Instructions for a walk in the woods

thanatosjr:

  • Never turn around to check behind you. You’ll see nothing, but once you start doing it you won’t be able to stop, and an ominous feeling will follow you until you don’t lock your house’s door behind you. 
  • If you stand very still and listen you will hear the woods calling for you. Don’t answer. Never answer. 
  • You’ll hear things quietly following you, hidden in the trees by your sides. It’s okay, they’re just checking on you. 
  • Don’t be scared, but be really, really wary.
  • If you have a bad feeling about taking a certain path, don’t. You’ll avoid whatever is waiting for you at the end of it. 
  • You never know what may be buried under the soil you’re walking on. Remember that every time you take a step. Pray that whatever it is, it won’t wake up. 
  • Be careful not to step on any beetle, or you’ll never get rid of them. 
  • If you bring a knife with you, name it. Otherwise the blade will turn against you as soon as you try to use it. 
  • Make sure you remember the way back home. As soon as you get lost, you’re just another piece of fresh meat.

danekez:

Okay so like. Story time. When playing overwatch I try to abide simple rules of courtesy during quickplay. If someone else grabs a character first, I choose something else and give THEM a shot. They called dibs.

I also expect everyone else to follow this etiquette. Most do! However, sometimes somebody won’t. Sometimes my prestiged ass will choose Hanzo- a character I have 43 hours of gameplay on, and some dinky little level 53 will wait a solid ten seconds and then- with the full knowledge that I chose Hanzo first- will choose Hanzo. I check their gameplay stats. 13 hours.

Fuck that. Fuck you. I have dibs, seniority, and more experienced gameplay with that particular character. I don’t need to change by the simple rules of this etiquette. So I stay Hanzo and glare at the other Hanzo on my team knowing full well that two Hanzos will likely cause us to fucking lose. I decide I will not be the dead meat. They will change. He will realize he’s doing nothing and change and allow me to flourish like the radnasty Hanzo I am.

Only. They don’t change. Only. We are both front lining Hanzos and we both refuse to die. We both are bent on a defiant fiery rage and determined to show that one of us is the superior Hanzo. We both get our Ults up within a minute of gameplay. Both of us get triple kills every time we use our Ults. Both of us are on fire for the entire game and decimate the enemy team out of a petty fight for inter-Team Hanzo dominance. Our stats argue back and forth for gold medal eliminations and damage done. The other team can’t get through the choke point- god help them if they did. The rest of our team stands back in awe- designating themselves as simple support for the stragglers who get past us.

We dominate and become an unstoppable DPS Hanzo wall of wrath and dragonfire. At the end of the match I sit back and upvote the other Hanzo as a sign of solidarity. I’m fairly certain he upvoted me. Thank you, mystery Hanzo, for supporting me with proving hat Hanzo is not useless. We were rivals, now we are brothers. Thank you.

Sing Me To Glaumora

Okay, this scene from the giant crossover fic I’m writing in my head wouldn’t leave me, so I decided to write it. Warning for character death.


The instant she heard the crack! resonating through the air and felt the shift in the wind currents, Tiera knew what had happened. Spinning around in midair, she was able to spot Jann falling from the sky, his dagger falling from his hand. Her sharp eyes seemed to zoom in further, seeing the spot of blood on the wall behind him that the must have been smashed against.

Everything seemed to stop around her, as she hovered there for just a moment. The sound of fighting and screaming faded into the background.

And then she lunged forward, a desperate screech tearing from her mouth.

“Jann!”

She didn’t even notice that she was dodging bolts of lightning and fire, or the bolt of glitched aura that clipped her side, leaving her flesh stinging and her tattered shirt flashing a myriad of colors.

All that mattered was Jann.


Tiera looked up from the Rattata she was tearing her talons into. They seemed drawn to this human dwelling, and the strange round construction that apparently contained nothing but rot and decay. Perhaps they had been too enthusiastic in this hunt, to get the attention of this dark-skinned human who they were now staring at.

The human stared back at her-a girl dressed in rags too big for her, with a pair of Hoothoot perched on her shoulder and a Quilava at her feet. There was blood on their mouths, and blood on their talons, and flesh in their jaws.

The next instant, she had fled and was gone.

The next time they met, he asked her quietly if she could understand him. She tilted her head. It wasn’t like with her siblings, where they could touch each others’ hearts without worry and understand each other almost wordlessly. But some part of her thought she knew what he was telling her.

“So, you can stay here. In return, you and your Pokemon will take care of my rat problem for me, as well as any other pests that come around here.”

She had heard tales of Pokemon and humans and the contracts they made. Perhaps this was one of them as well. She hovered forward, examining his face for signs of deception.

“Okay, I was not expecting floating…well, that’s okay. Come in. I’m Jann, what’s your name?”

It would be a long time before she could answer him with “Tiera,” the closest she could come to her name. She didn’t even try with her siblings, and so they ended up being referred to by just their relationship to her-Twin, Little Brother, and Little Sister.

But that was fine.

What started as a simple contract slowly started to change. She thought that, if she were to love a human as one of her flock, Jann would be it. If she were to call a human her father, Jann would be it.

When the dragons fought over their town and they had to flee, she took Jann’s hand and did not let go. If anyone wanted to hurt him, they would have to get through her.

When the strange portal opened up and they were sucked in, she held tight to Jann. She would not abandon her flock.

And even now that she was courting another avian in human form, one of the cloudwings, her flock came first. She would not fight in this war for a world that was not hers, a time that was not hers. Her flock would not fight. They would be safe.

And yet…in the end, she stepped out into the battlefield. It was not just because the one she was courting, the one she hoped to make her mate, was there. It was not just because of Little Sister’s insistence, the most empathic of them all. It was not just because she saw the fire-hearted human flock and was reminded of her own.

It was all those.

And Jann, despite all his protests, had come with her.

And he was falling.


Tiera felt as if she had crossed the battlefield in a flash, despite the distance between them. Already she was diving, her hand extended to grab Jann’s, to slow his fall. He was already unconscious, but he was still breathing! She just had to stop his descent-!

There was another crack! as Jann’s head struck the ground, her fingers just barely brushing his arm. She landed, hard, her knees scraping against the ground as she grabbed his wrist, feeling for a pulse like he had taught her so long ago.

There was nothing.

She spun her head around. The human called Nira-didn’t she have the power to bring back the dead? But in the chaos, she couldn’t see any of the versions of that woman who had arrived in this world. She called out, but there was no answer.

(Nira heard the call, she did-but her son had just taken a blow to the heart, her son, her Pompeii, he shouldn’t have been here-and she was standing over him, the earth flowing into his chest, remaking the ruined flesh and sending his blood pumping again.

(It was a blow that would have felled Anza, and Nira could not have that-could not have him die again, not after he sacrificed himself for them, and besides when she took the blow for him she could send a stone-coated fist flying into that bug bastard’s face-

(She had to maintain this shield, she wouldn’t let the hellfire hurt her precious creatures, she couldn’t do that and revive someone, she was so sorry-

(She heard, she heard, but she wasn’t one of the Niras with power to spare, with power from the god of the mountain. Her power was in the lightness of her step and the tip of her rapier, and it was all she had as she danced and parried between bladed arms and carapaced legs.

(It was Vern, this one, Vern and his mount both taken down in one blow, and Dust Storm was still conscious but Vern’s eyes were wide and staring and no, she would not let Death take her love now, not after all they had gone through, he would not die here-

(It was all she could do to hold on to her love’s neck as they flew through the air, her blade slashing at whatever was foolish enough to challenge them. Besides, she had used her last revival already, years before this, because Mako was fragile and he was mortal but now he was here, still here, for just a bit longer.)

Tiera tilted her head back and sobbed, sobbed “father” and “parent” and “mentor” in all the languages she knew, the languages she had picked up, the tongue she was born speaking. She had never called him any of those, had thought that the Noctowl who raised her was the only one she could call that, but she was a fool, should have seen sooner. This was not a word she should have hoarded, she should have learned from the people she met here.

Slowly, still not paying attention to the battle around her, she began to move Jann’s body, until his arms were spread at his sides, his face facing where she figured the moon would be, once all this was over (the sky had been overcast ever since these creatures appeared). She brushed one hand over his eyes, opening the one that had been closed in the fall.

And then she began to sing, in the tongue of the Hoothoot.

She sang of the world beyond, of the ones who would come to guide him there. She sang of the things he had taught her, how to call customers and the art of stocking shelves, how to keep accounts. She sang of the things they had survived together, how they had protected each other. She sang to the guides, calling to them to come despite them being worlds away from each other, to follow her song and guide Jann home.

And when it was over, she closed her eyes for a moment, singing a soft addendum: that they might guide her home.

When her eyes opened again, they were cold and vicious. She had loved only Jann, out of all mankind. She should have nothing tying her to protecting any of the other humans in this fight now.

But Jann was dead, and she would see vengeance wrought upon those who had killed him. And perhaps the best vengeance would be denying them the deaths they wished to cause.

She spread behind her wings of glowing air currents and took to the sky.

undoherdamage:

immortals falling for mortals

immortals getting clingy and needy because you have so little time we need to make the most of it

and their lovers being like chill i’ve still got like fifty years and we’ve already spent decades together we’ve been like all around the world by now but rly all I need is you

and just, no, you don’t understand that’s not nearly enough for all the things I want to show you please why are you slowing down I know but you’re tired a lot lately wait no

don’t

go