else feels that way. has to be reminded of consideration.

it's not, strictly, that he's uncaring, it's that he finds linking it all together hard.

still.

he lets her leave. lets her stand, one hand held up to the precarious tower of hair and towel, the other used as leverage, tone petulant and angry all at once. she's leaving, but she's not leaving. she wouldn't know where to go — would be lucky to navigate the manor, let alone leave long island.

it won't last long, his frustration and annoyance. it'll disappear in a flash of embarrassment and guilt, to sit alongside the guilt that's come with everything to do with this evening. then he'll go in search of her, but only after taking some time to wallow and to stew, to mull over his own thoughts and how much he's mishandled all of this.

(how hard would it really be to admit the truth?) )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-16 09:41 am (UTC)(link)
( it's longer than a few minutes.

marc sits and stews at first, his temper remaining before it slides into being directed at himself, before it shifts into something more muted. marc has never had an argument with anyone that hasn't resulted in one of them storming out and leaving for hours if not days. it doesn't occur to marc that it's not, necessarily, the most adult of responses, that it's not especially mature.

he goes upstairs, looks into the guest room with its minimal evidence of anyone ever having used it as a permanent bedroom, and just as minimal evidence of lottie having used it for a whopping several hours. he lingers on the floor, considers retreating to his bedroom and just, say, going to bed. it's a fleeting thought, not at all serious because marc knows he wouldn't be able to sleep, knows that even amongst the frustration, he'd worry about lottie.

back downstairs, then, and downstairs again to the basement. he bypasses the gym, the storage rooms (those are still full, home to various trinkets he barely remembered buying, items and weapons relating to khonshu that he assumes might come in handy one day). the pool's empty, the sauna too, but the hot tub—.

he stops abruptly, the sight of lottie in the tub still fully clothed in marc's long-sleeved top and marlene's sweatpants absolutely absurd. his expression twists — not that lottie can see it, given the way she pointedly turns away from him, the way she chooses not to acknowledge him at all. it twists and marc can't seem to decide what to make of the situation, standing still and remaining silent.

a few moments and then he approaches, stands to one side and as ever, seems not entirely sure how to proceed. reconciliation has never been a strong point of his — it'd been different with marlene, easier — but it'd been difficult and awkward with anyone he's in a romantic relationship with. (""in"". on and off—.) )


After I was kicked out of the Marines, I did a lot of freelance work. ( has he ever told lottie that? he's implied it, but he doesn't think he's ever explained what it meant. lottie's never been curious — seemed curious, he corrects, because he'd never have thought she'd be so upset about not being told he ("he") had a fucking mansion. ) Bad things for bad people for however much money I could get. What the job was didn't matter. I was very good at not asking questions, not caring if I was on the right side of a war or the wrong side. Espionage. Theft. Assassinations. ( a beat and a lingering, watchful glance at lottie. ) Kidnappings.

( a momentary silence, heavy and oppressive. )

After Egypt, I— Marc Spector stayed in Egypt. Died in Egypt. Steven Grant returned to the States. Steven Grant bought this house. Invested Marc Spector's blood money.

You've never wanted — needed — to know about any of that and there's no sanitary version I can pretend happened to tell you instead.
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-17 10:41 am (UTC)(link)
( marc deliberately doesn't clarify that dying in egypt was literal, that steven grant buying the house — not marc — was literal. he lets the ambiguity hang as he had with marlene at first, lets her make her own assumptions. lets the misunderstanding that steven grant is just an identity marc had assumed sit as one possibility. it's easier because lottie doesn't ask about that, doesn't ask about any of it — about how much blood money there must have been to buy a place like this, doesn't ask for clarification about grant.

(it'll come back to bite him (them?) later, in the same way all of this has. marc's avoidance of being clear about what he means and thinks and feels and has experienced works not exactly fine for the most part, but it works in a manner of speaking, a delicately constructed house of cards that only requires one light breath to tumble down.

he knows this but he so often does anything to change it.)

his not-apology eases the tension, makes the absurdity of marc hovering near the hot tub and lottie submerged, fully clothed, all the more pronounced. makes the contrast of where they are — a room ostensibly meant for relaxing — versus what marc's just told her all the more striking.

she turns to him, finally, watchful in her own way, considered in her own way. there's no horror there, no disgust at the blunt admission of the type of person marc was (is). instead, there's — relief? satisfaction. a muted happiness that says that marc's given lottie what she wanted and marc, for his part, isn't sure how to take it. isn't sure if her frank question as to whether everything he's just said is meant to be an apology is better or worse than the alternative.

the question hits him and he just stares at her for a moment, blank surprise sitting amongst the frown, the tight unhappiness pulling at his brows and the corners of his lips. it's not not an apology, but it's not quite an apology either, and he thinks they both know it. marc seems to find the actual words, the admission that he's acted poorly a deep, personal challenge, and though marc isn't pleased with the way the night's gone, isn't happy with his actions, is deeply unhappy with the knowledge that lottie's here, in grant manor, because of him, he's not quite sure what lottie's asking for an apology for.

for not telling her about grant manor? about his past, the half a dozen or so years between getting the boot from the marines, the ten, twelve years after that where he tried to desperately balance his life, where he veered between honesty and acknowledgement and understanding, and denial. ugly breaks with reality. institutionalisation in his worse moments, moments where the rest of the superhero community were busy fighting amongst themselves over morals and ethics and choices, where marc was busy fighting with himself.

'I don't know' is the honest answer. is it an apology? it's an explanation at very least. the barest, most minimal of roadmaps of marc's life, small moments of honesty that he's dropped here and there throughout their friendship, most often in moments like this where it's wrenched out. )


You wanted honesty, ( he says instead. it's not quite the same way he'd respond to marlene, the way he'd try to win her back by telling her what he thought she'd asked for and then getting frustrated when she told him that, actually, that wasn't what she'd asked and his failure to understand was the fucking sticking point, but it's not entirely divorced from it.

lottie had asked him why she didn't know about grant manor, and now he's told her. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-18 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
( if he were to sit and think about it — later, of course — marc will find himself reaching the conclusion that lottie heard his answer but she didn't really listen to it. that she took from it the parts that were appeasing, the parts that gave her what she wanted. he knows — will be reminded, again — that lottie doesn't really acknowledge the darker parts of marc, of who marc is and has been.

(what marc doesn't — won't — piece together is how it's not so different from how marlene used to treat him (and grant), used to believe that marc (the ugly parts of grant-spector-lockley) could be buried and ignored and that he could just be steven. a deliberately skipping over of everything that had come before, even as marc had been involved in peter alraune's death.

even as marc had been the reason why tonight was what it was.)

she climbs out of the tub even before she verbally acknowledges him, and he knows — roughly — what the response is going to be. she wouldn't have moved if she hadn't felt inclined to at least semi accept the (slightly pathetic) olive branch held out to her. she stretches out her arms, water dripping from — god, everywhere, the clothes he'd pulled out of his and marlene's wardrobes sodden and soaked.

okay, she says, and marc doesn't really hear her because she shifts awkwardly, not at all gracefully, as if trying to separate herself from the clothes without getting undressed, as if trying to create a layer between them and her so that she won't feel so cold.

it's ridiculous.

(lottie person is ridiculous, he reminds himself.)

he exhales, the sound loud against the patter of water dripping from lottie to the floor and then he closes his eyes, just for a second, wondering how badly she'd take it if he pointed out how fucking stupid her idea to crawl in the hot tub fully clothed had been. his lips quirk and he turns away, back towards the direction he'd come from (and lottie too, presumably, unless she'd managed to get completely lost in her wanders. )


Elevator, ( and there's an odd tone to his voice, one that suggests he's trying to hide a laugh. )
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-19 05:09 pm (UTC)(link)
No, ( he says, and it's true in a very technical sense because marc is not laughing. it's true only because marc does not tend to laugh, his amusement is often more muted and more restrained. it's not true in the sense that whilst the way that marc tries to keep his amusement from being too audible results in an uncommon tightness to his voice and it's not the closest marc tends to get to laughing, it's still—

there. the amusement is not well-disguised.

still, he doesn't stop walking until she says his name, pausing and looking back over his shoulder only to find that she'd taken the brief interlude to take the towel she'd used for her hair and use it to cover herself instead, wet clothes bedraggled and sad in a pile by her feet. near-laughter all but gone, he opens his mouth to speak, the words getting caught somewhere in his throat because lottie is, without a shadow of doubt, the most ridiculous human being he's ever encountered. five minutes and they'd be back upstairs. five minutes and he'd be able to give her fresh clothes.

(it's selfish and spoilt of him, but at times like this, he really misses nedda—.) )


I'll get you some— ( a twist of his lips, indecisive, like he's not sure how he wants to feel about the situation, ) —dry clothes.

( the heat makes the difference between lottie's usual pallor and the red against her cheek all the more stark, an unpleasant blotchy red, and he hesitates, lingering, thinking of all the questions he'd meant to ask earlier, the ones before all of this had happened, the ones he's normally better at asking but he'd not quite known how to in between the awkwardness — his and hers — and his shame. )

A first aid kit. ( uttered as he turns back towards the elevator before adding, firmly— ) And food. When was the last time you ate?
vestments: (Default)

[personal profile] vestments 2023-07-20 09:29 pm (UTC)(link)
( she's not supposed to stand here and wait. or — she can but she doesn't have to and, frankly, marc would prefer it if she didn't. would prefer if she followed him back up to the second floor so that he could find more (!) clothes that'll hopefully fit her without having to come all the way back down here.

her reply is at first hesitant, questioning, and he waits by the elevator door, hand resting on the panel as lottie's feet pad, wetly, against the floor. she speaks again, asserts that she's not hungry and the expression marc gives her is doubting and skeptical. she might not feel hungry — that'll be everything to do with the situation — but she should eat. he hmms lightly, disbelievingly, the sort of tone one takes when they've heard the answer but because it's not the one they want to hear, they've decided it doesn't count. )


Well, I am. ( or — he's not either, actually, but he should eat, in much the same way that he knows lottie should eat. it won't occur to him, not now, not later, not unless lottie says anything, that marc's decision to make choices for lottie is part of the problem here — although if she does bring it up, his response will be much along the lines of 'well, she's not giving him much to work with'.

the elevator dings, a bright, trill sound in the otherwise tense atmosphere of lottie and marc together, and he takes a step inside, just the one, to stand in the way of the doors closing to let lottie get in, too. )

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-20 22:52 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-22 17:36 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-25 18:42 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-26 20:01 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-28 10:41 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-07-29 20:43 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-02 21:44 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-08 19:27 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-10 19:55 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-13 18:28 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-14 05:57 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-15 06:38 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-16 20:33 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-18 05:51 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-19 08:32 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-20 07:22 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-21 18:31 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-22 06:07 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-23 12:31 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-24 14:47 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-25 19:56 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-27 17:09 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-28 20:50 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-08-30 19:37 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-09-02 19:42 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-09-07 12:01 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-09-10 09:03 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-09-15 15:35 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-10-02 19:49 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-10-11 00:05 (UTC) - Expand

(no subject)

[personal profile] vestments - 2023-10-26 20:47 (UTC) - Expand