The pact was signed between the King and the Fairy Queen, 1,000 years of prosperity for his kingdom, in exchange for his yet-to-be-conceived first born. The Fairy Queen however did not expect the king to slit his own throat and die on the spot seconds later.
Part 1
The hunter approached the end of a misty alley, following little red droplets that led behind a derelict building. Crawling away in the dark was the wounded vampire, tired and worn.
“Ah... My faithless little hunter,” the vampire rasped. “What circumstances to be reunited. You appear stronger since last we met."
“I am,” the hunter agreed. They closed the space between them, looming over the fallen vampire.
"It seems faith is no longer a... necessary shield," the vampire murmured. "And yet, you kept the bauble, I've noticed."
“I saw what you did." The hunter tucked the bauble away from view. “Attacking the Guild leader in plain view. Very bold.”
"Well deserved."
"A foolish target, in any case."
The vampire laughed, then coughed at the effort. “Why the... Pleasantries? Savoring your victory?”
The hunter knelt. "The entire Guild is after you."
The vampire grimaced. "It seems you shouldn't stall, then. Others may take your prey."
"They won't," the hunter said. They brought out a dagger.
The vampire stared, and a very human fear flitted across their face.
"I've reached the end of the road," the vampire conceded. "I won't claim to embrace death, but I'd rather it be you."
The hunter tilted their head. "How unlike you to give up."
"I've carried out my vengeance." The vampire tilted back their head. "Now satisfy yours."
"I had a different plan," the hunter said. They nicked the end of their thumb with the dagger's edge, and pressed it to the vampire's lips.
Wonder. Confusion. "You've truly lost me," the vampire whispered. "You're doing this... To what end?"
"Paying what is owed. Stop asking questions."
"You're playing with fire." The vampire's voice was low with hunger. "Offering your blood to one such as I. It seems you haven't shaken your wish for death."
"I've spilled more blood while training," the hunter scoffed.
"And if I forget myself?" The vampire whispered. "What then?"
"You're in no position to worry about that," the hunter said. "Drink."
With little other option, the vampire accepted the tithe of blood. Their cheeks flushed, and their wounds closed with unnatural speed.
"That should suffice." The vampire licked their lips and pulled away. "Thank--"
"I owe you nothing, and you owe me nothing." The hunter stood and backed away, eager to put distance between them. "We are not friends."
"Then, what are we?" The vampire gazed up at them, strangely vulnerable.
The hunter avoided their eyes. "Follow the path down to the ravine. If you leave now, you will reach the next town by sundown."
"Hunter--"
"If I see you again," the hunter said, "I will end you."
"Ah." The vampire stood and approached the hunter.
The hunter backed away, raw with a sudden panic. "D-didn't you hear me?"
"Your hand is still bleeding."
The hunter hit wall. "Hardly."
"Let me tend to it."
The hunter reluctantly held out their hand. They took the wounded thumb and gently bandaged it. Then, boldly, they pressed a small kiss in the small of their palm.
The hunter stared, then tore their eyes away with a blush.
Shouting sounded from the end of the alleyway. The Guild hunters.
"They're here," the hunter hissed. "Go, now."
"Till we meet again," The vampire whispered. "My faithless little hunter."
And then they disappeared into the mist.
"Hey, you're a hero, right?"
"Well, I mean--"
"I need someone strong to come clean out my garage."
"But I don't--"
"I'll pay you $5."
"..."
"I'll throw in a sandwich if you unclog my toilet."
"... ..."
Grace glowered over the laptop. "What makes you think you earned it?"
Felicity huffed. "We need to be able to work together."
"You're obsessing over this," Grace said.
"Trust is important if we want to crack this code."
"I'm helping you find your brother," Grace said. "That's the extent of this relationship."
Felicity sucked in a breath. "Oh. Fine. Yeah. I guess then, fine." She fiddled with the notepad in front of her. "So. Uh. How's your mom."
Grace slammed the laptop down. Felicity flinched.
"Stop. STOP IT, FELICITY! God, you ALWAYS do this! You always draw me back into your-- your family drama time and time again, and-- what? You think I owe you SMALL TALK?" She picked up the laptop and began stuffing it into her bag when Felicity touched her arm.
"Grace, I'm sorry, you're right," Felicity whispered. "I... You're the only one who... Helps me and I..." Her lip trembled.
Grace looked up at the sky and sighed. She released a long, low growl and placed the laptop back on the table. "Don't. Don't look at me with those eyes," Grace muttered. "I just... Stop. Stop trying to draw me back in."
"I'm not," Felicity protested. "I'm just--"
"Listen, let me do what I do best, and we can go back to never talking again," Grace said, voice hard. She tapped the keys of the laptop so aggressively it seemed they should pop off.
Felicity sat in total silence, watching Grace at work. For hours Grace worked, her anger slowly replaced with total concentration. Felicity tried to focus on her end of the research, but as the hours drew on she grew tired. She left to get two coffees, and returned to find Grace sitting back and looking very satisfied with herself.
"Come here," Grace said. "I found something."
Felicity set down the two coffee cups and stood behind her.
"The coordinates your brother sent you aren't his true coordinates," Grace explained. "They're the keys to a cipher. Look at this."
She typed the coordinates into Google Maps. "See? Every time he sends you a new coordinate, it's wildly different. This place is in the middle of the ocean. Buuut if we compare it to the letters he sent you," she reached over the stack of letters Felicity brought with her, "The letter that mentions the Atlantic Ocean? That's the key for that letter. So then, if we grab this, this, and this--"
"That's only a few hours away!" Felicity finished. She pulled Grace into an enormous hug. "Grace! Thank you thank you thank--" She froze, realizing her error.
Only, Grace looked frozen too. Felicity pulled up her arms quickly.
"Grace, look, please, I'm sorry--"
Grace closed her eyes. "I... You... Keep... Hurting me, Felicity. I can't keep doing this. I can't keep coming back to... This."
"I know. I understand. I... Thank you." Felicity moved to go.
"...Wait." Grace grabbed Felicity's hand. "You're not going alone, are you?"
Felicity blinked at her. "...Yes?"
Grace closed her eyes. "...Oh, you're going to be the death of me."
She gathered her laptop and grabbed the coffee.
"Come on, I'm driving," Grace muttered.
"Wait, really?" Felicity nearly squeaked.
Grace gave her ex a long suffering look.
"But this doesn't mean we're getting back together," she said firmly.
"Do you trust me?"
"You keep asking me that."
"You keep avoiding the question."
2024 Art Wrap
This was a big animation year for me. It’s really nice to do these art wraps to remind myself all the work I’ve accomplished.
See how I make room guardians on my Patreon!
Found my fav STP route recently. Dragon my beloved. Your horrifying beak mouth was an impossible-to-refuse lip syncing challenge 💖
Shoutouts to @blacktabbygames for making such a cool game!
Respectfully, I've seen this advice hit the opposite extreme, and I agree with the intent, but not the message. Power fantasies, Mary Sues, and Self Inserts wouldn't be popular if a "perfect" character was always uninteresting to read. (That said, "perfect" characters tend to show a writer's ideologies and imperfections) Conversely, when a character is always beat down on, always losing, always choosing the worst possible option, that can reach a certain banality too. Characters need contrast in some way. If a character keeps suffering extreme loss, give them something to help cope. Let them have a tiny moment of levity. If a character is flawless, give them a problem with no clear or "correct" solution. Contrast them against flawed characters. Again, I feel like you said this in a way, but I felt it needs clarification. Variety is the spice of life and all that.
Listen, you can’t write perfect characters. No one cares about reading about someone who never screws up. Your characters need to make bad decisions, they need to hurt people, and they need to be hurt. They should doubt themselves and do things they regret. That’s where the magic happens, when they’re flawed, messy, and human. People don’t fall in love with characters because they’re flawless; they fall in love because those characters remind them of the chaos inside themselves. So don’t be afraid to put your characters through hell. Only then will their journey mean something.
Okay but hear me out, this could make a fun prompt:
"You made three mistakes. One more, and it's all over."
There was a reviewer or commenter who said "I always keep track of how many mistakes the protagonist makes and after three, I stop reading the story and never look back".
I think about that person pretty frequently. We read for our own enjoyment, and therefore there's no wrong way to read a book so long as you're enjoying yourself, but ... maybe I don't actually believe that. Maybe there are wrong ways to read a book, and this guy found one.
The Monster crawled out from under the bed. "You saw that, right?" He asked in his low, scratchy voice.
He skittered towards the light in the back of the closet, now dim. He felt along the edges of the wall with his claws and growled, "The portal's already closed."
Rainbow Panda stared at the closet, breath caught in his fuzzy throat. "We need to go after him."
The Monster's lip curled. "We? You want to work together with me?"
Panda sighed, world-weary. "I don't agree with your methods, but..."
"But you admit I was right," The Monster finished, a somber edge to his voice. "I tried to make him more afraid, more cautious. Now he's been taken who-knows-where."
"Oh, just admit you like scaring people," Panda scolded. He adjusted his bow-tie, a habit for whenever he was agitated. "If he wasn't so desperate to prove himself, he wouldn't have ignored his gut."
The Monster shook his head and pulled back the clothing in the closet, looking for a seam or crack left over from the portal. He seemed to be lost in concentration, and didn't reply. "We can return to our squabbling after the boy is safely home," The Monster said finally.
Panda bowed his head. "You're right." He slid off the bed and hobbled over to the closet. He picked up a small keychain flashlight from underneath a pair of discarded socks. "What even was that?"
The Monster shook his head. "I have lived in this house for many years," he said. "I have seen all kinds of imaginary creatures manifest into being, but I have never seen one promise a life reborn in a new world. Much less see a human take that promise at face value."
The teddy bear stopped in his tracks. "Isekai. Portal fantasy," Panda explained, voice quivering. "He's been reading webcomics and watching anime."
The Monster stopped to look over his shoulder. "Web... Comics?" He grunted. "How do humans use webbing in comic-making? That sounds made up."
"Do you not-... Wha--... That's not important!" Panda shrieked. "The boy is in grave danger! A key component to most isekai is being reborn into a fantasy world after dying!"
"But... How do we find him? Where did he go?"
They sat in silence, wheels turning.
Quietly, the teddy bear hobbled to the bookshelf. "We need to read," he said. He shook the bookshelf, causing some of the books to fall off.
The Monster groaned. "You read. I'll keep looking for a way to get through."
"These stories always start with a character feeling powerless and inferior in life," Panda said. "Oftentimes isolated."
"We should like such stories, then," The Monster laughed. He crawled under the bed and returned with a box of crayons.
"I need you to take this seriously. He followed that... That charlatan because he didn't see other options," Panda huffed. "What are you doing with those crayons?"
"Drawing a portal," The Monster said. "I know not of these new webbed comics--"
"Stories," Panda corrected. "Just say stories."
"--but I know of the old tomes, and the old tomes drew doors with crayons," The Monster finished.
He gently pulled out a red crayon between thumb and forefinger, and drew shakily over the moulding, an imperfect straight line up to his height. The line sloped angular, then back down. Finally, a doorknob, jaggedly circular.
"Did it work?" Panda asked, uncertain.
The Monster pushed on the door. It pushed in, ever so gently. The doorknob, like a writhing ball of yarn, floated from the wall.
Panda abandoned the book and padded over to the makeshift door. With bated breath he tried the knob, and sure enough, the door opened.
"O-oh," Panda said. "It... It opened."
He seemed to hesitate at the opening. The Monster tilted his head. "Are you afraid?"
Panda nodded, and grabbed his hand. They jumped into the abyss together.
Down, down they fell.
Swirling around them were strange lights and discordant sounds.
Laughter.
Music.
At the end of it, a large field of grass.
The boy was hunched in the center of the field, shaking.
Panda ran to him. "Wait! I'm here! You don't have to be afraid."
The boy turned, tears in his eyes. He was... Laughing? His smile died seeing the small stuffed bear.
"What are you doing here?" The boy said. Annoyed.
A girl and boy around his age emerged from the long grass.
"What is that thing?" The girl said.
The Monster backed into the shadows of a tree and hissed at the sunlight.
"We came to save you!" Panda said proudly, chest puffed out.
The new boy snickered. "Save him? He just destroyed a lich, and you think he needs you?!"
"Maybe the little bear is going to save him from loneliness," The girl said with a snarky smile. "Oh, wait, he doesn't need you for that, either."
Panda, taken aback, looked back at The Monster helplessly. The Monster shook his head.
"This world is dangerous," Panda tried.
The boy huffed a laugh. "So is my old one. At least in this one I have the power to fix it."
Panda wilted. "You... You can change the old world too," He whispered. "We could change."
"I'm not a child," the boy said. "I'm sick of being treated like one."
"But--" Panda grabbed his arm, and he pushed him back.
"I'm not going back," the boy growled, and pulled out a sword. "Back off or I'll run you through."
Panda backed away, tears in his eyes. Then, stupidly, foolishly, he lunged for a hug. "I'm not letting you--"
The boy was true to his word. The Monster watched from the shadows as the sword pierced through the back of the stuffed toy. Panda went limp.
The boy laughed, high-pitched.
"That was a bit dark," the girl said, a little disapprovingly.
"Well, he did warn him," the new boy said snidely. "Besides, he was probably a spy from the Iridescent Wastes. Why else would he look like a rainbow puke bear?"
The boy discarded the teddy bear, and the three left the field towards a path to the edge of a small town. The Monster rushed to the stuffed toy and clutched him tightly.
"My old friend," The Monster moaned.
Panda did not respond. His little bowtie lay crooked, held on by a string.
The Monster sobbed, because how couldn't he? He was alone in this strange world to save a boy who didn't want saving, and lost the closest he had to a companion.
The sun melted into the horizon and cast long shadows over the grassy fields, and The Monster craved his little hideaway under the cozy bed. He crept to the edge of town, skittering across cobblestone streets. He knew well how to camouflage, and that he did when townspeople passed by with their oil lanterns.
A small tailor's shop sat at the corner of a long strip of shops, and The Monster scuttled over to the rich fabrics and glistening buttons in the window. He clutched the teddy bear tightly, and crawled in through the open door. The tailor, done with his long day, closed the shop door and locked it. He blew out the lamps that lit his workstation and proceeded to bed.
The Monster waited until the coast was clear, and searched around for an appropriate needle and thread. He wasn't adept at stitching, having only seen it as a small Monster many years ago, but gently he poked the stuffing back in and jaggedly stitched closed the hole in Panda's chest. He took a small piece of ribbon and wrapped it around his wrist to keep his small friend secure.
The Monster waited for the tailor to retire to bed. He crawled underneath, holding the stuffed bear aloft. He hoped the Under-the-Bed network worked in webbed comics. He felt around with his clawed hands until they grabbed onto the crook in the wooden floorboards. He smiled, sharp and toothy, as a jagged passage revealed itself to him.
--
Panda woke up in a sweat, which was strange because he had never once sweat before. He shifted in bed, and felt strange, like he was much, much too long. His fur was all on top of his scalp, the rest replaced by soft, smooth flesh. His eyes had lashes, and his little bowtie was replaced by a pajamas.
"What am I?" he asked, and even his voice was different, less squeaky and more... Human?
"We await your orders, my Prince," a soldier announced from the door.
"Prince?" Panda repeated. "Prince of what?"
The soldier looked at him with mild concern and embarrassment. "Apologies, it is early still. I will ask your personal attendant to assist you."
Suddenly a whole team of people were poking and prodding Panda, and he remembered idly how he got passed around and brushed and dressed and tossed about during a birthday party once, and wasn't this sort of similar?
He was brought down to breakfast, and that was a little more out of his depth. He didn't quite have a mouth, or teeth, or any sort of involvement with food before. He pushed the food around with a fork, trying to judge what was and was not supposed to be part of the food. The cloth seemed safe enough, but he got strange looks trying to nibble that. Thankfully the attendants assumed he had no appetite, and he was able to skip the whole thing.
In the drawing room, scary-looking men were peppering him with questions. "I believe we are at a disadvantage trying to flank them from the west side," the General said. "I say we sacrifice the new recruits to get them off-guard, then head them off in the mountains. They'll think they're winning and get sloppy."
"S-sacrifice people?" Panda said. "No! Don't do that!"
The General gave him an odd look. "My Prince, are you well? You yourself proposed the idea."
"W-well, it was a bad idea," Panda said, eyes sparkling with tears. "It sounds like we have a lot of big feelings, but we should use our words when we're hurting. Not hurt other people."
The General crinkled his nose. "My Liege, are you mocking me?"
Panda crumpled into tears. "No! No, no no and I don't get what's going on!" He wailed.
The military commanders and lords looked helplessly at the Royal Advisor, who in turn looked upon the Prince with a mixture of morbid fascination and disgust.
"Perhaps you should retire early, my Prince," the Royal Advisor said.
Panda grimaced. He looked over the map before him and whimpered. He tried his best to be brave, but this was far outside his element. The Royal Advisor gently guided him out the door.
"Perhaps he has... Reverted to a more child-like state as a result of the accident?" one of the Lords in attendance murmured.
"The Prince did take quite a fall," another agreed.
The door shut behind them, and the Royal Advisor guided Panda back to the Prince's room.
"Rest now, sire," the Royal Advisor said. Panda nodded uncertainly. The door closed and he dropped to the floor.
"...Monster?" He called from below the bed.
It was silly to half-expect his old friend to be underneath, but-- apparently not silly enough. From the floorboards appeared the telltale fanged creature, long claws climbing up from a set of endless Nightmare stairs.
"Monster!" Panda cried, and threw his arms around the beast, who flailed and hissed at the unexpected embrace. The Monster slipped out of his grasp and fled to a far corner, wild-eyed and heaving. The teddy bear slipped from the ribbon and fell to the floor.
"Who are you," The Monster said, baring fangs, "Who calls upon a wretched creature such as I."
Gently, Panda picked up the teddy bear and tilted his head. "You... You kept me," he said softly. He hugged his old body close. "You do care."
A low, beastly rumble from the back of the beast's throat. The Monster slowly lowered his shoulders, anger and fear replaced by curiosity. "...Panda?" he asked, uncertain, "Is that you?"
"Yes, Monster. I explained isekais to you, right?" Panda explained. "Death in an old world, and rebirth in a new one!"
"But you died in the new world," The Monster said. "Are you trapped here?"
Panda shook his head. "I don't know. What's important is getting the boy to safety. We'll figure the rest out later."
A child goes missing late one night after investigating a light emanating from their closet. The Child's teddy bear and the monster that lives under the bed must put aside their differences and form a truce in order to rescue the child.
God, I just love these little pink munchkins and this tired lil rodent mom
It's hard being a single mom of four to eight kids (she's bad at math)
Also self imposed design challenge to design an infant rodent that doesn't look like eraserhead baby
lovely spin
doin a comm for a friend. havent done this shit in forever but im getting there lmao. forgot how fun it is when you get in the zone
Just a little writing blog. Thank you for visiting.Please feel free to leave me an ask!
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