Dive into a world of creativity!
Mmpphh
-incoherent babbling-
HOLY SHIT I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR A RERUN OF THESE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
garashir plushies will return in 2025
Thinkin about Pretty Boys with Huge Eyes and Chaos Energy đą
Alexander Siddig, Hugh Laurie, Arsenio Hall: the holy trinity of mischievous side-eye
The crash was sudden. Instinct brought him to his feet and took his eyes to the corners, the shadows--all empty. The world sharpened, every sound and movement painted across his senses in sudden vibrant color. Not an explosive. Ever since Ab-Tzenketh that was the first, quivering question his mind asked. Not an explosive. No steps, no voices. The walls were whole, and the silence remained undisturbed save for the quiet scrape of chair as the doctor stood. They stared suspiciously at one another across the stretch of table. âWhat was that?â Bashir asked finally. âYou tell me, Doctor.â âYou canât seriously think it has something to do with me?â Oh, I can, Doctor. But in this case, he didnât. The taut alertness in the doctorâs body was entirely unfeigned. âNo, merely that you have the better hearing.â âItâit came from the kitchen. Sounded like crashingâŚor falling.â Garakâs fingers found the grip of the disruptor tucked at his hip and pushed through into the kitchen. The room stood as placid as heâd left it, a few dishes sitting innocent on the counter, a half-drunk bottle of kanar decanted and casting a long, still shadow in the moonlight. Room empty. Windows unbroken. Blinds drawn. But somethingâsomething is differentâ The teapot. He found her sprawled, hidden by the bulk of the counter, at the jamb of the backdoor. The door itself lay cracked on its hinges, and, outside, the nightlocusts screeched, grating across the grayscale silence all around. Sheâd pulled a shelf down as she fell, the ceremonial teapot scattered in jagged crumbs around her. Garak had seen plenty of corpses in his time. After a while, contrary to what most imagined, one grew inured. Eventually the glazed serenity of the eyes, the stiffness of the limbs, the eerie stillness of chest and mouth were mere details to be noted just as one might note height or eye color or symmetry of face. No, the sight of death hadnât affected him for many years. What heâd never quite grown immune to was the sight of the dying. Shivering agony in the eyes. Fluttering, soundless lips. The clutch of handsâŚLoral⌠Every one of her gray hairs was still perfectly in place. It seemed obscene. âGarak? Is everything alright?â The humanâs voice was small. âOh, God. Is sheâwait--â Before Garak could object, the doctor was crouched beside him, finger to Loralâs ashen temple. He took two breaths, brow furrowed, then switched to her wrist. A terrible keening sound. The doctorâs voice transformed, calm and strong in a way Garak wouldnât have thought possible for one so young. âLoral, listen to me. You may be having a heart attack.â She shook her head in silent terror. Pressed her hand to the center of her chest. âYes, but itâs alright: I have everything necessary to handle it in the medkit downstairs.â Garak didnât register what he was saying until the doctorâs urgent, commanding eyes pressed against his. âIn the medkit downstairs.â Garak sprang to retrieve it. The medkit he found in the laboratory was Parmakâs, the rugged hide bag with the small stitching of the Hebitian sun on the corner. Garak had bought it when Parmak got his job with the Bureau. A gift. Had he left it here? Had heâ
Focus, Elim.
His error didnât occur to him until he was halfway back up the stairs. The door swept open in the moonlight. The screech of the insects⌠Damnit, you might as well have handed him the keys to skimmer and drawn him a map to the shuttleport. But, to his relief, the only move the doctor had made was to prop Loralâs back slightly with a tablecloth. He sat beside her talking in low, gentle tones. The boyâŚhadnât taken it. As easy an out as he was like to have, and heâd stayed. Perhaps heâd believed that bit about the theta-band detonator after all⌠Inside he quaked with a terrible mix of adrenaline and gratitude and fear, but the hand that extended the medkit to the doctor was as steady as ever. He looked at it with detached admiration. âThank you, Doctor.â The human didnât respond, lost in the medical scanner. A probeâs mistake, Elim. He could hear Tainâs voice, sharp with disgust. Sentiment has dulled your wits. Trying to stay out of the doctorâs way, he sat and took the old womanâs hand. Nowâs not the time, Father. The medical scanner beeped worryingly. One didnât have to be a doctor to recognize the urgency of the alarm. Loralâs eyes lolled in fear. Make yourself useful, for the love of State. You may not be able to handle her heart as the doctor can, but you can handle it in your own way⌠He forced a light expression. âLoral, if you wanted a day off, all you had to do was ask.â  A tug in her cheeks. Good. âYouâre not to die until youâve finished preparing the cakes for Union Day⌠and, you know, thinking on it, I havenât the first clue how to steam those Kârârausian silk tunics. Imagine! Me on Union Day without my silk tunics, Loral! A true tragedy.â The dry exhale of what might have been a chuckle. âNo, Iâm afraid youâre going to have to stick around a bit longer, my dear.â For the briefest of seconds, he felt Bashir glance up from the scanner. Their eyes met and something stirred. Deep, from a place he barely recognized. He hoped the doctor saw the same respect reflected back at him.
Illustration by me, @bleuuughhh-blog
Have this thing!
I find myself doubting my ability to choose an excerpt of the appropriate size and type to best represent this story and the scene I drew for it; not so long that it impedes on AC's delicately built intrigue, nor so short that it's impossible to get one's footing in the text. I doubt my ability to represent this scene well enough not just in my excerpt but also in my artwork: I doubt if it's detailed enough, well enough composed, *legible* enough.
What I don't doubt, however, is the stunning quality of the story from which this scene comes, nor the extent to which I will endorse it and sing its praises. Hats off to you @alphacygni and your phenomenal fic from years ago lol. It's irreparably changed my brain chemistry and my standard for both romances and tragedies alike. I hope you don't mind the continuous art posts and tags because I definitely have more scenes to create and share!
Anyone feel free to ask me for Garashir scribbles BTW. I do art for a living and doing dumb lil doodles helps me relax and sometimes get out of artist's block. Still exploring and learning in this absolutely wonderful fandom đ
Click the first image to see the hairs on Bashir's lil head better
unpopular opinion but i think a ship that's not canon but both halves are canonically insane about each other is infinitely better than a ship that's canon and boring
Do you think bajorans / humans look a bit unnerving to cardassians... imagine a human but twice as smooth. Are humans to cardassians what odo is to humans. (Im dragged out kicking and screaming)
And here we see baby Julian definitely not checking out the weirdly forward alien Miles just brought past the infirmary:
Look at him! The way he does a little double take. The look of wonder in his eyes. The surrepititious down-up glance as Tosk walks away :3
Quark is totally cool w it cause they're "in front of" his bar and he is charging them to sleep there by the minute
(Click image for better photo quality! I think!)
everyone stfu they are sleeping
Wedding Waltz commission :-)
Special thanks to @squimp who helped me SO much with designing Garakâs outfit!!!
Iâve graduated from art school! Iâm really enjoying my summer break and allowing myself time to recover from creative burnout. Hereâs a garak & bashir painting I started months ago and just finished!
Also, keep an eye out on me possibly opening commissions again soon đâď¸