tired-techie:

cylin-aka-ankamo:

tired-techie:

cylin-aka-ankamo:

tired-techie:

They warned the new technician to not wander in the server room, there’s a monster that lives there!
(He still “gets lost” there every night).

This inspired me.
Actually that is a not so fitting description. Inspiration struck me like a sledgehammer to the temple. So I dropped everything else and ficced. Hard (pun very much intended)

Just needs betaing and then I’ll post.

I can’t wait to see how this inspired you!!!!!!

I FUCKEN FINALLY MANAGED IT!!!!!

http://archiveofourown.org/works/11812452

To read!!!!! I can’t wait!!!!

Please! 27. “Get over here now and bring a tarp.” Kylux in any setting you wish! Thank you 💕

minzimpression:

27 – “Get over here now and bring a tarp.”

*

“Get over here now and bring a tarp.”

“Excuse me?” Hux asks. He looks out of his window and can see the pouring rain. There’s no way he’s going out there. Not when he’s huddled in his favorite blanket, has a nice blend of tea on his night stand and Millicent purring next to him happily. “I’m not going out there. Where should I get a tarp anyway? What are you doing? Are you outside?”

There’s a grunt on the other end of the phone conversation.

“Well, I have to.” Kylo sounds a bit defensive and now that Hux concentrates on it, he can hear the sound of the pouring rain in the background. “They just sprouted. I don’t want the rain to ruin it. The soil is this close being washed away.”

Hux is lost.

“What is sprouting? Kylo your small garden is lawn and weeds only. And that big, ugly oak you refuse to get rid of.”

There’s a beat of silence. Then a sigh, and Kylo says, “I planted the avocado pit.”

Hux pulls the phone away from his ear and stares at the screen incredulously as if he’s sure, Kylo’s playing a prank on him. When there’s no laughter from the other end of the line, he presses the phone back to his ear and tells Kylo, “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

Our avocado, Hux. Remember? Our meeting? Four months ago? The fight about the last avocado? I stole it right out of your cart and you ambushed me in front of my car.”

Hux can feel his cheeks heat. “I am aware how we met, yes. Are you telling me you planted the avocado pit because you’re a sentimental fool?”

Kylo mutters something that Hux doesn’t catch. He’s already standing up and on his way to his garage, wondering if he has indeed something like a tarp stowed away there. “What was that?” He asks, rummaging around, and squeezing himself behind his car to get to one of the shelves.

“I said it’s the seed of our love. Of course I planted it!”

Hux bites his lower lip and grips the phone harder than intended. His heart is racing and he tries to calm down. That’s what Kylo always does. He brings Hux’s life out of order. Be it stealing an avocado right from his cart, ask him out on a date after Hux yelled at him, or blurting out I love you after their fifth date only.

“I should have known better than date an over-dramatic actor,” Hux says.

“Oh fuck you, Hux. Are you coming over or not?”

Hux reaches out to grab something blue and folded. When he pulls it out, he sees that it’s really a tarp. It’s not big, but it’ll do. 

“Yes,” he says and turns to his car. “Yes, I will.”

*

first sentence prompts

broodmother:

kyluxcantina:

“If travel is searching
And home has been found

I’m not stopping
I’m going hunting

Please reblog with your response to the above prompt, or submit your response to the kylux cantina!

Hux had spent enough time on the mountain to know what it felt like to be watched. Stalked. Hunted. He was familiar with eyes on his back, the ghost of teeth on his neck; a phantom kill. He shared his territory with wolves and bears, even the occasional foolhardy cougar who came too far north following the deer, so he knew the only thing that stood between him and a death of teeth and claws was his hunting rifle and a slick of commons sense.

But this wasn’t a wolf. It wasn’t a bear, or a cougar.

It had came down the mountain with the spring melt, and whatever it was, it was smart. He had found no fur, no scat. No fresh kills, no dens or nests. When it followed, it walked in own tracks; he’d only discovered that when he doubled back after a nearly getting caught in a squall and found his footsteps still picked out in the snow nearly as fresh as when he’d left them, if a little deeper.

Like so many predators, the nights were when it was at its boldest. It never came too close while he worked around the cabin during the day, whether he was replenishing his stores of fire-wood or starting the post-winter repairs. Hux never saw it then, never so much as heard it, but he could feel the weight of a watchful gaze on all the softest parts of him. He kept his rifle beside the axe and the woodpile; somehow, it did little to comfort him, but time to worry and fret and hide away was not something he couldn’t afford.

Darkness came creeping back over the trees; the days were quickly growing longer after months of night, but the hours of light were feeble and fleeting still. Once the sun went down, the cold at that time of year could still kill a man quicker than any beast, so it was time to retire inside, to bar the door and draw the heavy curtains, and set about his cooking pot on the fire. It was a lonely life and a hard one, especially having known the kiss of luxury and power in his relative youth, but a man could learn to love the simplicity of it. A man could learn to love the loneliness, out of necessity if nothing else.

Hux snuffed out the lanterns and let the fire die down before climbed into a bed built for two, piled with a punishingly poor selection of furs and quilts. The silence of night smothered like its own blanket, and what little sound there was would be damped by the snow – dampened, but not swallowed entirely.

He had became familiar with the sound of his hunter’s uneven gait; he assumed it was somehow injured from the off-beat, almost clumsy footfalls – animals that stalked humans usually were, and so he had also assumed at first that it would either die or attack within a day or two. That had been nearly two weeks ago, and it had circled his cabin every night since. On the third night, sick of his disturbed sleep, Hux had unbarred the door and knocked it wide, ready to confront the sickly beast; he stood on his porch with rifle in hand, and watched something dark slither into the gloom of the treeline. He’d fired a single shot after it, hitting one of the pines in a shower of bark splinters.

The warning shot didn’t work. It had came back the very next night, and every night since. Hux didn’t try to catch it again; he didn’t so much as twitch the curtains. He lay in bed and listened to it circle the cabin with a belly full of ice until the meek light of dawn began to scratch at his window, and he could pull together an hour or so of meagre rest. Something had to change – and it did. On that night, the door to cabin began to rattle.

It had started with scratching at first, so light he almost couldn’t make it out at first, then gradually louder until it forced Hux to sit up in bed, eyes fixed to the sliver of moonlight that oozed under his door. It flickered, interrupted; the handle shook again with a greater violence, twisting back and forth. Hux reached for his rifle left propped against the nightstand before he got up, heart in his mouth, the short hairs on the back of his neck on end. He crossed to the door, floorboards creaking beneath his uncertain feet. For a long moment, he simply stood and watched the door shake until finally – finally, it was too much. He struck the door with the butt of his rifle, as hard as he could manage, and the commotion outside stopped instantly.

A breath hung on the wind, a soft rasping gasp that was entirely human-inhuman.

“Hux?”

Weakness washed over him like a cold wave, robbing him of his own breath. God help him, he knew that voice in just one word, though it had never been so thin and reedy before.

“Hux, please,” the voice said, “Christ, it’s so cold. Please let me in.”

“I can’t do that,” Hux said, and he fought to keep his own voice from wavering. It hurt just to hear him again, so clearly in need, “You know I can’t.”

“I’m soaked to the bone, Hux. I haven’t eaten in days,” there was another rattle of the handle and Hux readjusted his grip on his rifle. He had to pull himself together. He had to knit anger out of his hurt, “If you don’t let me in, you’re going to find me frozen to your porch come morning.”

“You’re not getting in here, Ren,” Hux said, “You better be on your way.”

“Why?”

rattle rattle

A voice like dry leaves. Like brittle twigs that snapped when trod upon. A voice he’d heard every morning, every day, every night since they’d left the world behind together; a voice that had said I hate you as often as it had said I love you, and still left Hux aching for both.

“Hux, why?”

scratch scratch

“I thought you loved me Hux.”

“I did love you,” Hux blurted, teeth clenched. He’d meant to ignore it until dawn chased him away again and he could make a break for the nearest town. It was more than a day’s hike away but there would be no choice, but even that chance was looking slimmer by the second, “That’s why I put you in the ground myself, Ren, so the birds wouldn’t get you. The cold took you that winter and I dug your goddamn grave with my own two hands. So no, I won’t let you in.”

Hux pressed the barrel flush to the wood of the door. It shook and jumped beneath it.

rattle rattle

scratch scratch

griesly:

Stars In Our Wake | a kylux bookshop au

I have met in the streets a very poor young man who was in love. His hat was old, his coat worn, the water passed through his shoes and the stars through his soul.  – Victor Hugo

As the owner of Flagship books, Hux has his life perfectly in order until professional disappointment Kylo Ren barges into his shop and unfortunately, his life. Kylo is a terrible employee, Hux is a worse employer, and this arrangement goes about as well as you’d expect.

Art is by the amazing and talented valiantbarnes. Thank you so much!

cylin-aka-ankamo:

Isolation Cell

“Do you think it’s wise to turn it back on?”
“Phasma, I need to know what happened.”
“It’s a BattleR-E-N, Hux! It is made to kill. That’s what it did.”
“It malfunctioned. According to the official report at least. But I want to know why.”
“Even if it kills you?”
“That’s a stupid idiom to use in this sit- oh, you meant it literally…”
“…”
“It won’t kill me.”
“Correct me if I’m wrong, but to get any usable data-output you have to turn it back on. Not just the secondary OS, but the whole thing. Fully functional. How is that safe exactly? For you –  or anyone in this complex?”
“I’ll do it in an isolation chamber.”
“With a PX-45 blaster at the ready.”
“That’s overkill.”
“Hux, it’s a kriffing BattleR-E-N!”
“…”
“I’ll observe. If it so much as looks at you the wrong way, I’m hitting the kill-switch and it will be decommissioned.”
“Yes, yes. Okay.”

BattleREN Masterlist

cylin-aka-ankamo:

I Don’t Like It Here At Night

“I don’t like it here at night, Sir. I’m alone.”
“But there are always people in the lab.”
“Yes, but I have to pretend I’m offline. And…you’re not here, Sir.”
“Oh. Okay. Uhm…But you can’t hide in my office under the table.”
“Can I go where you go, Sir?”
“You want to spend your nights at my bedsit?”
“Yes, Sir, if I may.”
“That…hm… Okay. We need to find you something to disguise you a little. Research subjects are not supposed to leave the lab.”

BattleREN Masterlist

cylin-aka-ankamo:

“Do you like having cold things in your bed, Sir?”
“You’re not cold.”
“I am a droid, Sir.”
“Don’t call me ‘Sir’. I don’t own you. First Order Industries does.”
“That is correct, Sir- Hux. Why do you seek physical closeness with a broken droid, Hux?”
“Well, I … I don’t exactly… connect well with other people.”
“I understand. I don’t connect well to the Directive either.”
“I know.”
“It’s because I’m malfunctioning sometimes. Battle droids, which-”
“You’re fine. There is nothing wrong with you, R-E-N.”

Please consider Battle Droid AU

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