Something I drew a while ago but didn't post because I dislike how Feliks face turned out ;v; I put it on ig yesterday and people liked it so I'll be bold and post it here as well đ
«There is something wrong with this house. It doesnât feel like home but I want to stay.» I wish you a spooky Halloween >:)
Tino and Eduard As spoils of war, both taken from Sweden, theyâre the real servants around the palace, barely better than glorified pageboys. They help with the wardrobe and the general things, and wear dumb matching uniforms to easily blend into the walls in an aesthetically pleasing way, and not be such an eyesore to the Lady and Master. Tino and Eetu have known for ages though, going back to their childhood as the Uralic trio with Hungary, all speaking the same language until age and space thinned out their connection to their cousin, but the two held tight. @ask-grandduchy-finlandÂ
usuk art inspired by The VoiceÂ
alfred is an astronaut, and a voice (arthur) gets to know him while heâs up in space
Dealing with consequences of your dumb actions is overrated!
A continuation of this because I have bad self control when it comes to making Hetalia comics. German unification didnât go so smoothly.
Fun fact: there was a study conducted in 2015 about how people from West Germany and âThe new Federal Statesâ (East Germany) think about each other, revealing that itâll likely take another 25 years until the German nation will truly be âoneâ again. Not surprising, but sad!
My baby be strong !!
DUN DUN DUUUUUN And suddenly angst owo Poor Yuri ;;; In this AU his anxiety takes the form of occasional insomnia! >> Decided grey-scale suited the tone for this piece~ Want to see pages 2 days before the public? Become a 1 dollar patron! :D (See link in blog description)
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Donny set his beer down on the pub counter, and smirked, âFive hundred francs.â Hirschberg rolled his eyes, âWhat is that? Like ten bucks?â âYeah, but weâre in FranceâŠso five hundred francs. Take it or leave it.â Hirschberg snickered, âAint'cha got somethinââŠluckier than that?â Donny sneered as he muttered under his breath, âFucken lucky, Iâll show you lucky.â He set his lucky baseball card on the counter. Rare, 1939 Teddy Williams baseball card. Autographed. Omar raised his eyebrow, and grinned, âGoinâ all in, huh?â Donny smirked, âMight as well. Iâm the one that needs the least luck here.â They all grumbled as the betting went on. They were betting on somethingâŠwellâŠodd, to say the least. You were a basterd, and a friendly one, too. Friendly with all of them.  As a matter of fact, youâd gotten a laugh or two out of Hugo, which wasnât an easy thing to do. As much as they hated to admit, each of the boys had a thing for you at some point or other.
They looked back to the other side of the pub, where you were dancing with anyone and everyone that so much as looked  in your directionâŠ. Boy was it a sight that would never fade away from anyoneâs memory. You were one of a kind basterdâŠbut a basterd no less. Still, you were more than anyone of them could have ever bargained for. Especially Omar. To him, you were more than he could ever say. You were what theyâd all dreamed of having by their side once they got home⊠But goddamn was it a perk having you there by their side in the war, where it mattered most. Where it was rough having friends, butâŠnone of them would have it any other way. NowâŠthey were all betting who youâd be âfriendliestâ with in the end⊠And looked down the counter, âAldo?â He rolled his eyes, set his whiskey down with a clunk, and crossed his arms, and muttered, âIâm gettinâ too old for this shitâŠâ He cleared his throat, âAnd I respect Y/n too much to just bet on th-â Donny smirked, âYouâre scared, huh?â Smitty snickered,  "You scared youâll lose, lieutenant?â Aldo narrowed his eyes as he looked at his men, âLose?â
Hirschberg nodded, "You donât got it, old man.â âOld man?! Old man?! Wickiâs the oldest.â Smitty nodded in agreement, âOh yeahâŠWickiâs older.â âShaddap Uti.â Donny raised an eyebrowâŠ.If he was in danger of losing his Teddy fucking Williams baseball card, he wasnât letting anyone get away with less than that. All or nothing. âNeat stash of tobaacco there, sir⊠Y/nâs always sayinâ that stuff aint no good for you. âSpecially if youâre gettinâ up there in your years-â Aldo rolled his eyes, âAlright, alright. Iâm in.â He slammed his tin of snuff on the table, next to the card, the francs, and the mementos everyone was willing to bet.
âOmar.â The last one to enter the bet. And frankly, not the one most of the boys were worried about. With him, it was a long shot. âŠEven if they wouldnât advise him (or Smitty, or even Wicki) to join in on the bet, he had something they all wanted. One impressive hoarde of chocolate. He knew that was what they wanted from him. And he was confident⊠He wasnât very good at holding  a poker face, but frankly most of the boys were pretty dense as to why he was smirking, âAlright. Hersheys. Iâm in."Â
"Everyone quiet!â Hirschberg spotted you coming toward them, and they all scrambled to hide their wagers. âHey, whyâs everyone so quiet?â You stood at the end of the counter, after dancing for what seemed like an eternity, but not quite done for the night. The tavernâs band was taking a short break. And you just needed to cool off a little. Aldo knew that, and held up a glass of whiskey on the rocks. The most refreshing thing he could think of. âY/n?â You smiled a little as you caught your breath, âYa know that brunette back there keeps eyeing you, sir?â âWhat?â You smiled, and gestured back to the dancing youth, âThere.â âOâŠoh..wellâŠâ You smiled, âMaybe save that drink, huh?â âI-â A little way down the counter, Omar lifted a different glass. Cognac. Which is all you liked to drink. Which he knew. Hugo, thinking you had to be at least a  little tired out, and noting the band had been playing some slower songs earlier, he figured, he might as well give it a shot. âY/nâŠ.â You looked to him, with a naive, sincere smile, âYeah?â All he had to say was âDance?â And you nodded, âYou got it!â You smiled at him, and turned to get to Omar. SoâŠthe basterds watched as you passed Aldo by, and somehow Omar and Hugo seemed to gain favor⊠Minutes later, after finishing that cognac from Omar, you were back on the dance floorâŠand Aldo withdrew from the bet, seeing that the brunette on the dance floor had a thing for the Tennessee man. He swung by the bar with her, and passed by the basterds. She was clinging to him, and looking up at him dreamily, passing a lit cigar to him. He held it up, eyed his tin of snuff, and sighed. âMen.â They all stood waiting, as if heâd give an order. He smirked a little, knowing heâd get snuff some way or another, âI fold.â And he was off, with his new acquaintance. With one less basterd in the race, the stakes were raised higher. âFive hundred and fifty francs!â Donny held his poker faceâŠhe had to. Frankly, that was all the francs he had to offer. Smitty looked on as you danced the night away, âY/n likes music, right?â Omar chuckled, âOh she does, Einstein?â âLook.â Smitty narrowed his eyes, and Omar rolled his, and smiled âY/n donât care what music plays, Smitty. Sheâll dance to anything.â Donny laughed as he crossed his arms and leaned against the counter. It made him happy to see you happy. Frankly, he didnât really care who won the bet, as long as you were happy. He only bet to begin with becauseâŠwell heâs Donny Donowitz. Heâs just competitive. And impulsiveâŠand regretted betting his lucky card. Still, he smiled with a sigh, âAinât that the truth.â He took a drink and looked back at the counter. His competitive instinct kicked in. He grinned, as he nudged Hugo, and looked on to the dance floor, âY'know what Y/n really likes dancinâ to, Hugo?â Hugo raised his eyebrow as the band came back. Hearing the blaring, wild trumpet beginning to play, as you looked back at them from the edge of the dancing crowd, waiting for your dance partner, His eyes widened as you gestured to him⊠Hirschberg taunted him too, leaning over the bar, and snickering âThatâs right. Raginâ wild swing.â He looked back at Wicki, as if asking for help for the first time in his life. Wicki shrugged as he sipped some bourbon. âYou aready asked her to dance. Might not be the best time to disappoint her, kumpel.â Utivich laughed, âHer? Donât dissapoint us!â He pushed Hugo off his stool, and toward the dance floor. He grimaced, and looked as if he was about ready to snarl at them like a rabid animalâŠÂ
Just then, you walked out from the dancefloor, and took his hands, and pulled him toward the crowd, your laugh like a beacon in a stormy night, pulling a smile from him.
âDamn can she do the goddamn charleston!â Donny chuckled, looking on. Omar narrowed his eyes, trying to figure out where Hugo had gone.  "L-Is that Hugo?!â "Y-YeahâŠ.â âDamn look at him go!â
The basterds laughed and started cheering for him, until he stumbled a little, and fell. âLook at him go!â Wicki smiled, as you came back to them, your laugh was like a song to him. Laugh! That was it! He tried to capture that light in your gleaming eyes in the milisecond before your laugh rang like a mermaidâs song. A joke or two would do it⊠Except he stumbled on the punchline. There was a lot on the line, after all. And the boys laughed at him and his mistakes. Omar chuckled, âCareful boys, youâll break an old manâs heart.â Wicki rolled his eyes, and the jeering went on, Hirschberg smirked, âMight be having a stroke.â You rolled your eyes, though you could hardly contain your guity smile as you punched Hirschbergâs shoulder, âOh, youâre so mean!â He looked up at you, and caught sight of that hidden grin, and felt at ease with himself for a moment. Heâd made you smileâŠthat was a start. But it wasnât much. Omar knew that, as he smirked and took a sip of his beer.Â
You could read a room. Better yet, you knew each of the basterds inside out, and knew something was up. You werenât blind either, so you had a pretty good idea at what was happening. You were killer at war, but a heartbreaker at nature. All it took to throw Hirschberg off his game, and blow everyone elseâs egos to bits was to wink at him. One little wink.| Omar hid his smirk again as he raised his beer to his lips, and raised his head back, dousing his retained laugh with the rich, bitter, cool beer as he shot you a knowing, loving glance.
************ âY'knowâŠI thinkâŠI thinkn y/nâs on to usâŠâ Hirschberg sighed as  he loked down at the crumpled, orange and red leaves as he marched with Donny, Omar, and Smitty to a rendezvous point. You had gone with the rest of the basterds to a somewhat distant town for supplies, and they were meeting you at  a hideout that was roughly the halfway point. The rest of the boys were discussing their progress in the wager, and Hirschberg was a little unsettled. Donny sighed as he stretched out his arms, âOh yeah? What makes ya say that?â Hirschberg grumbled a little then admitted, âMade my moveâŠand she wasnât havinâ none of it. Got far enough to try and sneak in a little kiss.â Omar, who had been splashing some water from a creek onto his face, stopped. He looked up, still facing away from them to hide his cheeky grin, âYeah? Howâd that go?â He knew you. He knew youâd always be true. Youâd told him so, once, long ago. And he believed you. Still, he couldnât help but sigh a little, remembering the soft, secret touch of your lips. Sure enough, your lips were often cracked by the carelessness of war and winter, but still the best kiss a soldier like him could ever ask for.
Hirschberg wouldnât know. And thatâs what made Omar smirk. âShe slap you?â Smitty couldnât help but laugh a little, and Donny suggested, âPunch ya?âŠCanât blame her. Wouldnât want a face like yours near me either.â Hirschberg rolled his eyes, âNo! SheâŠ.she put her fingersâŠon my lips, goddamn it!â Omar smirked as he walked by him, patting him on the back, âWell, looks like youâre losinâ youâre luger.â âYeah, yeahâŠâ He sighed, wondering in defeat if heâd really lose his luger, âThen she said. She looks at me with those eyes, y'knowâŠthose fucken eyesâŠâ Omar nodded with a sigh, looking up at the sky, as if he could see them, âYeahâŠI know those eyesâŠâ The boys didnât quite catch that air of sincerity in his voice. That trace of love, that hint of reminiscence Omarâs dreamy daze was interrupted by Hirschbergâs brash voice, âAnd ya know what she says? She pushed me back, see. And she says to me, 'Hirsch, you gonâ tell me what this is all about or not?â â
Donny gasped, almost in disbeleif, like he was hearing gossip in a salon, âNo!â
Hirschberg replied in the near same tone, âYes!â Smitty shook his head, âWell whatâd you say?!â âI said no, thatâs what I fucken said!â Smitty rolled his eyes in exasperation, âSo you admitted there was something going on!?â âNo, didnât you hear, I said no?!â Smitty sighed, âNo. You said no, you wouldnât tell her what was happening, not no there was nothing happening.â Hirschberg frowned, and opened his mouth to respond⊠Then quickly realized Smittyâs point, shrugged, took a puff from his cigarette, and sighed, âGuess I didâŠâ As the boys marched on, Donny spotted something poking through Smittyâs jacket. âWhatcha got there, kid?â âA book.â âAw, yeah? What kinda book?â Donny smirked at Omar and Hirschberg, and nudged Smitty. Smitty pulled it out of his jacket. The cover read âLe Petit Prince.â A story born and banned in France. Nevertheless, there it was, in his hands, wishing to find yours. âYa know Y/n canât read French, right?â And in that moment, his heart broke into a million pieces. He wasnât in it for the wager, or even to win your heart. To him, youâd always be like a shining star, across the universe. Heâd always hope to see you, but heâd never be close enough. He loved you like a friend could, from the moment he figured that out. He knew love was much like war, not something to be toyed with or bet on. It was far beyond his hands. He loved you, but not in the way you deserved, so he stepped down⊠Heâd confided that to Omar, still not knowing the truth. And Omar had listened with a sigh, knowing you loved Smitty, like you loved all the other basterds. As brothers. But Smitty was, well, the youngest, and so you thought of him as a sort of baby brother. So Omar helped Smitty find that book. Did it nearly cost them an arm and a leg (literally)? Yes. Would either of them ever tell you? No. So Omarâs heart sank when he caught that defeated look in Smittyâs eyes, and stepped up. âSheâs got a French dictionairy, y'know sheâs learninâ. AndâŠitâs the thought that counts, kid. Chin up.â Smitty smiled a little, and stopped for a moment, as Omar turned back around and kept marching with the others.  Smitty looked up ahead, knowing you were somewhere out there, and he was more excited than evere to give you that book. After a few moments of silence, something started picking at Donny. âOmar.â âYeah, sarge?â âHow the hell are you still so confident about this?â Hirschberg, Smitty, and Donny then stopped in ther tracks to look at Omar, and wait for an answer. Omar was the only basterd that had never had a steady relationship before. Hell, Smitty mightâve been the youngest, but even he had a high school sweetheart at some point. Hirschberg nodded, âYeah you ainât even made your first move yet!â Donny sighed, having made more moves than heâd ever had to before, âYeah you should do sometinâ quick, Ulmer. You ainât got any idea what youâre getting yourself into with that girl. Itâs fucking impossible.â Omar shrugged, âWellâŠwe did go through boot camp together.â As a matter of fact, that was where it all started. Sneaking out of your bunks in the middle of the night, and roaming around under the stars, jsut talking. âAnd we spent our fair share of time together.â This was the first time youâd been split up⊠And he failed to define 'togetherâ. He shrugged, âI know a little more about her than you think.â
Hirschberg crossed his arms and remarked, âThat right?â âYeah⊠She likes a good show. Action pictures, that sort of thing.â Donny raised his eyebrow with a grin,âAction pictures, huh?â A few hours later, after ambushing a nazi outfit nearby, Donny was swinging with his bat, âY/n likes action movies, right?â Omar smirked a little, âGive her a real show, Donny. Knock 'em dead.â Donny smirked a little, and walked into the tunnel, already riled up.
And, after some intimidation and interrogation, Aldo called Donny out. And Donny did put his all into it⊠He really was the closest thing the basterds had to seeing a movie.Â
And at the end of it, as Werner lay dead, and his private gave Aldo all the information he needed, Donny looked across the fort to you, with smouldering, smirking eyes, and a sly grin. His eyes fell on you, your basterd grin, and laughing eyes, and moved down, and saw your hand. Your hand, resting on a stone. With Omarâs hand resting on yours. âNoâŠâ His eyes grew wide. His mouth dropped open. The other basterdsâ eyes followed his, because if something left the Bear Jew speechless, it was something worth looking at. And indeed, it was. Because they all saw what he did. Omar smirking, his raised eyebrow, pulling his arm around your shoulders, and kissing you. Whatâs moreâŠtheyâd all just lost a bet. In fact, theyâd lost the moment they even put their wagers on the table. Then, a million questions went back and forth. âWHAT?!â being the most common. Followed by âWHEN?!?!?!â and, of course, âHOW!?!?!?!â To which Omar responded, âLearned a lot more than you think in basic training. Y/nâs been by my side since then. Made it official just before we left England.â You laughed a little, âWe didnât know weâd be leaving together.â You didnât know you were both being sent to the basterds. Hirschberg smirked. âSo ya can do somethinâ right, huh Omarâ Aldo chuckled a little,  "Say, y/n that how ya get him to shut his mouth every once in a while? Ya learn that trick in basic training too?â You blushed a little, "More or less, Aldo.â Omar smiled as he looked at you, the basterds saving their grumbling about their gambling for later, for your sake. StillâŠHirschberg slipped up and said âSome fucken betâŠâ Then, it all made sense to you. A betâŠ. The other basterds never had a chance to start with. They were betting blind. Omar though, he took a gamble of long odds when he met you. He bet it all on you again that night in the pub. It wasnât just his chocolate stash, it was his love, his pride, his heart. That was clear to everyone from that moment. But you didnât understand why. You spoke softly, a way only Omar ever heard you speak before, and you asked him, âWhy?â He smiled. âBecause I trusted you. I knew my odds, they were always on my side. Like you.â You shut your eyes, feeling like a fool, and giving a small, amused smile. Loving someone during war was always a wager with death, with odds that werenât in your favor. But loving a basterd⊠Loving Omar Ulmer⊠Now that was a chance you were willing to take, from the moment you first laid eyes on him. He didnât know that. Heâd played a game of fortune and heartbreak, once, and won. And heâd be willing to bet it all again, for you, and only you.
The day I started posting about #inglourious basterds was the best day of my life.
the duke
@waifu-napoleon
another napoleonic edit bc why not
Ghibli Highschool AU
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The eyes thingâą