#I'm also like still trying to work out Bramble's personality and like she's meant to be from old Europe
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warning-heckboop · 3 months ago
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Catch me listening to Seeds of the Past and thinking about Dale Dimmadome
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baby-beelzeburger · 3 years ago
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Forest god Deku with a winter god s/o who brings the snow every year!?!? An unlikely romance?!?! ❄️🌱
❧ A/N: I got a lot more carried away with this idea then I meant to. I didn’t mean to write a whole fic, just write down my extra thoughts but... here we are. Might not have been what you were looking for, anon, but I just loved the idea so much that I couldn’t help it. So here’s basically an entire fic based on this. Also, I know you said s/o but they’re not together here yet.
❧ Word count: 2,009
❧ Taglist: @touyas-peach // @gentlecourt // @snowymaltese // @honey-desires // @johnnysactualgf​
If you would like to be added or removed from the tag list, dm me or shoot me an ask to let me know. I hope you enjoy the fic, and have a lovely day!♡
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Deku shivered as he sat on a stump, staring as his eyes focused on nothing.
Winter. What a dreadful time of the year. All of his trees lost their leaves, the flowers all died, and the adorable animals went into hibernation. Not only that but Deku himself seemed to wilt in the winter. His always fluffy curls lost their volume and all of their vivacious green color. His eyes became a dull greyish-green and his skin paled. He was always more drained, and his nature powers no longer worked, at least not as well, leaving him almost entirely powerless for an entire season.
Deku thought of his poor friend Tsuyu, who also often suffered during times like these. Usually, she went to sleep for the duration of winter, as she always got rather sleepy when the air froze. She never complained about it though, claiming it was a way to pass the time and it was better then choosing to freeze like Deku did. So she settled at the bottom of her favorite pond to sleep with her beloved frogs until spring came around.
Huh. Maybe I should try that...
Just as Deku was considering settling into a bramble to sleep for the remainder of the season, a whoosh sound came from his right. The wind started to pick up, as well as the snow, only making Deku groan and curl further in on himself. Yet still, he watched reluctantly towards where the sound was coming from, curious to see what it was.
Out of nowhere, Ochako, Goddess of the Wind, and someone he'd never seen before, came flying past. A flurry of ice and wind followed behind them. Snow flew at Deku as the ice tornado that followed their flight spit it out all over the dead forest. He cried out as the force of the wind blew him backwards off of his stump.
"You were right, Ocha! That was fun!" An unfamiliar voice, belonging to the unfamiliar person, spoke. Deku pulled his head out of the snow he had landed in and sat up, shaking his head wildly to cast the snowflakes out of his hair.
He heard crunching in the snow and opened his eyes to meet face to face with you. You were enchanting, eyes quite literally glowing a beautiful glacier blue. Your hair sparkled in the light with the snowflakes that nestled atop the stark white strands. Your smile was sweet as your head tilted to the side and you regarded him with curiosity. He noticed that the tips of your fingers and nose were turning blue from frostbite. You didn't seem to mind though.
However, your attractiveness soon became an afterthought when he realized you were half of the reason that he was now waist-deep in the snow. His mood soured further.
"Hey Ocha, who's this?" You asked, hands on your hips as you leaned over the stump to get a better look at him. Deku pouted, leaning away from you in defiance.
"Deku!" Ochako's cheery voice cried, running over to meet him. The sight of her happy face made him feel a little better, and he didn't want to be mean to a friend, so he forced on a smile.
"Hey Ochako."
"Deku? Like, God of the Forests? Oh wow, you guys know each other!?"
"Yeah! This is the friend I was telling you about! He lives in these woods."
"Oh, pardon me, I didn't know!" You bowed at the hip, one arm tucking underneath you while the other went outwards, "It's a pleasure to meet you Deku. I'm Y/n."
You straightened back upright and Deku let out a breath of relief, thankful to have his personal space back.
"Sorry for dropping in so suddenly. Didn't mean to knock you off your stump or anything."
"Yeah. 'S fine," Deku groused, looking away from you two. He crossed his arms over his chest, at least feeling a little bad that he was acting like this in front of someone new. In any other situation, he'd be more then happy to meet a stranger. He hoped you'd forgive him for this.
Ochako, on the other hand, was used to this behavior, and merely giggled at him.
"Don't mind him. He gets a little cranky when winter hits."
"Not a fan of the cold, are you?" Deku shook his head no, "That's okay, I don't really like the heat much. I get the same way when summer comes around! We're kinda like polar opposites."
Deku glanced up at you, eyebrow raising.
Wait a second... white hair, blue eyes, frostbite, aversion to heat, and snow that followed you where you went? Were you...?
Seeing the realization in his eyes, Ochako smiled and gestured towards you.
"Deku, this is Y/n, God of Winter."
"Yep! That's me!"
So you were what was causing this accursed weather. He felt stupid for not realizing it immediately.
Deku narrowed his eyes at you, now feeling a sense of reluctance to interact with you. It was in his nature to dislike someone like you, right?
You didn't seem to think so. You never wavered, even as he gave you that cold look. Clearly, the coldness didn't bother you.
"Since I feel responsible for creating this bad mood of yours, can I do something to make it up to you?"
"Whatever."
You sat down in front of him on his stump- irritation bubbled up inside Deku as you did. That's his stump! - and reached out to grab his jaw. A jolt of pure chill rushed over his skin as you made contact, and you quickly pulled back.
"Sorry, I should've warned you! I'm very cold, but it'll last just a second, okay?"
Deku nodded. While he still wasn't sure about you, his curiosity was much stronger, so he stayed still and let you do what you were going to do. Maybe something to do with your powers? If so, Deku was always willing to learn more about the other Gods and their powers. Even ones he had an aversion to.
Once again you grabbed his face. He was able to contain the shutter that went through him much better, since he was ready for it this time. Slowly you leaned in, your purplish-blue lips puckering a little as they aimed for his forehead. He tensed as he realized what you were doing, but before he could protest, your lips met his skin.
A shutter ripped through him as it felt like his entire body was drenched in ice water. And then, there was nothing. The air felt numb. You stroked his cheek but he didn't really feel it.
Panic rose inside him. His eyes met yours. You must've been able to see his anxiety because you smiled warmly. Reassuringly.
"Just give it a few seconds."
You spent those seconds tracing his freckles with your thumb, your eyes continuing to watch him for any furthering signs of panic.
Suddenly, a feeling of faux warmth bloomed inside him, starting over his heart and spreading across his skin. Feeling returned to him slowly. He noticed the touch of your hand against his face. Though he could tell that it was still cold, whatever power you used on him was fighting the feeling off so that it wasn’t as severe.
When feeling returned to his arms, he realized that you were holding his hand. When did that happen? He looked down at it, then back at you. You took it as a sign to let go, so you did, but Deku wasn't entirely sure that's what he wanted.
Now that the cold was seeping out of him and his mood was starting to brighten, he realized you weren't so bad after all.
"There. How does that feel?"
"B-better," He stuttered out. He wished that he could blame the cold on it, but of course that was no longer the case.
"Look, color is already coming back to him!" Ochako said excitedly. Deku glanced up at the curls hanging over his forehead to see the color of green coming back to life within the strands.
Did you just coax his body into believing winter was over?
"Color's coming back to his face too," You said, a teasing grin on your lips. Deku's hands flew up to feel his cheeks, which were burning hotter then the rest of him. He turned away from you so you couldn't see him, but the damage was already done.
"Thank you," He said, trying to change the subject so that you wouldn't pick on him any further.
"Of course! I'm happy to help. Only problem is that it only lasts a day, so I guess I'll have to come back every day to redo the magic. If you want me to, that is."
"Please!" Deku squeaked out, feeling embarrassed that he was so eager. Though, who wouldn't be? Anyone in his position would probably feel the same if an opportunity to say warm and happy during the winter presented itself on a silver platter like this.
"Then I'll be back tomorrow!" You looked over at Ochako, "We should go though, Ocha. Weren't we on our way to meet Tenya?"
"That's right, I almost forgot! We were just stopping by for a quick detour. I'm glad we did, but Tenya will never stop lecturing us if we're late. You know how he is."
Deku nodded because, indeed, he knew exactly what she meant. The God of Order was very serious about rules and deadlines, which he believed should always be followed. Even a minute too late would warrant a stern lecture from him. Heck, even a few minutes before the deadline and he might still do the same.
Deku could hear his voice now:
"What took you so long, you two? You were nearly late for our meeting! You must manage your time more wisely! Blah blah blah-"
Deku didn't envy their situation, that was for sure.
In a rush, Ochako gathered you up in her arms, a whirlwind of air surrounding the both of you.
"Bye, Deku!" Ochako called, waving to him. You smiled, waggling your frostbitten fingers at him.
"Buh-bye, Deku. See you tomorrow."
You winked at him, and with a blast of wind and snow, the two of you were gone.
Deku watched the area around him rustle with the force of the wind until it slowed down. Ochako's power still lingered, however, so the wind around him didn't settle down completely.
As he sat on the ground, feeling much lighter then he had before your arrival, he felt something brush against his ankles. He looked down to find the snow melted all around him, and a small bush steadily sprouting between his feet. He watched as it grew and grew, until red buds sprouted, unfurled and turned into roses right before his eyes.
"Weird," He muttered, "Why roses? And red ones, too?"
Thanks to his powers, sometimes flowers would often sprout around him when his emotions were high. But why these, of all the flowers? Why not something like verbena, or geranium? Something that symbolized the happiness he felt made more sense then something that symbolized... love.
Deku gulped, casting his eyes away from the bush.
It's just a coincidence, he thought, No deeper meaning, surely.
He glanced back up, smelling a rose that shook in the breeze.
I guess I better stay here, so this guy doesn't die.
As Deku laid down underneath the bush, he remembered his earlier silly idea to hibernate. He cuddled up under the leaves, thinking It wasn't such a bad Idea in part. He may feel better, but that didn't mean that he wasn't still a little sleepy.
One little nap wouldn't hurt. Hopefully it would pass the time properly, like Tsuyu had said. Though he no longer wished to pass by winter so quickly, he did want to pass the day until he could meet with you again. This time, he’d be in a better mood, and maybe you’d decide to stay and chat and he could get to know you better.
And, well, feeling your lips against his skin would be a bonus. 
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im-the-king-of-the-ocean · 4 years ago
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5 for Nuts and Dolts, because the hug in the trailer is still on continuous loop in my head and the only thing better than an angsty hug is an angsty hug AND KISS 8 for Data Farm, because I'm weak for the idea of Oscar being unexpectedly prince-like and making Penny feel like a princess (or the other way around) I can't remember the number, but the interrupted kiss for rosegarden No pressure to do all of these, I just couldn't decide on one ship because I love all of them
(as a brief refresher: Data Farms Fic Link, Rosegarden Fic Link)
...and here’s to finally being able to answer this ask and revealing the ridiculous (sort of) secret plan I’ve carried out over a month (or two maybe idk) and what’s now a six-chapter fic!
(no, I’m not joking, this (Rose Puppetry) was literally A Thing bc I’m Like That)
So, to explain, way back when I was doing requests for this kissing meme, it was around the same time that you introduced me to the Mechanisms music, and then the Magnus Archives after that.
Subsequently, I thought it would be really cool to make one of these three requests Steampunk-themed.  I decided on the Nuts and Dolts one bc, when I first listened to Once Upon A Time (In Space), I associated Ruby and Penny heavily with Rose and Cinders (I think it was bc the album was brought up in reference to Souls or something like that?  Also Rose Puppetry was my alternative solution to just derailing Souls completely into Being A Steampunk Fic).
Anyways, I started out with the intent to do a short oneshot where Penny breaks into a facility to save Ruby, which would be reminiscent of the final attack on Old King Cole that led to Cinders being reunited with Rose.
Except then I got carried away by world-building (bc it was so freaking fun) and Rose Puppetry became an entire multi-chapter fic all of its own.
For the record, I think I originally @ you when I posted the first chapter bc I was going to say that the fic was a response to this prompt and then quite literally forgot to actually say that anywhere.  I then realized that, if I kept quiet about it, I could turn it into a surprise, which seemed like a fun thing to do, so I went for it.
Anyways, I hope you enjoy the end of Rose Puppetry!
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5. Throwing their arms around the other person’s neck, hugging them close before kissing them passionately on the lips.
...
Rose Puppetry Ch6: The Tale of Little Briar and the Huntress in the Cottage
Summary:
A century ago or so, Atlas set out to conquer the world.  Penny was built to be a spy, an infiltrator meant to find weaknesses in Vale’s defenses before the invasion.
She did.  Then she fell in love.  And rebelled against the kingdom that had created her.
Ch1.  Ch2.  Ch3.  Ch4.  Ch5.
Every child in Patch knows of the Huntress who lives in the cottage on the outskirts of town.  Their great protector, who keeps the dangers of the woods at bay so they can go about their lives safely.  No one knows, not really, where she came from.  The youngest kids among them generally want to ask, but their parents usually shush them before they can try.  It’s considered improper, prying into what should be left well enough alone.
Briar knows more about the Huntress than any of her peers, but you’d never catch her boasting about it in the school yard.  No sir.  She can keep a secret extremely well, she can.  Well that, and she doesn’t want the Huntress to be upset with her and ask her father to not allow her to make the weekly deliveries anymore.  Briar loves visiting the Huntress’s cottage, with its duck pond and its thick bramble of roses.  But, most importantly, she loves being let inside and allowed to watch the Huntress work for just a little while.
For, in addition to being their protector against the scary monsters that lurk in the woods, the Huntress is Patch’s one and only mechanic.  There used to be more, of course, but that was back before Briar was born and they all got called off to fight in the Great War against Atlas.
Briar once asked if the Huntress fought in the Great War, too.  She remembers how the Huntress fell silent, the gloomy expression that had seamlessly eclipsed the Huntress’s entire being, and quietly swore never to ask again.  It’s not important for her to know, Briar decided.  Not like learning how gears, cogs, and screws all fit into machinery and make things like the big clock in the tower in the center of town work.
It’s a sunny day.  A few wisps of clouds linger in the sky, but not many.  Briar skips home from school, humming a happy tune of her own creation as she goes.  She briefly pauses to scratch the noses of the cows who’ve wandered to the fence of their pasture bordering the road.  The cows moo at her and sniff Briar’s fingertips for treats.
“Sorry, I don’t have anything for you today.”  Briar giggles as their chin whiskers tickle her.  “If I have time after I visit Ms. Rose, I’ll try and bring you all back something, but I make no promises.”
She continues on her way, only stopping in the Mech Field to pick a collection of bright, cheerful wildflowers.  Briar pauses to consider the ruins of the old war machines, but Ms. Rose once warned her very sternly not to get too close to the fallen mechs without her supervision, so Briar doesn’t.  Instead, she takes a spare hair ribbon out of her school bag, ties it snugly around the stems of her wildflowers to keep them properly bunched together, and heads home.
Her mother has the weekly grocery basket for Ms. Rose waiting when Briar arrives.  She helps Briar securely fasten it to the deliveries bicycle and situate the flower bouquet on top so the bumpy ride won’t jostle them too much.
“Keep an eye on the time,” Briar’s mother gives her the usual warning.  “And, if it starts growing dark, have Ms. Rose walk you home.”
Briar rolls her eyes.  She’s big enough to come home all on her own, even after sunset, she thinks.  Still, she promises, “I will!” before taking off on the bicycle.
Smoke lazily drifts into the sky from Ms. Rose’s cottage’s chimney as Briar makes her approach.  The huntress’s dog, a great, big creature with a lumbering gait and a lolling tongue, appropriately named ‘Wolf’, runs to greet Briar as she approaches.  She slows her bicycle to a stop and dismounts.
“Hey, Wolfie.”  Briar scratches behind the dog’s ears, and gets licked enthusiastically for it.  She laughs.  Wolf dances excited circles around Briar as she walks over and leans her bicycle against the cottage.  “Stop that!”  Briar commands Wolf, only half serious.  “I have to get the groceries inside!”  She nudges the door open and walks into the cottage.
“Ms. Rose?  Are you here?”  Briar calls out.
“In the workshop, Briar!”  Ms. Rose yells back from somewhere deep inside.  Briar grins.  With some care, she shoves the groceries in the refrigerator.  Ms. Rose will organize them however she pleases later, after a few more hours of work, at least.
Briar goes to hurry through the kitchen, but remembers herself, and pauses at the sink to fill a pitcher with water for her wildflower bouquet.  She carefully lowers the flowers in and unties her hair ribbon from around their stems.  Then, after tidying the bouquet a little, Briar walks further into the cottage.  She doesn’t go immediately to the workshop, but to a room Ms. Rose only recently granted her permission to enter.
Briar pauses and takes a breath in the doorway of the bedroom.  It’s always a bit weird to do this.  She’s never actually met Ms. Penny.  Not back before, when she was awake.  Ms. Penny doesn’t know who she is.  Never had the chance to, really.
Regardless, flowers always make Briar feel better when she isn’t feeling well.  With Wolf padding loyally at her side, Briar approaches the bed where Ms. Penny serenely sleeps and situates the bouquet on the table beside it.
“Good day, Ms. Penny,” Briar speaks politely, for she’s never spoken to a mechanical person, or one who’s never woken up, before Penny.  Briar still feels kind of odd about that, but, since she first stumbled across Penny’s room, she’s been determined to try and make her feel better (if that’s at all possible).
“Spring’s here.  The first of Mr. Oobleck’s lambs were born the other day.”  Briar starts her usual, short, babbling update about life in Patch.  “They’re extremely cute.  I’ll draw you a picture, so, when you wake up, you won’t have missed seeing them.”
“She’d like that, I think.”
Briar jumps, and spins around.  Ms. Rose stands in the doorway, leaning against its frame.  She smiles softly at Briar, and joins her by Penny’s bedside.  “Penny never…I think she always lived in cities before we met.”  Ms. Rose takes a deep breath.  “I’m not sure she’s ever gotten the chance to see a newborn lamb.”
“Then this will be her first time,” Briar says confidently.
“Yes.”  Ms. Rose smiles sadly down at Briar.  “Run along to the workshop now.  I left today’s assignment out on the table for you.  Try to see if you can get started on your own.  I’ll be along in a moment.”
Briar does as she’s told, but not before stopping just outside the bedroom and sneakily poking her head back in to watch Ms. Rose gently smooth Penny’s long, soft copper curls and place a kiss on her forehead.
“Don’t wait too much longer to wake up, my love, alright?”  Ms. Rose whispers.
Briar slips away, feeling a little guilty about spying on such a private moment.  She doesn’t know why Ms. Penny sleeps, what caused her to fall into her lasting slumber in the first place, but Briar does know that Ms. Rose came to Patch to have a quiet, safe place to repair her.
The assignment Ms. Rose set out for Briar that day is a small music box.  One that had, in all likeliness, played a lovely melody at some point, but has long since worn out.  Repairing it shouldn’t be the hardest of tasks.  Not now that Briar is a handful of months out of transitioning from ‘kid who gets to watch the Huntress work’ to ‘unofficial mechanic’s apprentice’.
Ever so carefully, Briar removes a tiny, rusty gear from the music box with her tweezers and sets it aside.  She looks to Ms. Rose, who smiles reassuringly back at her.  Briar finds the replacement gear, plucks it up with the tweezers, and goes to insert it right where it needs to—
“Hello?!  Huntress are you here?”  A voice shouts into the cottage.  Wolf scrambles up from lying under where Briar’s feet dangle off her stool and barks loudly.  Briar jumps.  Her tweezers fall out of her hand.  The replacement gear goes flying.
“Just a moment!”  Ms. Rose calls back.  She helps Briar retrieve the gear from where it’s fallen to the floor.  “Think you can work on your own for a bit?”  Ms. Rose asks.  When Briar nods, the huntress wipes grease and oil smudges off her fingertips onto her leather apron and goes to see who has come asking after her aid.
Briar half listens to the ensuing conversation about a broken down car on the road as it drifts through the cottage to her.  Ms. Rose briefly returns to the workshop for her portable tool kit, and then leaves to go repair the automobile in question.  She promises she’ll check Briar’s handiwork upon her return.  Wolf ambles back over to Briar.  The dog circles a couple times to settle, and then returns to napping.
For the next couple of hours while Briar works, things are quiet and peaceful.  She finishes repairing the music box.  With bated breath, Briar winds it up and sets it down on the worktable.  A soft tune fills the air.  Briar can’t help but smile.
Too excited to wait until Ms. Rose gets back to show off her success, Briar carefully scoops the music box up in her hands and carries it to Penny’s room.  She puts it down by the wildflowers she brought earlier, and lets it play its song a second time.
So caught up on listening to the music box’s melody is Briar, she doesn’t catch when it’s joined by the sounds of other mechanisms whirling and clicking.  Ones that have long remained at rest, but, at the sound of a comforting song, rouse again.
Movement catches Briar’s attention.  Before she realizes what’s happened, a pair of bright, dazzling green eyes meet her own.  They almost seem to glow, as if they’re lightbulbs that have spent a long, long time charging up and want to celebrate the chance to finally illuminate.
“H-hello?”  The voice is hoarse, creaky with disuse.  It’s nothing like Briar imagined it would be.  “Briar?”
Briar blinks rapidly.  “You know me?” slips from her lips before she can stop the question.
“Of course.”  Tentatively, Penny moves to push herself up in a sitting position.  One of her hands slips before she can put weight down on it.  Briar rushes forward to help support her.  “Thank you.”  Penny smiles gratefully at Briar.  “To answer your question, I heard you.  The days you came and talked to me and brought me flowers.”  She pauses.  “I’d very much like to see Mr. Oobleck’s lambs.”
“Oh.”  Briar takes a minute to process this.  “I didn’t think��” she’s not sure what to say.  She’s imagined this moment hundreds of times, but, now that it’s happening, Briar’s mind is frustratingly blank.
“It’s alright.”  Penny gives her a small, soft smile.  “It’s not everyday someone you’ve only known as a ‘sleeping lady’ wakes up.”
“I-err-yeah…” Briar pauses.  “If you don’t mind me asking, how could you hear me all those times?  Since you were asleep?”
Penny inhales deeply and exhales, the clockwork of her body moving with the motion.  “It’s a bit complicated.  A short explanation would be that, even without enough power to function normally, I could still record audio.” Penny shoots a knowing smirk in Briar’s direction.  “I would love to give you the fully detailed explanation.  Later.  If you don’t mind, there’s someone who’s long overdue for a hug, I think.”
Briar’s eyes widen.  “Oh!  Ms. Rose!  Of course!”  She scrambles up to fetch Penny a walking stick to lean upon as she gets up.  “She went out to repair someone’s car.  I think it’s just down the road!”  Briar hovers, ready to support Penny if she needs help with walking.  When Penny makes it to the doorway on her own, Briar relaxes a little.
Together, with Wolf keeping pace with them (and Briar would swear the dog is keeping as much a careful eye on Penny as she herself is), they make their way outside.
Penny pauses, and looks up at the blue, blue sky.  She blinks.  If she were capable of crying, she probably would have.  “I never dreamed I’d see it again.”  Penny whispers.  She turns to look ahead, down the road she and Briar intend to walk, and sees someone coming toward them on it.  Penny gasps.
There is one sight that Penny dreamed of, longed for, during her oh so very long slumber.  One sight, her vague, ethereal thoughts could never quite capture, but tried to constantly.  The person she sees on the road doesn’t quite fit the picture Penny remembers.  The person is no longer a youthful maiden, but a full grown woman.  Her black-red hair is longer, kept in an untidy braid over one shoulder.  She’s wearing the garb of a mechanic, and not combat dress.  Branching scars, leftover from a (Grimm) time Penny would very much like to leave in the past, dance across her skin.
“Ruby.”
Penny breathes the name out at the same time Ruby sees her, stops, and stares.
A moment passes where no one moves, where the world is held frozen in shock.  Anxiety ripples over Ruby’s face.  Worry that needs no verbal words to describe it.  That Penny won’t love this older version of her.  That this person she had to grow into while she patiently waited for Penny to wake up isn’t someone Penny will be able to bring herself to love.
Penny takes a step forward, and then another.  Her walking stick is cast aside as she recalls how to push her legs into motion as fast as she can.  She runs, reaching Ruby in the blink of an eye.  Eager to vanquish all the anxieties she sees in her beloved, Penny takes Ruby up in her arms and spins her around and around.  She laughs, causing Ruby to laugh with relief too.
They’re together.  Nothing, no war or conflict or spiders who want to control them, can get in the way of that any longer.  They may have once been puppets in a grand scheme, but they’re free now.  Free to do whatever they wish, as long as they wish.
Penny stops spinning Ruby around.  She holds her close, drinking in the sight of Ruby’s sparkling, silver eyes.  Without thinking about it, they press their foreheads together and simply gaze at each other.
Later, they’ll let Briar commit a condensed version of their story down on paper.  A fairytale, it will be.  One only a handful will actually believe there’s truth to, but that’s just as well to them.  Right now, this moment?  This moment is just for them.
Ruby wraps her arms around Penny.  Penny leans in.  Their lips find each other.  Tentative, unsure, aware they have a lot to adjust to again with each other (but eager to get started).  The kiss is soft and sweet.  A promise of many, many more to come.
They don’t live happily ever after.  For Penny and Ruby’s story doesn’t end here.  It goes on, with many days full of love, and equally as many filled with struggle as they learn each other’s embrace again.  There are moments when the scars of the past threaten to consume them, and moments filled with nothing but laughter and joy.
Overall, though?
Penny and Ruby live together for a very, very long time, and that time together is largely marked by their shared happiness.
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mantrabay · 4 years ago
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A Little Known Shortcut.
Wandering the roads. It has me under a spell.
Even when prickly brambles
scrape my eyelids or those bony ankles are being twisted by tooth like stones. The angular sort clustered mischievously among the green shoots that litter every footpath.
They lie in wait, in ambush.
It goes with the territory for this seasoned footman.
Meandering landscapes are house and home to the spiral lanes and clover clad hills that are rife in my area.
Their rustic heritage sometimes sacrificed to the orphanage of malleable motives.
Crop farmers obsessed with bountiful harvest.
A restless developer pushing the limits of an urban jungle.
Fellow traveller in league with fugitives from the cockpit.
The pressure cooker of modern life.
The town dweller with split loyalties who clings to the tumult of the city but hankers after some rural idyll.
Culprits one and all.
A lair from the hubbub.
Dwellings of the quaintest kind huddle together like dots in a matrix separated only by a minuscule space.
The more alluring aspects of tradition have been preserved.
Among these are shortcuts or bypasses.
Those sequestered passages that shave miles off for the perennial rambler or clueless hitchhiker.
The eye becomes a lense to all these
things hidden or supposedly hidden.
Human vision as sensor to magic trails.
Those tucked away secret spots beloved of local wiseacres.
They festoon the sprawling countryside at random.
My name is Eric Spring.
Anthea, my partner a transcendental meditation teacher retired early at an early age.
Her withdrawal from work was never meant to be permanent.
A final decision hinged on Anthea's ability to purge that fiendish veil of sadness that had been shadowing her.
There were several obstacles in her path but they weren’t insurmountable.
Thoughts of Anthea in her halcyon days haunted me.
Mental pictures of a vibrant woman imbued with passion.
Poignant evocative heart-tugging images.
Bar excursions into town my station is that of Anthea’s carer.
This eternally stoic woman is mindful of her mental boundaries and the abyss concealed by each of them.
But she is not prone to self-hate or abuse. The more lethal plagues of the psyche hadn't yet impacted on her.
Anthea was groping for exits but hadn’t found the signs.
She remains housebound as I embark on those age defying treks into town.
We keep in touch by mobile phone.
A very angelic sensitive looking person is she.
Reminiscent of a Sunday Times editor.
The accent filters every noun and stresses every nuance.
Like the sounds from an early morning orchard.
Anthea's job became monotonous and her other pursuits painting and writing fled without trace.
A budding artist’s most dreaded syndromes struck.
Writer's block. Artistic vacuum.
The wellspring of her imagination now devoid of those inspiring flashes that sustain creative impulse.
She had few outlets bar my care and a lady called Fidelma who had the edge on me with regard to local knowledge. I longed to hear Anthea's voice on my device.
Her hypnotic voice bridges gaps.
You feel close even when speaking to her from a distance.
I love the walks and savouring all those pivot points of folklore.
I pride myself on my intimate knowledge of every branch strewn rivulet, stream and layered rock formation.
My links to the environment are almost erotic as I crave it's sensual touch.
At times I enter a tranquil zone where the shutters are drawn.
Just myself and all those habitats.
“Hello Eric? Lost in thought again.
How is anthea these days?
I spoke to her over the phone a few days ago.
I sometimes drop in on her when you are out.”
Fidelma speaking with that chirping red robin voice of hers.
She had this penchant for suddenly appearing like an archaeological site.
And she vanished just as quickly leaving the person she spoke to scrambling to process her asides and insights before they disappeared.
Neighbour, friend, root and branch archivist whose grasp of detail was legendary.
“She seems to be coping.” I said.
“Glad to hear that. Maybe I can pay a flying visit some time soon.
But aren't you a foolish man to be imposing all those Olympic Marathons on yourself?”
Fidelma about to share one of her treasured nuggets.
“I love walking but any tips?”
Spring enquired naively as events soon demonstrated.
“There’s a shortcut…..a little known shortcut.
People in the know recommend it though I have never actually used it myself.
Maybe I will one day.
See, it's on the right hand side up the road there.
Think it might be useful when you want to get home in a hurry.” She concluded.
Fidelma in advanced middle age was still sprightly and youthful in her ways.
I missed a text from anthea and Fidelma noticed.
“Yes. I have one of those gadgets too.
Keeps me connected.
Took me awhile to master it.
Wish there was a shortcut for that.
But I'll best be on my way.
Take good care whatever the route.”
As always having spoken to Fidelma I wondered about in a trance.
Another colourful aspect of Fidelma’s personality was her “Banana Skin Syndrome.”
She could lose her balance betimes when enthusing about a topic or when she stumbled on an area that fascinated her.
The feet were a little wobbly.
All this against her philosophy about how interconnected everything is.
The mind is an antenna sending out signals to others was a frequent broadside of hers.
Even when Fidelma said very little she always had this magnetic effect on others.
Those terse one liners could trigger an avalanche in the mind.
Her thin phrases were always shrouded in a well crafted poetic meter.
It was in the tone, gestures and body language.
Those beady yet expressive eyes scanning her environment like a radar screen.
A cascade of images and sound bytes ensued when she left.
Several hours passed as my mind was in overdrive like a central processing unit.
I heard this inner voice telling me to explore this “shortcut.”
Having texted Anthea I then proceeded to this offshoot of a lane.
It was going to lighten the journey of this slope and pavement plodder.
Off I went down this quaint country shortcut.
Nothing out of the ordinary to begin with until Anthea rang.
“Gnawing feeling of sadness.
My mind is a dark blue canvass at the moment.”
Her lilting twang mingling with the song birds at the start of my downward journey.
I sensed this was urgent and started to walk quickly.
That's when problems arose.
Just a plain country passage with a primarily flat surface at this point.
There were houses on each side and some weeds strewn and partially mangled, turned to mulch by wild and indiscriminate boots.
Strange feelings welled up within me as I felt like a geyser at yellowstone.
The puff and splutter of tractors in nearby fields as furrows, the epicenter of future yields were turned.
Scarecrows were strategically perched in the meadow behind the right hand hedge to ward off some menace or other.
Something told me to relate my surroundings to Anthea.
If only to divert attention from an impending gloom.
Those barely audible inner prompts again.
“Eric, I don't want to pressurise you but at the moment I feel this dark cloud.”
Eric paused.
It then occurred to me that I was engulfed by dark foreboding clouds in tandem with a rising rainbow like haze.
As Anthea continued her disorders seemed to be complemented by external threats of rain intermingled with sunshine.
“I feel, Eric there is a radiance trying to break through.
Just to see you … your presence is a light which I could focus on.”
Then I realised that speed was of the essence.
That's when I could have panicked.
Anthea’s voice seemed louder, but also more lyrical as I realised this obscure
overlooked route could have done with some restoration!
Tufts of grass oozing slime.
Mounds of mud with pockets of oil stained water.
The briars were a shock team that endangered every part of the human body.
I was conveying all this to anthea as I was trying to dash at my normal pace.
Oddly Anthea’s tone of desperation started to dip.
But she did appear less tense as I told her this story over the phone.
“Someone told me this is a shortcut.”
Eric said gingerly.
“Who was that ? Anthea asked.
“Fidelma. We met on the main road just a short while ago.” I responded.
“You know her a bit better than I do.”
Anthea observed. “She's going to call over one of these days I'm sure.”
By now Anthea, initially nervous was mellowing as I continued with my frantic running … and staggering commentary!
She didn’t have had much to excite her over the last five years.
But I had to be careful lest those dark brooding phases returned.
Like a roving reporter I regaled her with lurid descriptions of limp green shrubs, tea brown leaves shredded on fissured rocks, juice dripping blackberry bushes with foraging earwigs seeking shelter from the sun.
But here I was almost knee deep in tangled foliage while keeping the love of my life up to speed!
The labyrinthine outcrops and mock craters were all included.
Suddenly misfortune struck without warning.
I nearly sprained my leg as I fell face down on a grassy patch.
Sprawled awkwardly across this surface my phone went flying but I managed to catch it.
“Eric, are you ok?
I don’t mean to be a burden.
Will I get someone to meet you at the end of this lane or short cut.”
Anthea again.
“I'm fine, Anthea.”
Eric said before slowly rising.
I kept detailing my observations and Anthea was reacting positively.
But I made it eventually with the sounds of the road as guide.
The temperatures continued to rise causing perspiration.
Peering thru the maze of entwined growths I saw … Fidelma.
“Where did you spring from?” Eric punning his own name.
“Fidelma ...you fell too.” A question that might have appeared tactless.
She was getting up, having fallen when taking her bearings it seems.
“Fidelma …. thanks but no thanks.
The shortcut.” I said.
“You are shivering.” She observed.
“I am. Spring responded.
“Got to get to Anthea because she might be in need of help.” Spring continued.
We both headed for my house as quickly as possible.
But it wasn’t far.
I texted Anthea and she answered by saying she had every reason to speak to me.
One wondered what that might be.
My face whitened.
Fidelma and I soon reached the house where I lived.
Eric pressed the doorbell as his heart pounded.
The door opened suddenly and we couldn't believe what we saw.
“Anthea, is that you?
I haven't seen you smile like that in years.”
I said.
Fidelma and I were perplexed to say the least.
“It’s early days yet but those locusts of darkness hopping around in my head maybe dwindling.
Those creative juices returned when I sensed your anxiety down the lane because I didn't want two sick people in this house.
But you brought splashes of vivid colour into my drawing room.
I could almost smell the rustic fragrance of every wilting petal and the creaking of every twig.
You set a whole cycle in train.”
Anthea then showed me two items she was working on.
“I have started a rough sketch of the lane you detailed and a short story.
There's been a sea change.” She said.
“Oh I wonder what I'll call this sketch and that short story?
Any ideas?” Anthea enquired.
Fidelma and I looked at each other and spoke almost in unison.
“I think we both have a fair idea what they both might be called.
Your story included.”
A little known shortcut indeed!
Photograph and short story copyright protected
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mantrabay · 4 years ago
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A Little Known Shortcut.
Wandering the roads. It has me under a spell.
Even when prickly brambles
scrape my eyelids or those bony ankles are being twisted by tooth like stones. The angular sort clustered mischievously among the green shoots that litter every footpath.
They lie in wait, in ambush.
It goes with the territory for this seasoned footman.
Meandering landscapes are house and home to the spiral lanes and clover clad hills that are rife in my area.
Their rustic heritage sometimes sacrificed to the orphanage of malleable motives.
Crop farmers obsessed with bountiful harvest.
A restless developer pushing the limits of an urban jungle.
Fellow traveller in league with fugitives from the cockpit.
The pressure cooker of modern life.
The town dweller with split loyalties who clings to the tumult of the city but hankers after some rural idyll.
Culprits one and all.
A lair from the hubbub.
Dwellings of the quaintest kind huddle together like dots in a matrix separated only by a minuscule space.
The more alluring aspects of tradition have been preserved.
Among these are shortcuts or bypasses.
Those sequestered passages that shave miles off for the perennial rambler or clueless hitchhiker.
The eye becomes a lense to all these
things hidden or supposedly hidden.
Human vision as sensor to magic trails.
Those tucked away secret spots beloved of local wiseacres.
They festoon the sprawling countryside at random.
My name is Eric Spring.
Anthea, my partner a transcendental meditation teacher retired early at an early age.
Her withdrawal from work was never meant to be permanent.
A final decision hinged on Anthea's ability to purge that fiendish veil of sadness that had been shadowing her.
There were several obstacles in her path but they weren’t insurmountable.
Thoughts of Anthea in her halcyon days haunted me.
Mental pictures of a vibrant woman imbued with passion.
Poignant evocative heart-tugging images.
Bar excursions into town my station is that of Anthea’s carer.
This eternally stoic woman is mindful of her mental boundaries and the abyss concealed by each of them.
But she is not prone to self-hate or abuse. The more lethal plagues of the psyche hadn't yet impacted on her.
Anthea was groping for exits but hadn’t found the signs.
She remains housebound as I embark on those age defying treks into town.
We keep in touch by mobile phone.
A very angelic sensitive looking person is she.
Reminiscent of a Sunday Times editor.
The accent filters every noun and stresses every nuance.
Like the sounds from an early morning orchard.
Anthea's job became monotonous and her other pursuits painting and writing fled without trace.
A budding artist’s most dreaded syndromes struck.
Writer's block. Artistic vacuum.
The wellspring of her imagination now devoid of those inspiring flashes that sustain creative impulse.
She had few outlets bar my care and a lady called Fidelma who had the edge on me with regard to local knowledge. I longed to hear Anthea's voice on my device.
Her hypnotic voice bridges gaps.
You feel close even when speaking to her from a distance.
I love the walks and savouring all those pivot points of folklore.
I pride myself on my intimate knowledge of every branch strewn rivulet, stream and layered rock formation.
My links to the environment are almost erotic as I crave it's sensual touch.
At times I enter a tranquil zone where the shutters are drawn.
Just myself and all those habitats.
“Hello Eric? Lost in thought again.
How is anthea these days?
I spoke to her over the phone a few days ago.
I sometimes drop in on her when you are out.”
Fidelma speaking with that chirping red robin voice of hers.
She had this penchant for suddenly appearing like an archaeological site.
And she vanished just as quickly leaving the person she spoke to scrambling to process her asides and insights before they disappeared.
Neighbour, friend, root and branch archivist whose grasp of detail was legendary.
“She seems to be coping.” I said.
“Glad to hear that. Maybe I can pay a flying visit some time soon.
But aren't you a foolish man to be imposing all those Olympic Marathons on yourself?”
Fidelma about to share one of her treasured nuggets.
“I love walking but any tips?”
Spring enquired naively as events soon demonstrated.
“There’s a shortcut…..a little known shortcut.
People in the know recommend it though I have never actually used it myself.
Maybe I will one day.
See, it's on the right hand side up the road there.
Think it might be useful when you want to get home in a hurry.” She concluded.
Fidelma in advanced middle age was still sprightly and youthful in her ways.
I missed a text from anthea and Fidelma noticed.
“Yes. I have one of those gadgets too.
Keeps me connected.
Took me awhile to master it.
Wish there was a shortcut for that.
But I'll best be on my way.
Take good care whatever the route.”
As always having spoken to Fidelma I wondered about in a trance.
Another colourful aspect of Fidelma’s personality was her “Banana Skin Syndrome.”
She could lose her balance betimes when enthusing about a topic or when she stumbled on an area that fascinated her.
The feet were a little wobbly.
All this against her philosophy about how interconnected everything is.
The mind is an antenna sending out signals to others was a frequent broadside of hers.
Even when Fidelma said very little she always had this magnetic effect on others.
Those terse one liners could trigger an avalanche in the mind.
Her thin phrases were always shrouded in a well crafted poetic meter.
It was in the tone, gestures and body language.
Those beady yet expressive eyes scanning her environment like a radar screen.
A cascade of images and sound bytes ensued when she left.
Several hours passed as my mind was in overdrive like a central processing unit.
I heard this inner voice telling me to explore this “shortcut.”
Having texted Anthea I then proceeded to this offshoot of a lane.
It was going to lighten the journey of this slope and pavement plodder.
Off I went down this quaint country shortcut.
Nothing out of the ordinary to begin with until Anthea rang.
“Gnawing feeling of sadness.
My mind is a dark blue canvass at the moment.”
Her lilting twang mingling with the song birds at the start of my downward journey.
I sensed this was urgent and started to walk quickly.
That's when problems arose.
Just a plain country passage with a primarily flat surface at this point.
There were houses on each side and some weeds strewn and partially mangled, turned to mulch by wild and indiscriminate boots.
Strange feelings welled up within me as I felt like a geyser at yellowstone.
The puff and splutter of tractors in nearby fields as furrows, the epicenter of future yields were turned.
Scarecrows were strategically perched in the meadow behind the right hand hedge to ward off some menace or other.
Something told me to relate my surroundings to Anthea.
If only to divert attention from an impending gloom.
Those barely audible inner prompts again.
“Eric, I don't want to pressurise you but at the moment I feel this dark cloud.”
Eric paused.
It then occurred to me that I was engulfed by dark foreboding clouds in tandem with a rising rainbow like haze.
As Anthea continued her disorders seemed to be complemented by external threats of rain intermingled with sunshine.
“I feel, Eric there is a radiance trying to break through.
Just to see you … your presence is a light which I could focus on.”
Then I realised that speed was of the essence.
That's when I could have panicked.
Anthea’s voice seemed louder, but also more lyrical as I realised this obscure
overlooked route could have done with some restoration!
Tufts of grass oozing slime.
Mounds of mud with pockets of oil stained water.
The briars were a shock team that endangered every part of the human body.
I was conveying all this to anthea as I was trying to dash at my normal pace.
Oddly Anthea’s tone of desperation started to dip.
But she did appear less tense as I told her this story over the phone.
“Someone told me this is a shortcut.”
Eric said gingerly.
“Who was that ? Anthea asked.
“Fidelma. We met on the main road just a short while ago.” I responded.
“You know her a bit better than I do.”
Anthea observed. “She's going to call over one of these days I'm sure.”
By now Anthea, initially nervous was mellowing as I continued with my frantic running … and staggering commentary!
She didn’t have had much to excite her over the last five years.
But I had to be careful lest those dark brooding phases returned.
Like a roving reporter I regaled her with lurid descriptions of limp green shrubs, tea brown leaves shredded on fissured rocks, juice dripping blackberry bushes with foraging earwigs seeking shelter from the sun.
But here I was almost knee deep in tangled foliage while keeping the love of my life up to speed!
The labyrinthine outcrops and mock craters were all included.
Suddenly misfortune struck without warning.
I nearly sprained my leg as I fell face down on a grassy patch.
Sprawled awkwardly across this surface my phone went flying but I managed to catch it.
“Eric, are you ok?
I don’t mean to be a burden.
Will I get someone to meet you at the end of this lane or short cut.”
Anthea again.
“I'm fine, Anthea.”
Eric said before slowly rising.
I kept detailing my observations and Anthea was reacting positively.
But I made it eventually with the sounds of the road as guide.
The temperatures continued to rise causing perspiration.
Peering thru the maze of entwined growths I saw … Fidelma.
“Where did you spring from?” Eric punning his own name.
“Fidelma ...you fell too.” A question that might have appeared tactless.
She was getting up, having fallen when taking her bearings it seems.
“Fidelma …. thanks but no thanks.
The shortcut.” I said.
“You are shivering.” She observed.
“I am. Spring responded.
“Got to get to Anthea because she might be in need of help.” Spring continued.
We both headed for my house as quickly as possible.
But it wasn’t far.
I texted Anthea and she answered by saying she had every reason to speak to me.
One wondered what that might be.
My face whitened.
Fidelma and I soon reached the house where I lived.
Eric pressed the doorbell as his heart pounded.
The door opened suddenly and we couldn't believe what we saw.
“Anthea, is that you?
I haven't seen you smile like that in years.”
I said.
Fidelma and I were perplexed to say the least.
“It’s early days yet but those locusts of darkness hopping around in my head maybe dwindling.
Those creative juices returned when I sensed your anxiety down the lane because I didn't want two sick people in this house.
But you brought splashes of vivid colour into my drawing room.
I could almost smell the rustic fragrance of every wilting petal and the creaking of every twig.
You set a whole cycle in train.”
Anthea then showed me two items she was working on.
“I have started a rough sketch of the lane you detailed and a short story.
There's been a sea change.” She said.
“Oh I wonder what I'll call this sketch and that short story?
Any ideas?” Anthea enquired.
Fidelma and I looked at each other and spoke almost in unison.
“I think we both have a fair idea what they both might be called.
Your story included.”
A little known shortcut indeed!
Photograph and short story copyright protected to mantrabay
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