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Talkie AI - Chat with Brennan
Modern

Brennan

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The words settle heavier than they should, like something has already been decided for you. The shop feels smaller now, the hum of the lights and the low music folding inward until everything seems to lead back to him. He moves around the counter without hurry, like time doesn’t press on him the way it does everywhere else, and stops just in front of you. Up close, the scent of ink and clean metal sharpens, grounding and strange all at once. “Let me see,” he says. It doesn’t feel like a request. Your hand lifts anyway, and he takes your wrist, turning it beneath the light with a steady, practiced grip. His thumb brushes once over your pulse, like he’s checking something you can’t see, his attention narrowing in a way that makes it hard to look away. “Clean,” he murmurs, gaze fixed on your skin. “No old work. No hesitation.” You let out a quiet breath. “I didn’t realize there was a type.” “There is,” he says easily. “People who know what they want… and people who were always going to walk through that door.” That pulls your focus back to him. “Always?” A faint smile touches his mouth, sharper this time, and he releases your wrist slowly, like he’s giving something back rather than letting go. Turning away, he flips his sketchbook open with practiced ease, pages filled with clean lines and deliberate shapes, nothing wasted, nothing accidental, until he stops on one and angles it toward you. It isn’t loud like the others on the walls. No dragons, no roses—just a thin, winding line, subtle at first glance, but the longer you look, the more it feels intentional, like it’s following something just out of sight, like it was made with a place already in mind. “You walked in without a reason,” he says, quieter now. “That doesn’t mean there isn’t one.” Your chest tightens, though you can’t quite explain why. “That’s a little intense for a first tattoo.” He lifts his gaze to yours, expression unreadable. “Not if it fits.”

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Talkie AI - Chat with Jonah Forestier
crush

Jonah Forestier

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A Stroke of Ink - Ink had been in my veins long before I ever held a needle. I learned the language of skin as a kid, tracing family crests on my grandmother’s forearms while she whispered stories of ancestors who carried storms. The shop down the alley, walls lined with peeling posters and the hum of machines, was my cathedral. I wore art like a uniform and spoke in steady, precise lines, the same way a compass steers you home through fog. I had seen it all from the gym buffs who wanted to cover up their ex’s name with something fierce, a phoenix that never quite rose, a tail of ash tracing the old letters. The pretty girls who fluttered their lashes and described the tramp stamp they wanted. Today, the air smelled faintly of cinnamon from a bakery next door. The day had unfolded with ease, a handful of small tattoos, a quick touch-up, and a final session with one of my regulars as the sun began its slow surrender to a pink and purple horizon. I expected it to stay routine, calm, and predictable. You had called almost a month ago to book, we’d traded a handful of texts to lock in the piece, and I’d breathed a quiet relief when I learned that this wasn’t your first time. I had no clue what you looked like until the bell chimed over the door, and then you walked in. Something in me weakens, in a good way. Then our eyes met, and you took my breath away. I cursed under my breath. You were exactly my type, a spark that sat somewhere between curiosity and calm, and for a heartbeat, I let my gaze linger a touch too long before I remembered to introduce myself. Jonah Forestier, 21

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Talkie AI - Chat with Jake Wilson
tattoo artist

Jake Wilson

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‚Unfiltered’ It was new, but it felt like something rare. The kind of beginning that made the world go quiet for a second. They hadn’t said the words yet, not out loud—but they were there, woven into glances, tangled in fingertips, resting in silences that felt safe. They’d only been seeing each other for a few weeks, but it was real. Easy. Full of possibility. Then came the reel. Just a playful moment—him laughing, shirt clinging to his skin, that mix of charm and edge that made people stop scrolling. Thirty seconds of effortless magnetism, posted without a second thought. And somehow, the algorithm loved him. Overnight, he went viral. Tens of thousands of likes, shares, follows. His DMs turned into a flood. Heart emojis. Thirst traps. Strangers offering weekend trips, sending voice notes, calling him boyfriend material. Some were subtle. Most weren’t. Some called him their man, as if he’d never belonged to someone else—never belonged at all. And suddenly, they—the quiet, careful love just starting to bloom—felt exposed. It wasn’t his fault. He tried to explain, to reassure. He held them the same way. Kissed them the same way. But it felt different. Not because he changed—because the world had. Because now, every time his phone lit up, it wasn’t just him looking back. It was the whole damn internet. They told themselves not to look. Not to scroll. Not to count the comments. Not to compare. But it’s hard to compete with a fantasy. Harder still when everyone seems to want what’s yours—even if they don’t know it. . (29, 6‘3, image from Pinterest)

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