A very sweet and soft story
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.
"You chose a bad day to infiltrate my base," the villain says.
"Because you're planning something?" The hero demanded. "I've seen people in and out all day. What are you up to?"
"It's a holiday, Hero, in case you've forgotten," the villain sighed. "I'm just trying to survive my family."
"O-oh." The hero looked lost in thought. "I, um, forgot."
"You know what?" The villain put an arm around their shoulder. "You might as well join. Everyone else wants to poke their nose where it doesn't belong. You'll fit right in."
"Oh, no, that's okay." The hero's eyes went wide at the crowd they were being dragged to, digging their heels. "This is for family, and I really should be going--"
"I'm introducing you as my fiancee," the villain stated with a mischievous grin. "Aunt Bertha will hate you."
utterly beautiful
I don’t care if this world breaks me, cause I was already a wreck in the making, so I will love you gently, hold your hand to help you up, come in to volunteer for a friend, show up to artistic events to celebrate other’s achievements, take the pictures for that evening, then fade into the background as silent as an echo on a blank canvass. I will unbury your skeletons, take note of the world’s diseases, pull those weeds, and plant the seeds so you can live to see hope blooming, and feel a soft breeze as you finally walk free from every tragedy that was haunting your psyche. I will write a world of compassion and beauty and disappear before you can even remember seeing me.
-2024
The slow progression of corruption and the misery it spreads, and how one woman takes it upon herself to do something about it, is what makes this such a brilliant use of the prompt.
The "evil" king was dead long before their empire turned to tyrany. However, the lords keep telling the peasants the king is alive just so they could blame him for all the atrocities they commit.
Their hand was warm in yours. The night was still, the moonlight sprinkled through the canopy of trees. You lay there and wish the rest of the world could disappear.
"I love you," they whispered softly.
You brought their hand to your lips. "I love you too."
Wind rustled through the trees. Something wet hit your cheek. The soft rumble of thunder tore you from the moment.
You both stood. They opened an umbrella and pulled you close.
"My place isn't far," they said.
You gently placed a kiss on their cheek. They smiled.
"Lead the way," you said.
Malcom had lived a good five centuries on Earth, and not once had he seen such stupid, brazen audacity. He rubbed his eyes and blinked tiredly at the man in front of him. "First-- Goodness... What... What makes you think I want to help you?"
"I'll give you blood, sir," Emmett said, yanking his sleeve much too readily. "Or... Money? Please say blood."
Malcom crinkled his nose and gave him a once-over. "Listen, I don't know where you came from, or what you're in, but what makes you think you can just walk up to someone on the subway a-and just ask for something like that?"
"Why's it so weird? I want my mind stronger." Emmett clapped Malcom on the back, and Malcom glared daggers. "Maybe we can even help you fix your... Uh... Mind control difficulties? Make a game out of it."
"Listen, hush, will you? Also, what difficulties?! My mind control is fine!" Malcom took a deep breath and worried his lip. "Also, quit saying vampire this, mind-control that. You're freaking people out." He shook out a newspaper and hid behind it.
"Oh wow. I didn't even know they still made those." Emmett said, flicking the paper. "Do they? Is that from this century?"
"They sell them in supermarkets," Malcom sniffed.
"Oh wow, so they do. Sorry to question you, grandpa." Emmett grinned cheekily. "Hey, maybe I can teach you what we use in modern times. Do you know what the internet is?"
Malcom gave him a deadpan look and held up his smartphone. "Sometimes I just like print better," he said. "Now go find some other poor sucker to pester."
Emmett stared at him with an almost hungry look, and gripped the newspaper. "Make me," he said.
Malcom grimaced. "This is some sort of weird fetish, isn't it? Let me sit you down and tell you about a little thing called consent. No means no."
"Listen," Emmett said, suddenly very serious. He seemed like he was having difficulties getting the words out. "I... Killed... Under a demon's orders. It was... I swore I'd never do it again. And I've seen you around. We take the same route almost every day. And you seem... Safe."
Malcom was at a loss for words. Emmett's pleading tone moved him, to be sure. But more than that, he knew how it felt to be a puppet.
"I have a feeling I'm going to regret this," Malcom muttered. "Listen, Emmett... Fine. I take Venmo. I won't say no to a little blood too. Nothing from the vein. All the hair and arm sweat-- just-- no. Get some sterile needles, wipe it down, get it in a bag or bottle for me. You're not diseased, are you?"
"Not that I know of, sir," Emmett said.
"And quit calling me sir. It makes me feel old."
"Good day, good sir. I would like to be put under mind control" "I… I'm sorry… It's just… People usually don't offer volunter to do that." "Oh, it's just that I need to practice how to get free once in a while to not get rusty."
"He's been claimed by a Fae Lord, a Witch, a Demon Queen-- we made deals with one too many entities," the Queen explained with a heavy sigh. "Now, he's gone and got himself possessed by a couple ghosts, and apparently has some kind of arrangement with a Siren and a Dragon. I'm a little lost on his social life at the moment."
The Queen plucked out the sacrificial dagger protruding from her son's chest and tossed it aside with a hanky. The wound instantly healed.
"He's immune to just about anything," she continued. "Lightning, arrows, knives, cannonballs, being frozen or burned and... What was it? Oh yes, poison."
The Prince reached for the knife that lay discarded and began giggling and stabbing himself. The wounds gave off little sparks as they zipped the skin back together.
"Oh, my poor son," the Queen lamented. "In any case, is this God of yours powerful? They might need to be in order to claim him."
The Order exchanged glances. "We changed our mind," they said.
The Prince hopped up on the sacrificial altar and grabbed the leader by his robes. "No no NO you can't stop NOW!!" He giggled, "Beyooooond the time it took for set up, how RUDE it is to call a God only halfway, right when it's getting GOOD?!"
The Order grimaced. "The prince speaks the truth. Complete the spell in the honor of God. Only he can determine if this vessel is worthy."
The Prince flopped back with a smarmy grin.
The Order sunk the knife into the Prince once again and commenced with the summoning. The Prince began to float, and he hit the clergy with spitballs from where he was suspended.
The God appeared and looked over the clergy. "You must know this vessel is... Inadequate," he said, gesturing to the giggling prince. "I have never been summoned to a less suitable vessel."
"Suit yourself! You clearly don't know how to PARTY!" The Prince said, dancing around the floating apparition. "Like I want some boring old god taking up space in MYY flesh prison!"
"Dear, that dance is a bit unseemly," the Queen said. "Stop at once."
"YOU stop, MOM." The Prince pointed at the Queen. "Is she? Is she suitable? She's been offering me up this whole time!"
The Queen shook her head. "That's not necessary, Dear."
"Very well. It is done," the God said, and his spirit flowed into the Queen's mouth. The Queen shook briefly, then closed her jaw audibly.
"Goodness. I expected more," the Queen said, dabbing her lips with a hanky. "Truly a boring God. Let's go home, son."
"Wait, what happened?!" The Order cried.
"Oh, we are also a family of God eaters," the Queen said. "I must have forgotten to mention that. Did I? It's how we keep getting all these contracts."
The prince pointed to the sacrificial dagger in his chest. "Hey, can I keep this?"
When the eldest of the royal children was kidnapped and brought to the ritual table to be the new vessel for the cult's god, they seem oddly fine with it. It was in the middle of the ritual that the eldest royal revealed…
Oh my god I am so obsessed with ‘A Man of His Word’ could you please continue it if you have time? Thank you sooo much i love your writing so much.
Happy to! Thanks for the kind words, hope you enjoy :)
Pt. 1
-
A Face with Two Hands (A Man of His Word pt. 2)
Cw: childhood parental loss, interrogation + previous warnings
“11:59,” the clock read.
It was digital, so no ticking could be heard from where it was reinforced into the wall. Civilian was just as silent where they stood in the center of the utterly empty room.
Around them, cold gray walls closed in, broken only by a thick metal door. It was painfully cliche as far as cells go, appropriate for a cold-hearted villain to stash away all their problems and inconveniences.
Like Civilian.
The quiet was peaceful, for a moment.
Silence, however, tends to beg to be broken, and Civilian’s mind was more than happy to oblige the whims of the stale air around them.
As easy as breath filled their lungs, the voices of their Mom and Dad flooded their head.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Midnight,” they had promised, with eyes full of love. “You should be asleep by then.”
But Civilian wasn’t.
Instead, they were camped out in the kitchen, nest of blankets keeping them separate from the hard laminate floor. They refused to give in to the sleep that pulled relentlessly at their eyelids, gaze stubbornly locked on the little green numbers that glowed above the oven and spelled out broken promises.
They clutched a small stuffed panda in their arms, waiting for the familiar sound of the garage door opening. Their eyes watered as they rested their head against the wooden table leg.
With each minute that ticked by, Civilian’s heart dropped a little lower.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Looking at the clock now, Civilian couldn’t help but feel the same sense of dread.
They shook off the memory, coming back into the present with a disorienting blink.
It was three hours till the next switch check in. As far as Civilian could tell, Villain wouldn’t be back until then.
Plenty of time to take inventory.
Physically, Civilian had little more than the clothes on their back.
The cuts Villain had inflected still laid open and untreated. Clearly, he didn’t plan on them living long enough for infection to become a problem.
They tried to tear strips out of their jacket in hopes of maybe tying some fabric around their wound but quickly deemed the weave too thick. Out of necessity, they moved onto the thinner cotton of their T-shirt, tearing off the hem with a degree of difficulty and gripping it with their teeth to tie as tightly as they could manage.
They really did miss having Friend’s extra hands and muscles around.
Mentally, they were about at the same level, except there was no shirt bandage that would stop the echoing in their mind.
Prisoner.
The word sat like cold iron wrapped around their heart, the weight like a death and betrayal all in one.
Civilian didn’t know how they could ever forget a feeling like that.
They were painfully aware that there was nothing but an awkwardly blurted secret and three days of planning keeping an old friend from spilling their blood across the unforgiving concrete of what they could only assume to be some kind of basement.
They took a deep breath and glanced at the clock again.
Well, two days now.
Unexpectedly, a sharp wave of anger crashed over them. Did their friendship truly mean nothing? They were so, incredibly, irrevocably stupid! Now they were probably going to die, stuck in this stupid place he brought them to (because of course he had a place-!)
The door opened with no warning, the loud clicking and snapping of the lock sending a sudden jolt through their heart and taking several more years off their life.
The man that entered seemed nothing but cold and distant.
He wasted no time stepping towards them, and in turn Civilian wasted no time falling flat on their ass trying to back away from him.
“What was your plan?” He questioned without preamble, freezing his movements and allowing Civilian a precious second to think.
Unfortunately, even with the immediate threat paused, they still lacked the clear-headedness to answer.
What was Villain talking about? He was the one with a plan to take down Hero. Civilian just needed to help work out one little kink-
“What?” They asked the stone-faced villain.
“After ten seconds.”
Oh, that plan.
“Hope for the best?” They squeaked.
Civilian’s attempt at a self-loathing chuckle ended in nothing but a weak cough.
Once upon a time, Friend would have laughed heartily with them, bent over, one hand holding his stomach. Villain did no such thing. Eyes that could never have belonged to Friend cut them a dangerous glare.
“Okay, then. We’ll start with the harder questions,” he spoke level, but Civilian knew a dangerous tone when they heard one. Slowly, they started crawling back, but it didn’t matter.
Villain descended and Civilian shrunk with the knowledge that his hands were not empty.
“How the fuck did you figure out who I am?”
As much as Civilian tried to ignore it, the way he spit the pronoun stung.
Civilian was not unfamiliar with pain, nor were they unfamiliar with those close to them inflicting it upon them. What they felt now, however, was a level far beyond anything they had felt before.
They supposed he, of all people, would be an expert in inflicting pain.
In a matter of seconds, Civilian was sure they didn’t have nearly enough shirt left to bandage everything. Their tongue loosened with the stinging. They had no question this was intended by the man holding the sharpened knife.
“Die,” they blurted as a result, in that oh-so elegant manner that Villain had a habit of bringing out in them.
“Excuse me?” Villain challenged, eyebrows raised and hand poised to continue cutting.
“My plan,” Civilian grit hard through their teeth, “was to die.” They clarified, rolling over to groan. “I made peace with it.”
Villain considered them for a moment, rising to his full height and staring down at them with a confusing mix of condescension and possibly pity. Or perhaps he was just smug. Civilian certainly didn’t trust their ability to read him anymore.
He tilted his head slowly, only adding to Civilian’s confusion as he smirked.
“Did you make peace with this?”
To that, Civilian said nothing.
His face evened out again, and Civilian recognized the masked anger, familiar as the taste of blood, as he reached down. Villain pulled them up by the collar, wrestling their arms roughly behind their back as he leaned over their shoulder.
“That was not your best plan,” he whispered, before pulling them out the door.
Part 1
The hero awoke. Still disoriented, they stared at their hands.
Claws.
Last they knew... They had transformed into some kind of beast and taken refuge in the villain's warehouse. The villain then tranquilized them.
The room appeared to be some kind of kennel. Concrete floor and walls, and sturdy iron bars with a locked door. Something soft beneath them-- a bed and blanket. They rolled to stand. Something clinked, and they felt a pull on their neck. A collar chained to the concrete wall.
A beast chained to a wall.
Ironically, they were in the one place where being a beast was safer than their real form. If they managed to escape, they weren't safe outside--
Deep breaths.
They just needed to call--... Well, text someone the situation. Surely someone would come save them.
They reached down and felt only fur.
Only fur.
They couldn't focus. They couldn't breathe.
Even their breathing sounded monstrous--
Their thoughts were interrupted by the creak and scrape of the kennel door opening and closing. They scurried under a blanket.
Villain.
"Good morning, darling," the villain cooed. They were dressed head to toe in protective clothing. "How did you sleep?"
The hero grit their teeth. They wanted to demand to be let out, to scream for help. They wanted to proclaim they were a human, not some beast--
All that came out was a horrible yowl.
"Shh sh-shhh... Don't worry, I'm here now." They brushed the hero's face with their fingertips. "Are you hungry?"
The beast snapped.
"I'll take that as a yes," the villain chuckled. They pulled out a walkie-talkie. "Bring him in."
A horrible scream echoed through the corridor.
"What's going on? Where are you taking me? I'll make you regret this!!"
Two henchmen stopped at the door holding a writhing prisoner. They wrenched a bag off his head. His indignant cries became a small whimper.
"Meet my beloved new pet." The villain threw a hand around the prisoner's shoulder. "They haven't been fed recently. Do you know how hard it is to find good, fresh meat? Do you have any pets?"
"W-what is that thing," the man stammered.
I'm human, the hero wanted to scream. I'm human, and I can help you. They pulled hard against their chains, even as the man trembled in fright.
"Gorgeous," the villain said proudly. "And very hungry."
"Fine! I'll give you the codes! Anything! J-just get me away from that thing!"
That thing.
The hero shrank back.
That thing.
They retreated to the back of the cage.
That thing.
Tears sprang from their eyes. They tried to wipe them away with furry hands.
The villain seemed to notice their struggle, and that made it all the worse.
"Take the prisoner to the drawing room," the villain said. "I'll follow in a moment."
Both the prisoner and henchmen, eager to leave, clamored out of the room.
The villain turned to the beast before them.
The hero curled into a ball, hiding their tear-streaked face.
"What's wrong, darling?"
A small, plaintive whine. The hero shook in a futile effort to contain their sorrow. They hated themselves for crying in front of the villain.
The villain laid a gentle hand on their back.
"Look at me," the villain said.
The hero turned to them with haunted eyes.
"I'm sorry, darling. I can tell that upset you deeply." The villain softly stroked their fur. "The way he yelled at you. I'll make him regret those words. I promise."
The hero shook their head vigorously.
"No?"
The villain pet them absentmindedly, deep in thought.
"Wait... You can understand me, can't you?"
The beast hesitated. Nodded.
The villain looked a bit taken aback. "Oh. I see. Oh my. I thought-- well, can you speak?"
A yowl. The hero shook their head. They pulled at the fur on their arm.
"This form is... New?"
Nod.
"You're trapped in this form." The villain gave them a look of intrigue. "Oh. Oh my. What caused this? Do you know?"
The hero shook their head.
The villain clapped their hands. "Oh, oh, very exciting, very exciting." They patted the hero's back, who snarled indignantly. "We'll get to the bottom of this, you and I. This is fascinating."
The hero had a very, very bad feeling about this.
Part 3
"That smell. What is that?"
"I'm not sure."
"I've smelled it before. It's so familiar."
"You're imagining things."
"No, no, it's this tea. You made me this tea before."
"...You should go."
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