Tumgik
#Sonata the wolf
scuro-sideblog · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
The Scuro grandpups have their first lessons in negotiation - squabbling over food.
10 notes · View notes
kras-gk · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Message from the Sun!
40 notes · View notes
marysmirages · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Sonata Arctica (2017)
361 notes · View notes
kousaka-ayumu · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Security Breach in GL2
And yes those 2 cats are my Security Breach Ocs Aria Kitty(Blonde and Aqua blue hair) and Sonata Kitty(Silver and pink hair)
6 notes · View notes
k-i-l-l-e-r-b-e-e-6-9 · 9 months
Text
Sonata Arctica - Wolf & Raven
10 notes · View notes
nat0327 · 1 year
Text
Sonata of Twilight - Master Post
A Wolf's Loyalty (v2) Twilight Princess fic - part novelization, part rewrite, part AU. The story of Twilight Princess, told through Link's POV, as he slowly bonds with and starts to fall for Midna.
Tags: Link/Midna (Legend of Zelda), The Hero's Spirit | Hero of Time | Golden Wolf & Link, Link (Legend of Zelda), Midna (Legend of Zelda), The Hero's Spirit | Hero of Time | Golden Wolf, Love Story, Friends to Lovers, Slow Burn, Mostly sticks to canon, Sarcastic Link, Selectively Mute Link (Legend of Zelda), Midna is a sassy sarcastic little shit after Link's own sassy sarcastic little shit heart, Everybody in Ordon Village raised Link, Everyone in Ordon is like Link's family, Novelization, No Smut
AO3: [link]
A Princess' Vigil Twilight Princess fic, from Zelda's POV. Takes place during the story of A Wolf's Loyalty. Trapped in a tower of Hyrule Castle, Princess Zelda keeps a vigilant watch over her people even as she's powerless to do much else to help them.
Tags: Zelda (Legend of Zelda), Zant (Legend of Zelda), POV Zelda (Legend of Zelda), Traumatized Zelda (Legend of Zelda), Menacing Zant (Legend of Zelda)
AO3: [link]
ONESHOT #2 TBA
ONESHOT #3 TBA
ONESHOT #4 TBA
BOOK #2 TBA
9 notes · View notes
canaryknight · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
"I'm not a vampire, I'm Ritchii."
@bloodlett / @vampfucker ♡ do not rb unless you're them
5 notes · View notes
kuunvalotar · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
"Winterheart"
40 x 30 cm
The painting is inspired by "For the Sake of Revenge"-music video by Finnish band Sonata Arctica and the wintery feeling that their music always creates in my mind. 🐺🤍
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
5 notes · View notes
cinemajunkie70 · 2 years
Text
The happiest of birthdays in the afterlife to Ingmar Bergman.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
23 notes · View notes
kiwisbell · 2 months
Text
helen ; chapter two
lure the wolf
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Si vis pacem, para bellum. Or, the lie.
series masterlist | my masterlist pairing: joel miller x f!reader tags/warnings: 18+ (MDNI), john wick AU, hitman!joel, husband!joel, established relationship, artist!reader, love as worship (and blasphemy), joel miller has a Reputation, flashbacks, blood + injuries, medical attention, mentions of rape/SA, cars, tommy is the rational brother, joel is an idiot, childhood/religious trauma, criminal underworld, secrecy/lies, betrayal, ANGST, Big Fight, unresolved angst, joel gets shoved a couple times, the typical alcohol/smoking/profanity, i'm deeply sorry overall for what i'm putting you through, dividers by @/saradika word count: ~ 7.1k a/n: i am... sorry. just know that i love you, okay? again, i extend a huge thank-you to @cavillscurls for being my incredible beta and listening to my constant moaning. ilysm honey. also, thank you hugely to moms @tieronecrush & @northernbluess for helping me with *that scene* prev | next
Tumblr media
Is this seat taken?
Of all the people crowding the restaurant, Joel noticed you first.
Candlelight drowned the world in burnt orange, and he could very well have been walking into the cathedral he grew up in. A piano player expertly brushed his fingertips across the keys, coaxing Moonlight Sonata’s soft lullaby from the strings. It was fucking warm, his vest tight around his torso, weighed down by the Beretta hidden in the lining. Sweat began to bead at his hairline as he slid easily between tables where guests took their seats, relishing the idle hum of chatter while they lay napkins over their laps and paid attention to proper cutlery etiquette. Some people, he’d noticed, enjoyed having riches to spend. 
Joel found a corner, next to one of only two empty tables in the entire restaurant. His eyes did not leave you the entire journey into the quiet darkness.
You, who stood straight-backed and elegant on the small stage, conversing pleasantly with three men in servers’ uniforms. You, whose eyes gleamed when you smiled, in standing defiance of the dim light.
Paintings, Joel realised, were hanging from the wall behind the stage. Dynamic brushstrokes of muted colours depicted naked bodies and desperate embraces. Blushingly erotic for a public event, Joel thought. Still, he stared, his head tilting to the side as he examined the angles of the bodies, the taut muscles, soft skin, hungry hands. 
Joel spent too much time watching the dip of your throat and the curve of your collarbones as your turn to speak came and you gesticulated idly, humbly. He was here for a job. He was not here to look at paintings and a pretty girl.
And yet he watched, utterly still. The men you spoke to would compliment you, and you would place a hand to your heart or shoo their words away. A simple, fine golden chain hung around your neck. Joel should have been spending these minutes reaffirming his plan, ensuring his target was still in position. He should have confirmed his suspected exit routes. He should have done his fucking job.
But the smile had struck him, stronger than any punch he’d taken. Your smile crinkled the corners of your eyes.
You simply shone.
You gracefully slid away from the men’s attention and took a seat on the chair that had been placed on the right side of the stage. You were here to complete a live commission for the grand opening, he realised. And Joel, the utter idiot he was, sunk slowly, trancelike, into a seat at the empty table in the corner.
Joel listened to music. Occasionally. When he was in a bright enough mood to let the radio stay on in his car, he kept it tuned to an old country channel. Now, he thought he could see music in the way you painted, your collarbones the careful glide of a bow across the strings of a violin, an achingly sweet song that smothered the noise in his head.
You treated your palette and your brush with astonishing tenderness. Your strokes were deft and drifted expertly across your workspace. Your eyes flickered between the crowd and the canvas, and Joel became your reverent audience.
He had no idea how long he sat there, watching. Every rise and fall of your arm held him to his seat like there were ropes around his ankles. When the emcee stepped onto the stage and brought a microphone to his mouth, Joel watched you lift slowly from your trance. You blinked twice, took a deep breath that shifted the necklace on your throat, and loosed it like a sigh. Then a speech began, and Joel remembered that you were not the only person in the world.
Joel had made a point of studying his targets: not only the man, but the place. The guests. The owner. The blueprints and the staff. He knew them explicitly. He was thorough, and he had contingency plans that surpassed the number of fingers he possessed.
So, of course, he knew your name. He knew that you had been painting since you were a child. He knew that you donated all of the proceeds from your gallery sales to various charities. He knew that your income came from commissions.
But he had never seen your face in person until now. Joel had enough of a brain to acknowledge beauty, though attraction was something different altogether, a beast he had never quite wrangled. He could not have possibly predicted the twisting in his chest or the aggressive twitch in his fingers when you shifted off the stage. He wanted to follow. He wanted you to stay where he could see you, where he knew you would be safe, while he conducted business.
Safe, though, was relative. It meant little. Joel took a moment to gather himself, straightened the dinner fork at his place setting as though he was expecting to dine at all, and waited for his target to show his face.
The last thing he needed was unexpected company. Then, a gentle shadow that smelled of summer rain and daisies eclipsed him, and Joel looked up.
Is this seat taken? 
Tumblr media
Joel promised himself a number of things.
The problem was that he couldn’t keep a single one.
He had very few contacts in his real phone. Tommy, Cabrera, Maria, Bill. He contacted these people infrequently, some more so than others. He was not fond of texting, and he kept his phone calls short. Now that your name added a noticeable weight to the phone in his pocket, Joel had never been more tempted to stare at his screen all day and night, waiting for a message.
So, the first promise: keep his phone at home while on a job. It wasn’t particularly necessary either way, bringing it along, since he had burners at his safe houses. He left it on his nightstand once before a mission. When he came home, covered in other people’s blood and sometimes his own, he picked up the phone only to find that your latest message had come through an hour previous.
‘I’ve decided. You ever make escargots?’
The night before, you were waiting on a client and Joel was cooking dinner. He put you on speakerphone so he could stir. 
“Where’d you learn to cook?”
“Taught myself, really.” He’d frowned, then. “Grew up in an orphanage. They decided what we ate.”
You could have pitied him: That must have been awful. What happened to your parents? I’m so sorry, Joel. No wonder you’re terribly adjusted.
“Where did you go after?” you’d asked him instead.
“Here,” he had told you. “New York. Good place to learn how to cook if you’ve got no money to spend.”
“Smart man. Is that steak I smell?”
He’d laughed. “Close, but no. Risotto.”
“Shit, I’m hungry,” you’d groaned. “I could eat seven steaks. I haven’t eaten all fucking day; my client is late for this meeting and I came straight from the gallery. C’mon, describe it to me more.”
“I’ll make you dinner.”
It had slipped out, a little wobbly, a deer taking its first steps. But Joel had persisted, white-knuckling a wooden spoon and glaring hard at his cell phone. “Anything you’d like. Name it.”
Staring at the text message, smearing the screen with blood, Joel laughed. Alone. To himself. In his quiet, dark home.
‘You want me to make you snails for dinner?’
He had expected to send the message and put his phone face-down with enough time to shower, to cleanse himself of blood. He’d left you waiting so long, after all. But your name appeared, blown-up, on his screen. You were calling.
“Not the whole meal,” you said. You always spoke first, knowing Joel didn’t care for the hellos and goodbyes of phone-call etiquette. “Escargots is an appetiser, Joel.”
Joel smiled, which revealed some sort of painful contusion on his face he hadn’t known about. As he palmed the tender skin around his jaw, he said, “I can do that. And what about dinner?”
“Well, that, you’ll just have to get back to me on,” you said. “Gives me another excuse to talk to you.”
With that, Joel had officially forgone the promise. He wanted to carry your name with him.
He made a second promise, to set boundaries: he would only allow himself to call you once a week.
But you, who knew people better than most, who sat with them for hours as you painted their very souls into colour and light, caught on. 
“You call me at exactly eight o’clock every Monday night. You could at least vary it by an hour so I wouldn’t notice.”
Joel hung his head. “Shit,” he grumbled. “I’m… I’m sorry.”
“Joel, I’m going to say something. I want you to listen to me.” 
And he, who obeyed your every command, whose marrow sang the song he’d heard that first night at the restaurant, straightened. “Yeah. I’m listenin’.”
“I just got home from a four-hour showing, and I’m achey, and a little drunk, but if I call you, it’s because I want to call you. If I talk to you, it’s because I want to. Because you’re the best part of my day. So if you want to call me, too, just fucking call me. End my misery, okay?”
He wondered how it would taste to slip his tongue past your parted lips, to feel the burn of your celebratory champagne, the crack of your whip-smart resolve as you moaned softly against him. He thought he might like to make you moan.
You wanted to speak with him. You awaited his calls. You liked him. 
As a child, Joel had known God’s wrath as intimately as he had known His love. They were the two sure things in the world, according to the Sisters. They made him memorise Genesis. Joel knew love and evil existed in this world. They had never taught him the in-between, the mundane, the nuances of like. 
“Yeah, okay,” he said. “I can do that.”
So, one call a week lasted less than a week, and it wasn’t a fortnight after you first met that you and Joel were speaking every single day. Your voice was in his head, your laugh in his blood. Like dissolved. He began to need.
He knew your routines, your habits. He knew how you took your coffee (milk and two sugars, sweet to his bitter black). He knew you hated pork. He knew which paints you used most, and which palette knives were best for different details. He knew you hated painting trees, but you loved rivers. 
In his free time, he would visit bookshops. You loved Wilde and Machen. It only made sense—your paintings were decadent, larger-than-life, sinful. Joel enjoyed philosophy. He liked Coleridge, Keats. 
“They would’ve hated one another,” you said one day over breakfast. 
“You think? They were pretty fond of all those flowery words.”
“Poetry and philosophy are opposites,” you offered. 
“Maybe,” he said, “but maybe not. I think they needed each other.”
You smiled over the rim of your coffee cup. “Maybe you’re right.”
A month after he’d met you, he’d rebound a copy of The Importance of Being Earnest. A month after that, he’d worked up the courage to give it to you. 
“Oh my God, Joel…”
“It’s yours,” he said. “I know it’s one of your favourites. It’s stupid, I know, just…”
You beamed at him. “Just… what?”
“Just saw it, and thought of you.”
A dozen other projects were sitting at his makeshift station. Pieces of you already lived in his space. 
In these moments, Joel thought, This is what I missed. There was light in you, a light that had been beaten out of him. Some nights, the dark called, and there you were, the fluttering of strings on the Eolian Harp, and he knew he was obsessed before he drove you home that long first night.
Often, the moment lasted only for the little time you could spare: a brief text, a two-minute phone call. When he limped up the stairs to his home and collapsed in the closest chair, usually bloodied or bruised or both, your name was always waiting for him.
One night, two words: ‘Call me?’
He did.
Joel had just come home from a job in Queens. The gangsters hadn’t put up much of a fight themselves, but one of them did know how to drive a car, and he’d taken a hard sideswipe to his whole body, knocking out the headlights with his ribs. He felt, appropriately, like he’d been pulled apart, his bones stretched, muscles hot and sore.
He had made his promise about weekly calls three months ago. Joel figured he must have been out of his mind then, thinking he could go that long without you. He simply could not.
“Missed you.”
Your laugh, delighted and quiet, melted some of his bones until they gently began to slide back in place. “I missed you,” you said. He quickly assessed that you were home, judging from the buzz of silence on the other end of the line. “Tough day?”
His brother Tommy was a mechanic. So, Joel had told you he worked the books. Gave him a decent excuse to be there as often as he was. Didn’t give him an excuse for anything else.
“Tired,” he said easily, “but glad to hear your voice.”
“You sound like you’ve been hit in the ribs,” you said. “Are you sure you’re okay? Did Tommy rough you up?”
Joel wasn’t familiar with lying. He’d never had many reasons to. Violence convinced people a lot easier. The biggest lies he’d ever told had been the nightly sermons, the recitations of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Amazing fucking Grace. He didn’t like the way lying to you sat low and heavy in his chest.
“I’m all right. Just gettin’ old. Took the stairs too fast.” 
“Joel.”
He didn’t like the edge to your voice. He was causing you this anguish. Fuck, he hated that thought. He hated that he had no choice but to lie. “Sweetheart, I’m okay.”
Your sigh was soft, resigned. “You promise me?”
“On my life.”
“That’s what I’d like to avoid,” you said with a laugh. “Are you back in New York?”
Joel looked down at the hand on his thigh, flexed his split knuckles. “I’m back.”
“Well, I just got back from a gallery showing,” you said. “And I want to see you.”
Joel listened to his stilted breathing punch out of his lungs in the quiet darkness, clenching his bloodied fists. In his dreams, his head was bowed as if in prayer, but his arms were wound tight around your body. The warm press of your fingers into his skin felt like the lick of a flame. In his dreams, you sighed his name and you called him yours. In his dreams—maybe his one and only dream—he kept you safe more than he put you in danger.
That was where the hopeless dream slipped like smoke through the slits in his eyes. You would always be in danger as long as he was involved in this life.
“I want to see you, too,” said Joel.
Tumblr media
Tommy’s day gets infinitely worse the second his brother walks through the door.
“Everyone out,” he snaps, and his guys flee from the garage, letting the door fall with a clang of metal to the concrete. You jump, falling out of step with your husband and hugging your arms to your chest. Tommy narrows his eyes. “What can I do for you both? I was just about to close.”
You open your mouth, but Joel’s already working. “I need a ride.”
“That so?” Tommy cleans the oil from his hands using a once-white rag, now a slick brown, smearing it across his forehead when he wipes the sweat away. “Don’t suppose it has anything to do with the kid who drove in here with your car two hours ago?”
You lower yourself onto the hood of a nearby Porsche 911, dropping the overnight bag from your shoulder and letting it slump on the ground. Tommy watches as you study the ring on your left hand, twirling the bands around your finger. 
“Shit,” says Joel, scratching his beard. “And what’d you say to him?”
“I didn’t say nothin’, Joel. I took one look at your car and decked the asshole. He wanted a tune job. Clearly didn’t know whose car he stole.” Tommy tosses the rag onto a table, next to a decanter of bourbon. “What the fuck are you thinking, pissin’ off Cabrera’s kid?”
Joel meets his brother’s eyes, a lethal glint in their brown that Tommy’s never known to mean anything good. “That,” he says darkly, “was Emiliano Cabrera?”
“Yeah, I’m sure his old man ain’t proud to share their name, either,” huffs Tommy. “I’m gonna ask again, Joel: what the fuck did you do?”
“I didn’t do a goddamn thing he didn’t deserve,” says Joel, “and I need a ride.” 
Tommy’s fingers curl in at his sides. Sometimes, it’s hard not to punch his brother in the jaw. “Yeah, I heard you the first time. Just know it’s a loan. So don’t fuckin’ scratch my property, Joel, or so help me—”
You stand from the hood of the car and pin Tommy with your gaze, a bit distant, a bit icy. “I need to use your bathroom, Tommy. If that’s okay.”
He feels himself soften a bit at the sight of your trembling hands. “Yeah, sweetheart. ‘Course.”
“I’ll show you,” says Joel, reaching for your arm. 
You watch the floor and brush past him. “I can find it.”
Joel’s fingers twitch as you go without another word, his eyes shuttering, and Tommy notices that his knuckles are bloodied. 
“Wanna tell me what happened?” he asks once they’re alone.
Joel sits where you did moments ago, reaching for the decanter next to him. He doesn’t pour or drink; he merely angles the glass and watches the fluorescent lights filter through it. “He broke in. I killed his buddies, but he got away.”
Tommy lowers himself onto the edge of the table. “Jesus fuckin’ Christ, Joel.”
“Yeah.”
“She’s cut.” Tommy turns his head to the doorway where you disappeared. “They do anything else?”
“They would’ve.” Joel slams the decanter back down on the table, and the echo reverberates in the walls. “He tried—”
He does not finish the sentence, but he does not need to. 
Tommy rubs his jaw. “You gotta tell her, man.”
“She’s in shock. She went through a lot.” Joel’s eyes drop to the floor, to the bag brimming with your clothes, and his jaw works. “I… can’t tell her. Not right now.”
Tommy is struck, sometimes, by how transparent his brother can be. He’s killed countless men and bled gold like some invulnerable god, and still, he knows nothing about himself. “Fuck, Joel.”
“I have to finish this.” Joel’s voice is the bottom of an empty well. “I need to find him.”
“Don’t,” says Tommy. “Don’t fucking finish it. Take your losses and go back home. You know better than anybody where this goes, and all you’re doing is putting her in more danger.”
Joel shakes his head. “Tommy, if you think I don’t know—”
“No, I don’t think you know. You want to lose the one thing you worked for all those years ago, fine. But don’t expect her to understand.”
His brother’s head snaps up. “And if you told Maria?” he counters. “Would she have given you a kid if she knew everything you’ve done?”
Tommy’s chest stirs up acid. “You’re treadin’ on thin ice, brother.”
“You’re the one who should be careful.” Joel stands abruptly and winces; he’s wounded under that jacket, Tommy realises. Hiding wounds once again. “You punched Manuel Cabrera’s son in the face.”
Tommy sniffs. “Kid’s got a punchable face.”
Joel is silent for a moment. “Yeah, he does.”
You appear around the corner, giving Joel and his crimson-stained shirt a once-over. “Where are we going?” you ask him.
The way Joel jolts up out of his seat on the Porsche’s hood tells Tommy that it’s the first time you’ve spoken to him since the incident. “A hotel,” he says, approaching as slowly as one might a spooked deer. You do not move, but you do not take his outstretched hand, your fingers curled taut around your arms. Joel frowns at his split knuckles. “It’ll be safe there.”
“Okay.” You’re staring hard at a spot on his chest, your voice hollow as if heard from the dark end of a tunnel. “Tommy, I’m sorry to barge in on you like this,” you add.
“Ain’t no trouble, sweetheart. You just… hang in there, hear me?”
“Yeah.” A wobble courses through your bottom lip and Tommy wants to hunt those fuckers down himself. “I’d be happy to paint your nursery sometime, if you’ll still have me.”
“Christ knows I’d be useless at it compared to you.” Tommy roots around in a drawer for a fob and unlocks the doors to the black Porsche. “Let’s get you both out of here.”
Joel claps him on the back. “Thank you, brother.”
Tommy tosses the fob to Joel. You’re already slipping inside the car with your bag tight to your chest. “Don’t get used to it,” he says. “And Joel? For Christ’s sake, think hard before you dive headfirst back into this shitshow.”
Joel squeezes his arm and slides into the driver’s seat, and Tommy watches his brother go.
He doesn’t remember much of the church, the way Joel remembers. He doesn’t remember the prayers or the beatings the way he knows Joel does. Tommy got off with a slap on the wrist, as far as things go; sometimes, he looks into his brother’s eyes and he still sees the fourteen-year-old kid, sharing a dark room lit only by candles and the picture of the praying hands, devising a plan to escape. We’ll get out together, brother. You and me.
He saw that look again tonight. He saw the flare surging up in Joel’s eyes, an incendiary promise. 
Tommy doesn’t call his guys back in. Instead, he stalks into his office and makes a call.
The line stops ringing after three trills, and Tommy doesn’t wait for a hello.
“Your son is fucking dead, Cabrera.”
“First, you strike my boy.” A lion’s growl, stirring deep in the chest; he’s probably smoking. “Now, you threaten me, pendejo?” 
“You heard me. You fucking heard me.” Tommy licks his teeth. “Do you know what you’ve just started, letting him run around this city like he owns it?”
“I’m the one who owns this city, Mr. Miller,” says Cabrera. “Now, I’d like to know why you punched Emil in the face.”
“Because, sir, he broke into Joel Miller’s house, stole his car, and tried to rape his wife.”
The silence stretches thin, and Tommy can hear thoughtful puffs of smoke burst from Cabrera’s parted lips.
“Oh,” he says at last.
Tumblr media
Everyone is staring at him.
The lobby of the Continental Hotel, a flatiron at 1 Wall Street, is understated in its extravagance. The floors are a marble that crackles with the weight of every footfall. There are crystal chandeliers and a too-high ceiling and stained-glass windows depicting the fall of Icarus, Narcissus at the water’s edge, Arachne and Athena. Hubris surrounds you in all colours and shades. And those few milling about the lobby turn their heads to watch your husband approach the front desk. 
Despite yourself, you tuck in a little closer. Joel is carrying your duffle; he didn’t bring a change of clothes.
The concierge, whose nameplate reads Charon, lifts his brows. “Mr. Miller,” he says politely. “It’s a pleasure to see you again.”
Joel nods. “We’d like a room.”
The concierge only eyes you briefly, but it’s enough that you feel adequately scrutinised. “Of course, sir. Single suite?”
“Double,” you cut in. You feel Joel’s eyes on the side of your head, but you persist with as sweet a smile as you can muster. The concierge nods. 
“Of course,” he says. “I presume, Mr. Miller, that you are utilising your… guest privileges?”
Joel stiffens next to you. “I’ll tell the Manager myself. Nobody else needs to know.”
“Of course, sir.” Charon hands him the key. Joel reaches into his pocket and places a golden coin on the desk. You feel your brows pull together. It isn’t a currency you’ve ever seen. EX UNITATE VIRES, reads the ridged inscription, surrounded by leaves. 
“Is the Doctor in?”
“Twenty-four hours a day, sir.”
“Send him up,” says Joel, stuffing the key in his pocket and fitting his hand on the small of your back. 
The concierge’s voice grates down your spine, like feeling the rough underbelly of a shark. “It is a pleasure having you with us again, Mr. Miller.”
You walk just fast enough to escape the weight of his hand on your back. He’s still covered in blood. 
“Again, huh?” you say quietly, your chest sluicing down the middle. “How often do you come here?”
“I don’t,” he says. “Not anymore.”
“You know, hotels are where husbands take their other women.”
Joel looks at you sharply. “That’s not funny.”
And you know it isn’t true—you know he isn’t like that—but you’ve been lied to nonetheless. The knife twists anyway.
“Right,” you say, and leave it at that. 
There is a man waiting outside your hotel room. He’s squat, old, and seems to have taken on a slight hunch, but he smiles warmly at you. “Pleasure,” he says plainly. “Let’s get started.”
“Her first,” says Joel, turning the key in the lock. 
“You sure?” The Doctor eyes him warily. “You’re the one who’s bleeding.”
Joel glowers. “Her first.”
The Doctor just shrugs, taking a laborious seat at the little round table by the window. It’s nearly midnight now, the moonlight filtering in through the closed curtains. Joel flicks on the light, and you blink, taking in the spacious room.
“Jesus,” you utter, mouth agape. There are two queen beds covered in crisp white linens, a bar cart, a kitchenette, an enormous claw-footed tub out in the open, and a bathroom housing a floor-to-ceiling glass shower and a vanity with two sinks. It’s big enough to host a decent gathering, let alone two people. “How much did this cost us, Joel?”
“I’ll explain later,” he says. “Let Doc check you out.”
Numbly, you sit opposite the Doctor, who dons a pair of glasses and gloves and unlatches a small medical kit. “The cut’s superficial,” he says automatically, brushing his thumb over the tender skin just beneath the knife slash. “It’s already scabbed over.”
“She hit her head,” says Joel tersely. You can tell he’s pacing behind you, his fingers on his mouth.
You sigh. “I feel okay,” you tell the Doctor. “Really, I do.”
But he inspects you anyway, shining a light in your eyes and forcing you to follow his finger and asking you mundane questions like What’s four times seven? and Who’s the president? He hands you a clean bill of health, no concussion, and you switch places with a surly-looking Joel. 
He’s shed his jacket and laid it on the bed closest to you, so you dig around his pocket and produce another gold coin. Joel lifts his shirt to reveal the gash in his belly from the broken glass. And the Doctor clicks his tongue in reproach but says nothing, dabbing a disinfectant onto the wound and chuckling a little at the way Joel hisses through his teeth. 
“Out of practice,” mutters the Doctor. It only makes the knot in your throat pull tighter.
“Is he going to be okay?” you ask. Joel studies you carefully, as if he isn’t quite sure how to understand your question.
“He’ll be fine,” says the Doctor, “if he keeps all movement to a minimum.”
Flipping the coin between your fingers, you can admire the intricate beauty of it. The gold is not tarnished by touch or time; it seems new. Or just unused, if Joel’s been keeping it stored out of sight. The ridges are meticulous, impervious to debasing, and you suspect that’s deliberate. Everything these people do seems deliberate. 
Who are these people?
Joel seems to know. He seems to know everything. And he’s kept it all from you. 
The Doctor leaves with an extra two coins in his pocket, and you’re sure to thank him as you see him out. The door closed and locked behind you, the air suddenly stifles, and the current grows warm. 
You pull at the collar of your shirt and abruptly stop yourself from pulling it over your head. You’re sticky and sweaty and probably covered in someone else’s blood beneath all the fabric clinging to your body. You need a shower. And yet, undressing in front of him—the oldest, most familiar act between the two of you—is the most daunting thing you have ever done.
Joel’s cell phone begins to ring, and you’re spared for the moment. 
“I’m going to shower,” you tell him, though he’s already speaking quietly into the phone. You step into the scalding shower, a lump in your throat, and scrub at your skin so hard that it’s raw and abused. 
The first time you went on a date with Joel Miller, you had to ask him. He would clam up and go quiet when you teased him a little too far, his cheeks taking on a pink hue. He showed up in a stunning black suit and brought you a single daisy. 
By the time you’d known him a year, you had four bouquets. 
The hot water borders on agonising. You stand, back straight, facing the flow, letting it fill your tear ducts and your mouth and your nose. You let it drown you, slipping into the deafening quiet that you so easily find as you paint. 
Sometimes, he’d sit behind you while you worked, those rare moments you weren’t using him as a model, and he’d watch. There was something voyeuristic in the way he could spy on your work for hours as you painted bodies in their many stages of pleasure. 
You watched him kill two men tonight. He’d brought your attacker’s knife to his own throat and spilled his blood like a pig for slaughter. You always thought you knew bodies—but your Joel, your husband, knows them better than you ever thought possible.
You stand in the shower, watching the tiled wall, for longer than you should. But when you dry yourself off and dress, Joel is sitting silently on the edge of the bed with his elbows on his knees. It strikes you suddenly that this is the man you’ve painted a thousand times—often in this very position, when he gets lost in thought—and for a moment, you don’t recognise him. 
He’s more severe than before. The lines of his face are jagged, tensed as though in preparation for a blow. You would paint him in shades of red and orange. You would be ruthless in your brushstrokes, and everyone would know the artist had put a sliver of her own fury into him.
He looks up and meets your eyes, and you fold your arms over your chest.
“So,” you begin, “you’re like Bond? Like, a spy?”
Joel stands, crossing the room to meet you. “I don't try to hide,” he says. “Though he didn't really try, either.”
“So, there's people who know your name.”
The pull at the corner of his mouth does not win out. “Yeah. A few.”
You make a sound even you cannot decipher, and Joel’s hands fidget at his sides. The silence descends again. 
You look up at him and swallow knives. “Who are you?”
He grits his teeth. “You know the answer to that,” he says imploringly, desperately, reaching to take your hand. You step backward and watch his face crumble. “I’m your husband, baby. You know that.”
White-hot pressure prickles behind your nose. “This is the least you owe me, Joel. Who are you?” 
His Adam’s apple bobs. “I…” 
A hand, ghosting across his jaw, as if to conjure the words from his throat. His eyes flicker frantically between each of yours. 
“You might call it a gun-for-hire,” he tells you. “I was contracted under a man named Manuel Cabrera. This hotel is for others like… like me. People who operate in the Underworld.”
The revelation should not surprise you, but the earth beneath your bare feet fractures in one seismic shift. You think of the daisies. The suits. The gifts and the walks along beaches in Spain and the soft whisper of the breeze against your cheek. You think of sleeping next to him every night, his arm wrapped around your waist because it was the only way he would sleep. 
You think of the little he told you about his time in the Marines. The tattoo on his back that reads, FORTIS FORTUNA ADIUVAT. Fortune favours the bold. 
You think of a gun hidden in his bedside drawer. You think of a tough childhood he’s only alluded to: an orphanage, a church, the sisters. A cigarette burn behind his ear. 
“When did this all start?” Your voice is a feeble thing, afraid of its own shadow. Afraid of what that darkness will breed. “How long have you been… doing this?”
“As long as I can remember.” It’s the reply you want and not at all. Joel is looking down, and you realise he’s staring at your wedding ring. “I got out.”
“When?”
“After I met you.”
When he first kissed you, it was barely a brush of your lips, and then he was taken away. He’d frowned like it was a mistake, and when you stood on your toes to kiss him back, the gash between his brows smoothed over, and his hands cradled your face. 
Don’t regret it, you pleaded.
He pressed his mouth to your temple. You are the only choice I don’t regret.
You hate how the memories crowd you now, stifling what’s logical, what’s real. You hate the phantom sensation of his lips on your skin, the bristling of his moustache. You hate the way he holds back from touching you as if it’s something poisonous. You hate his wide-open eyes. As he stands before you now, you would paint him in shades of black. 
The pain in your chest yawns open into a cavity. You want to tear out the viscera and stuff it inside.
You gave your heart to him, and he poured oil-slick lies into the clean organ like it was nothing. Like it was all so easy for him. 
“You lied to me.”
He swallows. Nods his head. “I know.”
You can’t help but scoff at that. “Fuck you. You have no idea. Two hours ago, I didn’t think you knew how to throw a punch. You killed those men back there, Joel. And everyone in this building knows your name. You don't know.”
And the venom tastes sweet. It tastes powerful and strong and enough to rot what remains inside. 
“Was I even real?” you ask. “Was I just a cover story?”
“Don’t,” Joel snaps. “I did everything for you. You don't understand… you couldn’t understand the things I had to do to get out. To be with you. To settle down, give you the life you deserved.”
“Maybe I would understand if you'd told me!” You’re raising your voice, prickling pain behind your eyes, chest sour with an ache you don’t know. “You never even tried. You never even thought to tell me the truth? Your own wife?”
“Civilians can't know about the Underworld,” says Joel, and he looks as though he wants to say more, but you’re shoving him square in the chest—he doesn’t budge; of course he doesn’t fucking budge—and getting louder still.
“Don't patronise me,” you say, burning with vitriol, giving him another hard push. “I gave my life to you, and I’m just a civilian?”
Now he’s getting louder, grasping your arms and pleading with his eyes to make you listen. “I wanted to protect you,” he says, his voice breaking. “I wanted to give you a good life away from all that shit I’ve bled for, killed for. I needed to keep you safe, baby.”
Baby. You’ve always been his—his baby, honey, sweetheart, endlessly closing her eyes to a truth she was too blind, or maybe too unwilling, to see. And although you may resent him for keeping it all from you, you resent yourself, too, for never even guessing that something was wrong.
You feel so goddamn stupid. 
“Nine fucking years.” You shove him again only to see him falter slightly on his feet, to see the helpless glimmer of tears that shine, unshed, in his eyes. You hate him for crying, you hate him for being so strong, you hate him for all the touches he’s made you question. “You have lied to me for nine fucking years, you bastard.”
“That ain’t fair—”
“No, shut up! Shut the fuck up and let me talk. You kissed me and fucked me and gave me flowers and gifts and you’ve built it all on one big lie. And you expect me to forgive you because you were trying to protect me? I married you, Joel Miller. I loved you. We made vows to trust one another, to be truthful. Did that mean anything?”
Joel’s lips crack apart like water seeping through stone. “‘Loved’?”
“You’re selfish, Joel,” you spit, your throat raw, the pressure building hot behind your eyes. “You didn't tell me the truth because you didn't want me to run.”
“Would you?” he asks. A sluice has driven hard through the resolve in his face. “Would you have run?”
The fight bleeds out of you, the excess drawn from the skin. “You never gave me that choice, so don't you dare give it to me now.”
Maybe you would run, if given the chance. Maybe you would flee far away from the dangerous man you now know he is. But you wear his rings. You’ve taken him inside you countless times. You’ve given him your soul. There is no maybe. 
“You don't get it,” he croaks. “Don't you understand the things I’d do to keep you safe? Don't you understand that I’d kill for you?”
The sob bleeds from your lips. “What if I don't want that?”
Joel shakes his head. “I said no tears,” he says. “No tears, baby, please.”
No tears, he would always say. No tears for me until I’ve earned ‘em.
But it's like weights have been tied to your wrists, and you cannot lift your hands to wipe them away. Why should you have to? Why should you care to listen to him at all?
“No tears?” you shout. “You’ve lied to me all this time and you don’t want me to cry? You want me to just let it go? Fuck you, Joel Miller, and fuck you for giving me your last name, for letting me love you all this time when you knew you were lying to my face.”
Joel steps back like you’ve struck him in the face. The words are dry, blowing slightly on the air, and you must moisten them on your tongue to dissolve the numbness, water saturating a teaspoon of sugar. He does not say a word.
“What are you going to do?” you ask him. The sound of your own voice is foreign to you. 
He stands silent before you, as if mulling over a million words he wants to say. Instead, he flexes his fingers, and the scabbed skin of his knuckles cracks open. “Finish it.”
“Why?” you ask. “They could have chosen any house. They chose ours. It was never personal, Joel, until you made it personal.” 
You embrace your trembling arms as your adrenaline seeps, bone-deep exhaustion settling in. “I would have gone back to sleep last night,” you tell him. “I would have crawled into bed with you and let it all go away.”
A flicker travels through his eyes: like he’s been lashed in the back. “I can't,” he says. “I can't just… let it all go.”
You laugh, and it’s so hollow, so nothing, that you know a part of you is forever gone.
“I never really knew you, did I?” 
He shakes his head, reaching for you only for you to pull back. A dance. “You know me. You do,” he pleads. “Baby, c’mon… you know me.”
Maybe you do. Or, maybe you used to. You knew that his favourite colour was blue. You knew that he liked to bind old books as a hobby, and that you went to used bookshops in your free time to surprise him with new projects. You knew that he was a good cook. You knew that he liked John Keats and old, terrible action movies and Hank Williams. You knew a Joel you may never have known at all.
You cast your eyes down at his knuckles, at the stitched wound in his belly. Red stains the grooves of his palms. Doesn’t he know that you just wanted to go home? “You may be doing the killing, but all of that blood is on my hands. Did you ever think about that? Do you even care?”
“He gave me no choice,” says Joel.
“There is always a choice.”
Joel traces his thumb over your wound, his eyes glimmering. He's beautiful in this light, in the way he looks a little broken from the inside. “He would've hurt you. He would have violated you.”
“What will you do when you get your revenge?” you demand. “What happens then?”
“It’ll be done,” he says desperately. “And we can go home.”
“Home.” You chew up the word and it tastes like glass. “Home is with my husband. I’m looking at you now, and I don't recognise an inch of the man I married.”
Joel chokes, giving up, giving in, his hands on your face, touching his forehead to yours. “Baby, please. You have to understand…”
You cradle his wrists like they’re porcelain, allowing yourself this final silence. “We don't have a home anymore, Joel. We have this hotel room. And right now, I just need to go to bed.”
You pry away his hands and cross the room. It’s colder here, the autumn air a balm to your skin. You begin to untuck the sheets from your bed and catch a glimmer of gold out of the corner of your eye.
Joel doesn’t turn to face you, but you hear his voice like it’s coming from your own chest. 
“I love you,” he says. “I've only ever loved you.”
You look down at the golden coin you left on the table. Unity is Strength. 
“That's the one lie I still want to believe.”
367 notes · View notes
avocado-writing · 6 months
Text
Kinktober 21
Tumblr media
21. Anonymous Sex, Hair Pulling, Masturbation
It’s 1660 and everything is wonderful. 
It’s not just the fantastic sex, it’s the fact that you no longer have to face the possibility of a solitary life. No others to keep you company, cursed to an existence of watching the people you love wither and die until your only option was to simply not care about humans at all. But now? Oh, you not only have one kindred soul, but two. You’re jubilant. You’re overwhelmed. And you’re not alone. 
And, also, it’s the fantastic sex. 
You’re learning new things about each other’s bodies, what works, what doesn’t. You have not left the bed for any significant period of time for months. You’re sore and exhausted all the time but oh, isn’t it lovely?
Today, for instance, you’re about to find out something wonderful about Crowley. 
He’s walking past breezily as you sit at your dressing table readying yourself for the morning, wearing that dashing doublet and tight hose, his auburn locks flowing behind him. Gosh he is delicious. Utterly without thinking, you reach out to grab a handful of hair, playfully. 
“Look at you, aren’t you just —”
“Unnnnnfff—aaaa!”
The reaction comes as an utter surprise to you both. There you are, a handful of grabbed tresses, and there he is, head wrenched back and moaning like a whore. He slaps his hands over his mouth. 
You light up. 
“Oh my god!”
“Don’t you dare—”
You tug again and he whines, hips thrusting into the air. It’s like you’ve pulled a lever he didn’t know about. You giggle, wind a strand around your finger. 
“Oh, this is brilliant. Aziraphale, come here!”
Like a dog when called the angel pops up in the doorway instantly, eyes going wide when he sees what’s going on.
“What’s…”
“Listen to this noise Crowley makes.”
The demon is utterly powerless when you give his hair another yank, his moan cracking through the air like a beautiful sonata. Aziraphale goes bright pink.
“I see.”
You push Crowley onto the bed and straddle him. He is a mess under you already, you can feel how hard he is, how wanton. You pin his hands to the mattress.
“Tell us to fuck you.”
“Fuck me,” he begs, instantly. The two of you oblige.
Tumblr media
@bootlmoth @elleofdragons  @angelic-anarchy27 @yeethaw13 @candlewitch-cryptic @kwyn-q @rat-that-writes @buryustogether @letthenightingalessingagain @ltlthetrifecta @angiestopit @purplefrog1sblog @wereallbrokenangels @angelspathway @clarina04 @belilwen @chaospossum @eightsdoctor @oo-delallymrcrow @silcosmoke @climbingivy97 @live-logs-and-proper @project-sad @just-a-beatlemaniac69 @imagination-phantom @anonymously35 @corgis04 @peytonpenguin37 @catlynharper @unabashedgentlemenpirate @wolfe-houler
@darktealrat @mxxny-lupin @willbedecided @detectiveapparatiagreen @shadowluna25 @kaylinelizabeth4004 @xquinn-bartonx @blue-bell22 @foolishprincipalitee @fandomawesomeness @eweweweewewe @latersgaters-steven @llamaproblem @night-affiliate @randompost18 @hunterispunk @jessica-laufeysdottir @uxcaran @bunnymallowo @jae-michael @jelly-terror @larkiesparkie
153 notes · View notes
booksteaandtoomuchtv · 7 months
Text
Burn The Ships (1/5)
THIS IS/WILL BE MATURE.
Tumblr media
NOW WITH BEAUTIFUL COVER ART BY @snowbellewells
AO3 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
Summary: Pan and his pack of gruesome werewolves torment and put an end to individuals who find themselves unlucky enough to be a guest of Neverland. After being betrayed by her ex, Emma finds herself the game in this month’s hunt.
Captain Hook has never found the sport particularly alluring, preferring to spend his change far from Pan’s cruel crew. When he catches the scent of his mate, he is forced to join in the hunt to find her before the others can.
Saving her will mean betraying Pan and no one betrays Peter Pan and lives to tell about it.
@anmylica, @deckerstarblanche, @elfiola, @goforlaunchcee, @jrob64, @kmomof4 , @pirateswhore, @stahlopp, @teamhook, @tiganasummertreee, @undercaffinatednightmare, @xarandomdreamx, @zaharadessert
Author Note: This little fic is a birthday gift for the always encouraging and absolutely wonderful @kmomof4. I was initially drawn to Moonlight Sonata because it is also one of my favourites and the story behind the song felt like Killian meeting Emma for the first time. (I also love Für Elise but it doesn’t make me think of CS as much as Snowing and I cannot really explain that.) Then, I thought “oooh, CS PHANTOM OF THE OPERA?!” for about thirty seconds before realising that maybe I did not want to take that on while I was trying to finish up Witchy Woman and plotting the CS Miraculous Fic and that one Bridgerton-based CS Fic. But, then, I listened to Burn the Ships and read about the inspiration behind those lyrics and absolutely knew that was the one. What is more Captain Swain than battling demons (internal and external) and enduring together? Anywhoosies, HAPPY BIRTHDAY (this month)!! Thank you so much for all the flails, the sanity checking, the gifs, the cheerleading, and for just generally being one of the brightest lights in all of our lives. (Edit: atge birthday is on the 15th, I know. This whole thing happened where this was a two-parter and now it is a whole long thing and the posting schedule SHOULD work out so the whole thing is done by the 15th.)
Emma woke to the harsh sunlight infiltrating the discoloured curtains hanging limply over the large window her lumpy mattress had been pushed against. This was the worst part of her day - these moments in which the lie of her dreams, even the worst of them, gave way to the nightmarish truth of her reality. She fought against the dread seeping into her heart and tried to hold on to the last remnants of her dream, but it faded away as the scarred wardrobe came into clearer focus before her.
Despair, however, was less easily shaken. That endless emptiness accompanied her as she started toward the water basin to splash cold water on her face. Her gaze lifted to meet the empty emerald eyes she knew would stare back at her. She had watched helplessly as the hope drained from them, over the last several months, taking with it the anger and defiance that once glimmered behind them.
Fantasies, like hope, were for those with people or a pack, who cared. Lone wolves, orphaned at birth and betrayed to the monster who ruled this island by their shitty ex-fiancées, weren’t missed. And without any to notice your absence, who would know to rescue you?
“Cheer up,” a cheerful boyish voice chirped from behind her. She jumped and spun around - having your back to the demon was never a good idea. Pan was there, in the middle of the dreary room, looking at her with a dark sort of crazed humour dancing behind his eyes. That look meant he had a new twisted game to play. Her stomach fell and icy fear gripped her heart - losing came at a high price in Neverland and she always lost.
“As you doubtlessly know, the moon will be full tonight.” Pan paused and waited for her to respond. As if any wolf would be oblivious to the phases of the moon, she buried her annoyance at the patronising question and nodded for him to continue. “Tonight, I am letting you out of the garden. You’ll get to run the length of the island.”
Emma knew there was a catch, but after spending several transformations pacing the tiny gated garden, the prospect of running had her heart racing with excitement.
“As you lead us in tonight’s hunt.”
Her blood turned to ice in her veins. She was going to die tonight.
§§§§ §§§§ §§§§ §§§§
“OOOHHHH, CAPTAIN!” A sing-song voice called from somewhere high on the main mast.
“Pan, to what do we owe this unexpected visit?” Hook called back genially. He swept his arms out wide, in a welcoming gesture, discretely sliding the small vial into a hidden pocket of his coat.
Pan flew lower, hovering just above head height, forcing Killian to look up at him. A sweet scent filled the air between, something soft and warm. Killian couldn’t hear Pan's next words as the wolf within tried to locate the source of the scent. With the change coming so soon, Killian knew he would struggle to fight the impulses of the wolf. He had to get away from this enchanting distraction before Pan noticed his attention was elsewhere.
“Let’s discuss whatever business you have away from listening ears.” Hook gestured toward the ladder leading to his quarters, hoping the breeze would not penetrate the boards.
“As you well know, the hunt will be tonight. I do hope you and your crew will attend.” Pan started, as Killian filled a glass with rum in an effort to steady himself. The room around him was saturated with the warm - Vanilla? No, not quite. What is the point of being a bloody wolf if I can’t determine a bleeding smell? - scent. Could a scent be alluring and inviting? Because Killian felt an inexplicable sense of contentedness, something cosy he was drawn to like the heat of a fire, that seemed directly related to the sudden arrival of the scent. Was this possibly a new torture device derived from this cruel realm?
"What do you say, Captain?" Pan sneered, the last word sounding as an insult rather than a well-earned title.
"I'll not be joining your pack of savage, cruel beasts as they set out to torment an innocent you have captured for a barbaric ritual of bloodlust and cruelty."
"We're all wolves, Hook," Pan responded. "You can keep to your ridiculous code, acting as though you are a gentleman despite the tasks you perform in your service to me. But, you cannot deny that the same blood-thirsty animal lives under your skin. One day, you'll relish letting the darkness play alongside my pack. We're the same at the heart of it."
"I am nothi…"
"Ah, ah, Captain, you wouldn't want to say anything regretful, now, would you?" Pan smiled his cruelest smile and Killian swallowed down his annoyance. The last time Killian had crossed Pan still hurt as fresh as the night Pan’s pack had stolen Milah’s pup from his ship. Killian heard Bae’s weak howls from the depths of the Mermaid Lagoon and raced toward his ship as quickly as possible in the dense jungle. When his paws landed with heavy thuds on the wooden gangway, the overly sweet, coppery smell of blood filled the air - air that was notably barren of any of the sounds or scents that had made the Jolly Roger home. Without even a single survivor to share the burden of grief and burial, laying his sailors to rest had taken days - purging the Jolly of all evidence of the massacre had taken much longer.
“Aye,” Killian growled out.
“Good, lad.” Pan evaporated, leaving him alone in his cabin. The sweet scent that had entranced him moments before faded away. Realisation dawning, Killian swore but did nothing to soothe the sudden rage burning hot through him.
The bloody demon had his mate.
31 notes · View notes
lonewolfwriting89 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
💎 MASTERLIST 💎
[Lone Wolf Writing89]
~*~
Elle || UK || 31 || She/Her || Capricorn || Reader Insert Writings (Multi-Fandoms) || NFSW 18+ Content
Please read all warnings before reading my work. Majority of my work is NFSW, 18+.
I do not consent to having my work copied, reposted on other sites or translated.
Please note this a side blog to my main account.
…I got nothing but time…
~*~
Tumblr media Tumblr media
JAMES BUCHANAN BARNES “BUCKY”
🖤 HEATED PASSION
🖤 ON MY KNEES
🖤 MOONLIGHT SONATA
Tumblr media Tumblr media
SIMON “GHOST” RILEY
💚 COVERT RAINFALL
💚 ORAL ASSIGNMENT
💚 CLAIM
💚 GHOST OF YOU (Coming soon)
💚 NSFW ALPHABET - 18+
💚 MORE
💚 SATIN
💚 SLAVE FOR YOU
💚 WITCHCRAFT
💚 WHISKEY HIGHS
💚 PRIMAL
Tumblr media Tumblr media
VINCENT DE GRAMONT “MARQUIS”
❤️ LA FEMME
❤️ GAMES WE PLAY
❤️ PERDRE LE CONTRÔLE
Tumblr media
84 notes · View notes
Text
I had a nightmare, the wolf eating the raven  Entrails of life on my plate and I ate them
(Wolf & Raven, Sonata Arctica)
9 notes · View notes
cosmotheo · 4 months
Text
PF2E Classes and Dating Dynamics
Episode 1: Bard
Bard + Alchemist: Wedded Weirdoes. Sharing a love for the boundaries of the known world, and even moreso pushing past those boundaries into the unknown. Eclectic, odd, and idiosyncratic, but never out of sync with one another. There is at least 1 mutagenic used in the bedroom nightly.
Bard + Barbarian: The Wolf and its Howl. Barbarian feels numb to the world due to their grueling training, and Bard reminds them the beauty of small, gentle things. Who is protecting whom differs depending on which you ask.
Bard + Bard: Songbirds. Cute little love ballads to each other, coming up with the stupidest rhymes with each other's names. Calling each other pet names like "Muse" and "My Sweet Sonata". Nasty freaky sex.
Bard + Cleric: Would you still love me if I were a Bookworm? They meet in a class discussing the Theological importance behind Likha, The Teller. Both are quiet, so as not to gush, until an obscure bit of trivia leaps from their mouths in unison. They spend the night together in the dorms, but they're far too busy talking to sleep. Two lovable gray ace dorks.
Bard + Champion: Hype and Hyper. Champion slays and kicks ass for their god. Bard thinks that's badass, starts playing some sick trumpet. The excitement is electric, and sparks form between them. They have a sex playlist, and Def Lepperd is on it.
Bard + Druid: The Spider and the Fly. No one understands the Druid quite like the Bard. There is a roughness, a viciousness to love that society has shorn off. Filed the points from our fangs to distance ourselves from beasts. The Bard remembers. The Bard can sing the old songs, just like the Druid can. Stare them in the eye, no matter their shape or size, and refuse to blink. Their love is raw gold in the belly of a forgotten cave, and that's just how they like it.
Bard + Fighter: Knight and Squire. Bard has ballads set aside just to tend to Fighter's wounds. Fighter learned to pick up a shield so that no one hurts their Bard. They lift each other up, holding each other to a fierce, almost competitive standard, only because they believe in each other so much.
Bard + Inventor: Experimental. Societal standards are stupid and identity is what they want it to be. Transhumanists who love each other's ability to ebb and flow. Music, fashion, expression, and even bodily configuration change day by day, and yet their hearts never drift apart.
Bard + Kineticist: Hearts Aflame. A Bard in awe of a dangerous powerhouse of fire. A Kineticist baffled by this Bard's insistence on being around despite constantly getting (slightly) incinerated. Their love is sacrifice and compromise, hard earned and Aloe scented.
Bard + Magus: Battle Buddies! Have you ever noticed how combat is like a dance? These two have! Magic, steel, song, dance, blending together in beautiful harmony. It's no wonder they get along so well, they're like puzzle pieces fit tightly together.
Bard + Monk: Order and Entropy. Sometimes, we must shed blood for peace. Sometimes, our silence must speak loudly for us. The Bard's creativity is tempered by the Monk's discipline. The Monk's form is made flowing by the Bard's song. In life and love, all things must be brought into balance.
Bard + Oracle: Strangers Together. An Oracle's burden is a heavy one. Nightmares wrack their restless nights, and alienation riddles their everyday life. If not for the lullabies of the Bard, they wonder how they would sleep at all. They hold hands, staring together at the Enigma, and for a moment, they feel a little less alone in this weird, wild world.
Bard + Psychic: Dark Side of the Heart. Bard will never forget their first meeting. Psychic will never remember it. The power of a Dark Persona is mesmerizing, like looking into the eye of a storm. Bard has tried and failed a hundred times to capture that feeling into a song. Psychic eventually stops apologizing for its existence... and feels a lot less lonely now that they have someone to confide their darkness into.
Bard + Ranger: Folk Heroes! Any talking that is done in this relationship is very one sided. The Bard will tell you all about how their partner slayed the evil giant with one hand tied behind their back, or pole vaulted across the sea with a single bamboo chute, or lifted a whole town out of the way of a volcanic eruption! The Ranger, smiling quietly, will simply add "That's true, mostly."
Bard + Rogue: Starcrossed Sneakthiefs. They meet in jail, both imprisoned under different circumstances. This isn't either of their first jailbreaks, but its their first one together. They turn robbery into romance, and second story work into soulful serenades. The only thing they need is each other... and everyone else's stuff too.
Bard + Sorcerer: Forbidden Feelings. Who else would understand? The way that society treats us different...the way they cast their looks of shame down upon us. We were born this way! We had no choice! If only they knew just how heavy it was... the burden of being...just so horny for dragons.
Bard + Summoner: Pet People. It's not often you find your true soulmate, or a trusty animal companion that'll stay by your side. Even rarer, the Bard finds both in the Summoner. Eidolons, the truest shape of one's soul, have a kind of "people sense" that cannot be overstated. It is no surprise then that the Summoner's face turns bright red when, for the first time ever, their Eidolon bends its head down to allow the Bard to give the goodest boy some pats.
Bard + Swashbuckler: Theater Dropouts. They met in the detention center of their college. One had switched the prop swords with real ones to show their prowess on stage. The other had cast Sleep on the lead to make them miss their entrance. It isn't their fault that the stage isn't big enough for them, someone ought to build a bigger stage! When they look into each other's eyes, minutes before facing their possible expulsion, they realize it doesn't matter. They'll star in this adventure together, two leads unbound by petty things like direction and criticism.
Bard + Thaumaturge: Hobby Hubbies. Bards, like crows, are known for their love of shiny things. Any Thaumaturge worth their weight in salt has a plethora of trinkets, doodads, and gizmos that have been marinating in hundreds of years of esoteric lore. You know what they say, couples that treasure hunt together stay together.
Bard + Witch: Love Through Spite. Listen, patrons suck. They're flighty, they speak in riddles, they have stupid expectations, and half the time they don't even know what they want. The only difference between ours is that yours is the Spirit of Winter and mine owns a villa in Tian Xia. Let's bitch together until the pain stops.
Bard + Wizard: Bitter Rivals. These two are the absolute bane of any unsuspecting lecture goer's existence. It starts off simply, one will answer a question provided by a teacher, or give some small anecdote. Like volatile chemistry, the other will react with something snide. Snideness turns to rudeness. Rudeness turns to vitriol. Vitriol manifests in nasty spells slung across the lecture hall. With all of the fighting they do, it's a wonder (and a nightmare, really) to all their classmates why they always end up in the same classes. The truly keen are left with an even larger mystery: why has the Wizard been repeatedly spotted leaving the Bard's dorm in the wee hours of the morning? The world may never know.
11 notes · View notes
nat0327 · 1 year
Text
A Princess' Vigil
Summary: Trapped in a tower of Hyrule Castle, Princess Zelda keeps a vigilant watch over her people even as she's powerless to do much else to help them.
Excerpt: It had been cold in her tower, in the eternal twilight. How long had it been, since everything had been ripped away from her? Without the regular motions of the sun and the stars, it had been nigh impossible to tell. Even now that it had returned, she wasn’t sure just how much time had passed. As she stared down through the window, at the people busily swarming through the streets, she wondered if maybe they could tell. If maybe at least that semblance of normalcy had been granted to them.
https://archiveofourown.org/works/46047586
This fic takes place during Chapter 39 of A Wolf's Loyalty, which can be read here:
https://archiveofourown.org/works/32957119/chapters/81794980
0 notes