#The Locust Horde
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Can I get a concept for Myrrah from Gears Of War please??
OMG! Finally, It's Myrrah content time >:)
Yandere! Queen Myrrah Concept
Pairing: Romantic/Platonic
Possible Trigger Warnings: Gender-Neutral Darling, Obsession, Overprotective behavior, Possessive behavior, Manipulation, Kidnapping, Human pet mention, Slight sadism, Violence, Murder, Isolation, Blood, Forced companionship/relationship.
There are two ways I typically think Myrrah could be written as a yandere.
If she is a platonic yandere, I imagine she'd take you in as some sort of heir.
Due to her "losing her daughter" she may see a young human like you as a replacement, despite her hatred of humans.
She thinks she'll teach you right and purify you of all those human lies.
If she's a romantic yandere I imagine she abducts you with a group of other humans, intending to make you an experiment.
However, upon seeing the prisoners, she decides she'd much rather have you as a human pet.
Her obsession would then continue from there.
Myrrah has an evident hatred towards humans due to them taking the surface and her experiences growing up in a lab.
She herself is technically human... but she considers herself Locust and is superior to any human in her mind.
Despite her intentions you meet her nearly the same way.
You come down to The Hollow as a human prisoner, only for Myrrah to become attached to you in one way or another.
In a way she feels she's probably saving you from being corrupted by humanity.
She plans to keep you to herself and is willing to remove any human or Locust who steps out of line.
I would expect Myrrah to be highly manipulative and possessive over you.
No human but you (and her) ever get in her palace in The Hollow.
Plus tons of heavily armored Locust swarm the palace.
Safe to say the moment Myrrah takes you in, there's not getting back to the surface.
In fact, it was either siding with her or your death.
Myrrah considers this mercy, but really there was no good choice for you.
Since this is a general concept I will try to keep Myrrah's actions towards you ambiguous.
You are heavily protected since you are so important to The Queen.
Locust guards are always appointed around you and they make sure you rarely leave the palace.
Myrrah's goal is to remove humans to have you and her people safe and away from Imulsion.
The Lambent epidemic is a huge concern for her, especially when she thinks she can easily lose you to it.
She may be immune, but you and her people are not.
This is another reason she refuses to have you leave.
Myrrah acts condescending at times, but you mean a ton to her.
She'll act like she's above you (she is) before becoming softer and embracing you.
Myrrah is able to telepathically order Locusts around.
She'd tell them how much you mean to her and how they should treat you like you are an extension of their queen.
No harm should ever come to you.
In response I feel some Locust, at least the Generals and High ranking ones, have a feeling of attachment to you too.
Caring for you is like caring for their queen.
Caring for you will make their queen happy.
Which means you'll have Locust like RAAM or Skorge around you, eagerly trying to attend to you as Myrrah orders.
Armored Kantus and Palace Guards are the most common Locust type to watch over you for Myrrah.
Myrrah is capable of being affectionate at times.
She primarily shows she cares through words of praise and affirmation, occasionally throwing in some sort of name she calls you.
However she may seat you on her lap or hold you close.
A kiss on the forehead if platonic, a kiss on the lips if romantic.
Stuff like that.
Myrrah is ruthless when it comes to others around you.
If the COG ever storm her palace and try to harm you, she'll have them killed.
If a Locust gets too comfortable around you, she has them sent off or even executed.
Wronging you is wronging her, an offense punishable by death.
Myrrah takes her obsession very seriously.
After all, it is a great honor to be one of the only humans she tolerates.
Even Adam Fenix disappointed her... you won't do the same, she knows it.
Myrrah doesn't care how much blood is spilled to keep you.
As a queen she's claimed you and expects you obedience, she even feels she's entitled to you.
I wouldn't necessarily call her all that jealous, but her patience certainly begins to wane the longer someone she doesn't like is around you.
She knows she may have kidnapped you and forced her to live in The Hollow...
But hopefully you won't have to much longer.
She'll find a way to eradicate humanity and move you all to the surface, then you can see the sun again and be free from the possibility of turning Lambent.
She's doing you a favor by removing you from the vermin, you should be grateful she's picked you.
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Even though we have not gotten to seen the Pendulum Wars (other than from the novels and comics)….
…. Emergency Day is the event of the Gears of War Universe we’ve all been waiting for in the upcoming ‘Gears of War: E-Day’!
#gears of war e day#gears of war#emergency day#The Pendulum Wars#The Locast War#xbox showcase#my own thoughts#I can’t help but feel out about this!!!!#the coalition#gears of war e-day#E Day#The Coalition of Ordered Governments#COG#The Union of Independent Republics#uir#Locust horde#locust war#Xbox
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anyway uhh liauditore text post time (jimmy/skizz/tango plate up funny thoughts under the cut)
"that's nice, get out of my kitchen," jimmy snaps and chuckles to himself a bit as he does, amused by his own wit. he catches himself too late. oh god, did he really just say that? to skizz?
it was a slip so easy to make. his stupid brain had a habit of it, thinking up these cutting responses to everything others said. he'd trained himself well enough to not be so rude around his usual group of friends (and they'd destroy him if he'd said something like that near them) but tango and skizz were... unfamiliar. new. but warm and welcoming. a combination that brought out something in jimmy he thought had been beaten out of him long ago.
thoughts ran through his head, a million at once. what does he say now? is there any use in apologising? tango and skizz had been so gracious to him til now, will they kick him out? will he get yelled at? before or after work is over? he's going to be thrown out in front of everyone--
in the real world, a second had passed.
"s-sorry--" jimmy chokes out the beginning of an apology, suddenly cut off by another sound. the sound of laughter.
skizz is laughing. he gives jimmy back a few hearty, playful smacks, stern enough to make him stand up straight but soft enough to not hurt.
"This guy!" skizz chuckles. "i'm tellin' ya, these young guys these days. like spitfire!"
"yeah, well, he wouldn't have to talk like that if you weren't botherin' him all the time," tango adds as he passed over a stack of dirty dishes to the chefs. "do your job, stupid."
"i am! i am! God!" skizz grabs the plates off tango like hands on a clock. perfectly in sync. jimmy didn't catch what they said next. but the next time he looked over, they were chuckling together.
"Great work, Jimbo," skizz tells him at the end of the shift.
Jimmy thinks about it for a moment. Then smiles.
"I know."
#liauditore is unhinged#my writing#<-- kind of lol#plate up streams poisoned my water supply and sent a horde of locusts on my crops
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being aroace does not make me immune to the power of Jolene and I Will Always Love You. That's just the power of Dolly Parton
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Male bikini armor...
#hendry#oc#art#artists on tumblr#if staff nuked this i send send a horde of locusts to their hq#OakholdC's Art
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after some contemplation, i think the main thing i am confused about is why everyone has such incredibly strong feelings about something that only has two half-hour episodes which aired 4 years ago. that's the length of a youtube video essay. mystifying to me
can someone explain hazbin hotel to me like i'm five years old
#i still get followed on the reg by people who have 'hazbin hotel enjoyers DNI' or similar in their pinned posts#like they're putting up signs to keep out the hordes of hazbin hotel fans that regularly descend upon them like locusts#we live in such different worlds
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I really really hate doing this. I never wanted to defend Taylor Swift or her fans ever in my life but people are so fucking weird about her and her fans. they get so salty over the smallest most inconsequential shit that they do. literally saw a post today about swifties trading friendship bracelets at her concerts and they were fucking bitching about plastic pollution and how people who sell plastic bracelets with beads purchased from Michaels and Joanne's fabric are having their livelihoods threatened by the swifties descending like a horde of locust upon the strip mall craft store to buy beads. literally a some people have war in their countries situation. some white girls are making friendship bracelets with pony beads they got at Michaels. please fucking survive.
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Vamster Queen – Huge beast, unaligned
Another month, another huge creature added to the collection! The Vamster Queen and over 30 more huge boss monsters are available on my Patreon page (alongside many, many more creatures)!
Waves of vamsters foreshadow her coming, distant sounds of thousands burrowing paws seal her arrival. Although she doesn’t need to feed as frequent as her brood, she will be hungry eventually. And after all the endlessly tormenting symphonies of squeaking and squealing, she emerges: the queen of the vamsters – a sinister sovereign piercing the bowels of the earth and with each of her ravaging children the hopes of everyone above. Much like a swarm of locusts turns a a lush field into barren wasteland, so does the ever-moving horde of vamsters strip all life from thriving farms, peaceful villages and buzzing towns. Eagerly and loyal, the vamsters follow their queen; insistently yet with great care their mother guides them, for she knows they must feast.
#fantasy art#artists on tumblr#creature design#bestiary#dnd item#concept art#illustration#artist#animation#art#dnd#hand drawn#homebrew#paintings#fantasy#digital art#dungeons and dragons#ciritcal role#ttrpg#worldbuilding
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Summary: it’s always the best laid plans of mice and men, isn’t it?
Pairing: s.h. x f!oc
W.C.: 5.4K
Warnings: gilded age!au, miscommunication, a comedy of errors/manners, society snobs, a masquerade ball mishap, arranged marriage, steve ‘down bad’ harrington, and a reader/mc who doesn’t have time for this shit - she was educated abroad, she went to Vassar with Miss Nancy Wheeler, okay?!, back on my iliad bullshit (i know, i know)
playlist | m.list
I. Coup de foudre
It’s a dreary December evening in Manhattan. The streets are damp and slick accompanied by the cacophony of hooves, equipages and carriages trundling down the way. Somber topcoats and fur-trimmed capes hide the tailored waistcoats of the men and ornate skirts of the ladies, as is to be expected with the current onslaught of weather.
Small white flurries of snow that are sure to bring a swift end to laborious dinners and engagements at the club. And the man in the sleek black equipage himself is all too relieved about it— at least he would be released from the obligation of hearing his father’s friends complain about these upstart robber barons descending like a horde of locusts on Fifth Avenue.
A quiet night in his study would be a welcome distraction.
That is, if they can ever get home in this weather.
He can hear the whinny of the horses from up front and the soothing tones of the driver. The streets are probably close to icing over at this hour, making it difficult to find traction.
Suddenly, the equipage swings quickly to the side and careens into something with a loud thud, sending its sole occupant straight into the door with a smack. He hisses lowly at the twinge in his forehead as the driver descends with a flurry of apologies.
He opens the door himself and steps outside before the driver can assist him. The white puffs of his breath speak to how quickly the weather had turned. He draws his coat closer and approaches the two drivers as they attempt to settle the horses.
“Gentlemen,” He greets, “What seems to be the problem?”
“Noting to worry about Mr. Harrington,” His man, Andrew, assures him, “The ice just snuck up on us is all.”
He nods taking in the damage, dents and scuffs on both vehicles but the horses appear to be fine. Reaching into his coat pocket, he brings out a small notebook and a pencil to scribble his information down for the other driver. Is about to tell the man to bill him directly when someone steps out from the carriage opposite.
The footsteps themselves are delicate and tentative. He tears his gaze from the driver’s, glancing back only to find a young woman emerging from the carriage. She’s holding her skirts in one gloved hand, shivering in the cold.
“Is everything all right Jesse?”
Her voice is like music to his ears, melodic almost. And she looks like something stolen from a painting— bright and alluring.
The winter light is quickly fading, and the lamplighters were sure taking their time this evening. Her cape is dark, like his coat, but the split at the front reveals a purple skirt trimmed in demure black lace, signifying an exit from her period of mourning.
Her man, Jesse, shepherds her back toward the coach, “Let’s get you back inside Miss, don’t want you to catch a chill.”
“Of course,” She says with a shake of her head, “How silly of me.”
And before Steve can embarrass himself in an attempt to introduce himself, she’s safely ensconced back in the carriage. Her driver returns and takes the paper from Steve, tucking it into his coat.
“Apologies gentlemen, but I must be on my way.” He pulls himself back onto the driver’s box, “Have to get the young Miss home to her brother’s, you understand.”
He tips his hat, and with a tug of the reins he’s gone.
Steve finds himself standing right where she left him, feet riveted to the very spot where she once stood. He must have taken a step toward her at some point, like an utter madman, probably startled the poor girl half to death.
Despite their disastrous non-meeting, he can’t seem to shake her from his mind. As if everything had been in black and white until she stepped down from the carriage and breathed color into his world, spring bursting forth at the sound of her voice. It sounds positively insane, even to himself, but if Robin were here, she’d understand.
Hell, she’d probably have a word for it too.
Something French, inevitably.
“Mr. Harrington,” Andrew says, a hand tentatively resting on his shoulder, “Is something wrong?”
Steve blinks; a feeble attempt to clear his mind from thoughts of the mystery woman.
Andrew refrains from rolling his eyes, “Right sir, let’s get you home then.”
The journey back to the Harrington family manse was uneventful. The familiar brownstone facade came into view as Andrew swung the equipage onto the street outside the house. Luckily, the home was large enough that his late arrival wouldn’t be noticed.
He thanks Andrew and watches as he takes off with the horses for the carriage house a few blocks away. Stepping into the house, he makes quickly for his study slipping through the door just as one of the maids turns down the corridor.
Steve shucks his coat onto a nearby chair and tugs off his cravat with one hand, the other pouring a healthy portion of bourbon into a highball glass. He downs the amber liquid too quickly, the burn welcome against his throat.
After pouring another glass to sip from, he settles into a heap on a club chair by the window. Resting his jaw on a hand, he faces the glass panes, eyes trailing the flurries of snow outside, unsettled by the quiet of the street. His mind won’t stop racing, vacillating between kicking himself for not getting her name and hoping he’d run into her again, albeit this time under better circumstances.
Little did he know, that several blocks away a man was questioning poor Jesse about his whereabouts when a slip of paper was placed into his hand. He scans it quickly, face paling at the name scrawled there: Steven Harrington.
“How could you let this happen Jesse, really? The accident, I understand, but allowing my sister out of the carriage unaccompanied?”
“Sir, I had no—”
“I’ll not hear your excuses.” Christopher Fairchild balls his hand into a fist, the paper crumpling in his grasp. “You said he saw her, Harrington, that is?”
“Unfortunately,” Jesse admits, “I intervened as best I could and got her back into the coach. He seemed rather transfixed by her.”
His employer grunts, “Yes well, that is unfortunate. What if someone had seen her with that man, no chaperone in sight?” He turns to the sideboard and pours himself a drink, says with a scoff, “Not even out to society and potentially scandal-ridden.”
At this point, his wife, Marian, chooses to enter, having seen the young lady to her rooms and getting her settled for the evening. She places a tentative hand on his shoulder while Jesse trains his gaze to the floor.
“Darling,” She soothes, “Your sister is asleep as is the baby, don’t get yourself into a fit at this hour.”
He sighs as her palm moves in slow circles against his back and takes deep breaths. “Of course dear,” He sips from his drink and turns to her. “I just worry about her. All the work you’ve put into her debut and planning the ball.” Christopher places a kiss on the back of her hand, causing her to blush. “I don’t want it to be all for naught.”
She sighs prettily.
“It won’t be,” Marian advises, “You’ll write to the Harringtons tomorrow and we’ll get this matter settled. And there won’t be a speck on your dear sister’s reputation, I’ll see to that.”
But, oh dear reader, where would be the fun in that?
As we all know, the New York winter season is winding down rapidly, and do we not deserve something to keep us warm over the holiday? I would say so!
So, in honor of her long-awaited arrival, let us give a hearty New York welcome to Miss Eleanor Fairchild! Fresh from the society of Paris and a graduate of Vassar along with Miss Nancy Wheeler, her debut this week is the talk of the town.
Despite her indecorous brush with Mr. Steven Harrington, I am sure she will not have a shortage of suitors after the ball this weekend.
But the question remains, my loyal readers, of who will take a shine to Miss Fairchild and step out from the long shadow cast by the Harrington name?
Only time, and this weekly missive, will tell.
Morning in New York was startling and nothing like waking in Paris.
House maids, lady’s maids, and valets moving up and down the stairs, knocking on doors to air out the linens and draw the curtains aside to let the murky winter sun stream through. There was, of course, the soft babbling from the nursery as Gus woke from his repose, the nursemaid and his mother close at hand.
A sharp knock sounded from the door just as you drew the bedclothes closer to you, content to roll over and sleep through the gray morning.
“Bonjour mademoiselle, vous permettez?”
“Oui!” You say, curious at the chipper voice now opening the door, “Sorry, yes, you may enter.”
“Merci, mademoiselle.”
The girl, your new lady’s maid, softly shuts the door and turns to regard the room.
It’s certainly larger than what you’d grown accustomed to in France. But then again, most everything was in New York, especially so since you hadn’t returned to the city in well nigh on a year or more.
The room itself is well-appointed and elegant, Marian saw to that; soft colors and fabrics, diaphanous and frothy, a subtle nod to Versailles no doubt. You hadn’t had much time or energy to give it a glance last night, more inclined to have a late dinner, divest yourself of traveling clothes, and pass out as soon as possible.
The lady’s maid continues her silent assessment as another knock sounds from the door. She steps to open it and let in the housemaid.
“Good morning Miss,” She greets with a smile, her voice rounded with a warm Irish lilt. “I ‘spect you’ll be needin’ a fire this morning.”
You nod just now noticing the chill in the air. She busies herself with the kindling and sweeping ashes from the fireplace. The maids exchange a few soft words before she steps out to get the firewood from the Useful Man down the hall.
“Apologies,” You say by way of greeting, “But I don’t believe I got your name?”
“Oh, pardonne-moi,” the lady’s maid curtsies briefly, “Je m’appelle Marie.”
“Marie,” You repeat, “Pleased to meet you.”
“Moi aussi, mademoiselle.”
And from there, the ritual of dressing began. The house maid, Louisa, lit the fire and spirited you out of bed to air out the linens. At Marie’s suggestion, she also tackled unpacking the various trunks placed near the dresser and closet.
“These are fine frills Miss,” She smiled, her fingers delicately folding chemises and hanging skirts or dresses. “The Missus said your debut gown came all the way from Mr. Worth’s shop in Paris, is that true?”
A soft sigh escaped you at the memory, ivory chiffon and silk revealing the décolleté and arms, gauze and tulle providing a tempting illusion of bared skin. A full skirt with bustle that would skim the floor accompanied by a small train. With gloves and a fan to match, of course.
“Indeed, it is,” You allowed with a cheeky wink, “But I think Marie would have my head if I touched it before Friday.”
Marie, for her part, merely smirked and continued her preparations for your bath.
Across a few city blocks, a footman knocks on the imposing doors of the Harrington manse. The family butler, Campbell, just happens to be descending the stairs and takes it upon himself to open the door.
“Good morning sir,” The footman says with a bow, “Mr. Fairchild bid me to deliver this.” He hands over an envelope addressed to Mr. Samuel Harrington.
“Yes, well,” Campbell sighs, opening the door to let the footman in. “I’ll get this to him. If you hurry, Cook can scrounge up some coffee and a pastry for you. Just take the servant’s hall to the right.”
“Much obliged,” The footman says with a bow as Campbell starts up the stairs.
The handwriting on the envelope is neat, if a bit cramped. Must be the young Mr. Fairchild then, rather than his wife sending the correspondence.
Mr. Harrington’s study door is cracked open, the sound of papers shuffling to and fro on his desk as the butler enters. He briefly glances up to find Campbell, “Happen to know where I put those contracts, Campbell?”
“Perhaps the drawer on the left, sir.”
Mr. Harrington pulls the drawer open, “Right you are, good man.” And thereby loses himself to perusing the documents and thus ignoring Campbell.
“A letter has arrived for you sir,” He says stepping closer to the desk, “From Mr. Fairchild, it seems rather urgent. I have his footman waiting for your reply.”
“Hmm, well let’s have it then.”
He takes the letter from the butler’s hand and slips the blade of the letter opener under the paper. Retrieving the missive, he scans through it quickly, lips pulling down in distaste.
“See to it that Mrs. Harrington gets this,” He instructs, pulling out a new sheaf of paper and beginning his correspondence. “If she wishes to see my reply, she best be quick about it.”
The letter itself detailed the unfortunate meeting between Mr. Fairchild’s sister and Mr. Harrington’s only son. The man was understandably concerned about how it would seem should someone have happened upon them sans chaperone, as the young lady had yet to make her debut into society.
Mr. Harrington’s reply was cordial in an attempt to smooth things over— the Fairchilds, like the Harrington’s were of good stock, two families of the New York Four Hundred deemed to be unblemished and acceptable company by none other than the Grande Dame herself, Mrs. Astor. It wouldn’t be fitting for reputations to be sullied as the result of a simple misunderstanding.
As expected, Samuel’s wife, Amelia, swanned into the study seemingly in the midst of her morning toilette. Her hair was up, but she still wore her housecoat as her day dress had yet to be put on by her lady’s maid. Mr. Fairchild’s letter waved about in one hand, while the other pressed upon her chest as if to stop her racing heart.
“That boy of yours is going to give me heart failure.”
Samuel signs the letter with a flourish and lays his pen to the side.
“Oh, so he’s only my boy when he acts indiscreetly with the fairer sex, but he’s your son when he’s winning accolades at Harvard and breaking hearts abroad, is that it?”
She tuts and sits demurely on the divan, “Well, yes. Precisely that Sam.” She fans herself with the letter as her husband leans against his desk. “The social set have already written him off as a lost cause and we can ill afford a whisper of a scandal, especially now.”
Sam passes the reply to his wife and pauses, as if to choose his words carefully.
“Still moving forward with your plans to find Steven a wife then?”
“Of course, dear,” She answers brusquely, “There are many suitable ladies this season of decent breeding and passable looks.” She glances up and passes the letter back to him. “Your response is sufficient, send it off with the footman.”
Amelia rises from the divan and turns to leave. “Wake Steven and have a talk with him will you? I’ll send Maude out to the florist, he should write a note of apology for her to send along.”
“As you wish, dear.”
Amelia leaves just as abruptly as she appeared. Samuel sighs and furrows his brow, the inklings of a headache coming on. He taps his fingers against the desk and checks the time.
“Campbell,” He calls into the hall, “Have Calvin wake Steven and tell him to see my in the study.”
“Of course, sir.”
He takes a seat and settles himself behind the desk once more.
“And have Cook send something up? Coffee and breakfast for two.”
Awaiting the arrival of his son, Samuel Harrington turns and faces the bay of windows that look out onto the street below. He watches as Fairchild’s footman hops on the back of the coach and slides from his view. He contemplates his son’s options, admittedly there are few.
Such are the advantages and disadvantages in marrying a woman who’s as sly as a fox. It’s just a matter of out-maneuvering her; an entertaining and seemingly endless chess match that’s lasted even longer than their marriage.
But the silver lining in all this, he supposes, is that Steven Harrington, their sole child and heir, just so happens to take after his father in this respect, in that he’s crazy like a fox.
Funny how things work out, isn’t it?
As for the young Mr. Harrington, well, suffice it to say he had quite the morning. The newly arrived Miss Fairchild, however, had a luxurious start to her day (that is, if one discounts the pulling and pinning of hair, the tugging on of stockings and tightening of corset laces).
You joined your brother and sister-in-law in the dining room while another maid fixed a plate of breakfast for you; Pierce, the butler, stepped in to pour the coffee. You thanked them both and broke your fast, listening as Christopher and Marian discussed the events of the day.
“I’ll need to see to the accounts today,” Your brother said, turning his newspaper with a shake. “Everything should be in order before the ball this weekend.”
Marian nodded and sipped from her coffee cup. “I have some calls to make today, and thought Nell could accompany me.”
Christopher slowly lowers his newspaper and glances your way— don't feel obligated to do this, you haven’t been properly introduced into society yet.
Buying time, you take a bite from the flaky croissant on your plate and ruminate. In a way, both Chris and Marian are correct; you aren’t obligated to escort Mrs. Fairchild, nor would it be wise to turn down an informal introduction to those in Marian’s circle. She would, after all, be serving as your chaperone, and, along with your brother, introducing you to Manhattan high society on Friday at the ball.
Your debutante ball, to be precise.
At the time, Vassar was a welcome distraction and reprieve for being paraded around like a prize calf at auction. But then came the unfortunate illness and demise of your parents, followed by a year of mourning.
It would seem that your time of delay had finally come to its end.
After all, no one wanted a spinster for a bride.
Dabbing at the corners of your mouth with a napkin, you clear your throat and brace yourself.
“That sounds lovely, Marian. I’d be happy to escort you today.”
She smiles and makes to reply, but before she can open her mouth to do so, a knock sounds from the front door. Puzzled, the three of you glance at one another, clearly not expecting a caller at such an early hour.
Pierce nods to someone by the door, bidding him to open it. He quickly returns with a beautiful arrangement of flowers, only to set them to your right and hand you a card. Baffled, you take in the spray of purple orchids, white tulips, lemon geraniums, the sprigs of rosemary, and tucked away behind the hearty green stalks, the shy blooms of forget-me-nots.
Respect, sincerity, an unexpected meeting, remembrance, and affection.
“Well,” Marian prompts from across the table, “Who are they from?”
It’s only then that you recall the card in your outstretched hand. Slipping from your reverie, you thumb open the small envelope.
Miss Fairchild—
Please accept my sincere apologies for our run-in yesterday evening. I hope it did not startle you. I’ve liaised with your brother about the repairs, and in the meantime will give you use of my equipage and pray it will suffice. I also hope that you’ll enjoy the flowers and please know that they relay my deepest and most sincere sentiments.
Cordially yours,
Steven Harrington
P.S. Je vous prie d’accepter mes sincères regrets et ma sympathie à l’occasion du décès de votre proches.
For the remainder of the week, Steve was a bundle of nerves. He’d written the note as his mother asked and even went so far as to accompany her to the florist, managing to slip in a few blooms that complemented the arrangement nicely. And if his mother didn’t happen to notice the errant sprigs of blue or the lingering scent of rosemary, then so much the better.
What he didn’t anticipate was the lack of a response.
“It isn’t done,” Miss Robin Buckley reminded him on their promenade in Central Park. “Until she is out to society, her brother is no doubt keeping her under lock and key.”
“You could provide the introduction,” He points out petulantly. “You’re choosing not to in order to entertain yourself with my suffering.”
“You cad,” She swats at him with her fan. “And no, I cannot. There’s a reason I fled to France after my disastrous debut, as you well know.”
And thus, Steve resigned himself to pining for a woman who barely knew of his existence, while the eligible bachelors of New York bided their time until her debut at the ball.
“For what it’s worth,” Robin says carefully as they round a bend, “There have been many deliveries to the Fairchild House, but yours was the first.”
He warms at the thought.
“That has to count for something, I suppose.”
She grins, “It will.”
They continue to walk, grateful for the brief break in the weather and discuss the evening’s festivities: who will wear what, how many dances until Robin steps on someone’s toes, how ostentatious the new money Vanderbilts will be.
They exit the park, parting ways as their carriages await. Robin catches a curious expression on her friend’s face, both dreamy and apprehensive. She lays a gloved hand on his arm.
“À cœur vaillant rien d'impossible.”
Steve glances down and says with a playful smirk, “Qui vivra verra.”
On Friday afternoon, Marian and Marie carefully assess your gown while Louisa dashes to and fro with the pearls, no the diamonds.
“Sapphires? No, that would ruin the effect.” Marian muses and Marie agrees.
You, by the by, are seated on the bed in a chemise and loosened corset, bored stiff, as the two hem and haw over how to best display you for the ball.
Because that’s all this is really, an overblown dog and pony show in which you’ll be paraded around and shown off to great effect all to attract suitors. It was enough to make one queasy. God forbid a woman do anything on her own or without the approval of a man.
As if men ever did anything worth doing that a woman didn’t have to make right.
Having quite enough of their chatter, you shrug into a robe and pull its sash tight, toe on some slippers and make your way down the hall. At the end of the corridor, you spy the cracked door to Christopher’s study. He’s shuffling papers and muttering to himself as you slip inside.
“I think the accounts can handle themselves for the evening,” you say with a smirk, settling yourself on a chair by the window.
He chuckles, “I suppose you’re right, clever girl.” Sorting the papers into a single file, he looks up at you with a quirked brow. “Had enough of Marian’s prodding, I take it?”
You sigh and dramatically cast your head back, “That’s the worst of it— they haven’t even begun!” Warming at his familiar laughter, you continue: “If I’d known that this is what I’d be subjected to, I would’ve stayed in France.”
Chris studies you at that; your weary sigh, crossed arms, and face a mask. Can’t make heads or tails of if you’re serious or not. Is it too soon? Did you still need time to mourn Maman and Papa? But then your debut had been delayed so much already…
“Is that what you want?”
It’s a question you hadn’t expected from him. But suddenly you’re reminded that he’s your brother, the only family you have left in the world. The man who dropped everything and took the first ship bound for France to be with you at your parents’ deathbed. He had insisted you stay at the house in Paris until you’d recovered your own strength and sent Marian and Gus to keep you company while he saw to business at home.
And knowing him as well as you do, Chris wouldn’t ask something idly.
So you choose your next words carefully.
“I no longer trouble myself with wants.”
The lightest dusting of snow begins to gather on the windowpane. Soon enough, all of the city would look like a snow globe. A perfect winter wonderland for the evening’s festivities, and your favorite kind of weather— snow makes everything look softer somehow, muffles the sound, and blankets the world in swaths of pure white. Your mother adored snow, had somehow convinced you and Chris that she could smell when it was about to begin. And maybe that’s why you’ve taken a shine to it now.
Turning from the window with a small smile, you rise to exit the study and get ready for the night. Leaving your elder brother puzzling over your parting phrase.
Steve could hardly forget your first meeting, but seeing you that evening nearly eclipsed the recollection. Without a cape and no longer in the purples and grays of half-mourning, you were quite a sight to behold.
And he wasn’t the only one who thought so.
Several men from the club, Hargrove, Hagan, and Byers, were scattered around the room sizing up the competition just as he was. Somehow, Edward Munson had been granted an invitation— with his railroad money and lack of pedigree. Regardless of social standing, each eligible bachelor in the room was jockeying for position; who would be the first introduction, the first dance, did her eyes fall on him or the man to his left?
Steve was well-versed in this routine, he’d been to enough debutante balls to last a veritable lifetime. Usually, he’d enter and make the necessary greetings before grabbing a refreshment and picking a wall to lean on because god help him if he was going to actually dance more than the bare minimum required.
But in this instance, things were different.
Namely, that he hadn’t been able to stop thinking about you since that fateful night. Despite the lack of interest from you (which was to be expected, really), he couldn’t help but think of you fondly. Descending from your coach to check on your driver and the horses, shivering in the evening chill, voice soft and sleep-worn.
There was also the fact that his mother was hovering somewhere behind him. She’d oh so fortunately seen Mrs. Fairchild as she was making her social calls earlier in the week and had received an informal introduction to you. She’d said as much at dinner that day and ever since then, she’d been subtly laying the groundwork for a possible courtship.
And as much as Steve did not want to bow to his mother’s machinations, he also desperately wanted an introduction with you. So he sips his drink and observes the goings on around him his attention turning to the grand staircase as someone announces:
“Presenting Miss Eleanor Joséphine Fairchild, escorted by her brother Mr. Christopher Fairchild.”
The symphony starts up as you descend the stairs to polite applause on the arm of your brother, eyes demure and downcast, your subtly rouged lips pulling into a soft smile. And Steve can hardly breathe— it’s as if the world slowed and went fuzzy at the edges, everything and everyone falling by the wayside save for you.
Because you are positively incandescent; beautifully angelic in your finery and reminiscent of Venus emerging from her shell. He feels as if he’s been struck, a warmth radiating in his chest, and wouldn’t be surprised to find one of Cupid’s golden arrows lodged there. And Steve knows a little of desire, of wanton lust; he is, after all, a man of privilege in a world that caters to his whims. But while this feels reminiscent of that— the heat, the wanting— there is also, oddly, restraint.
All eyes are on you as your brother leads you across the floor, smiling politely at those assembled, eyes never staying on one person for too long. You’re playing nice, presenting an unimpeachable image of the demure lady, it wouldn’t be done to favor one gentleman this evening. In fact, it would send the wrong message entirely.
Everyone present knows this; it is a game often played in polite society, even if its ramifications are— how shall we say it?— best left behind closed doors.
“A lamb and her shepherd,” His mother says, voice pitched low for only him to hear. “Bo-Peep will soon abandon his charge, and that, Steven, is when you will make your introduction.”
It’s all he can do to school his features and recede into himself; eyes glassy and blank, face a mask. Polite and charming, affable even. And while his mother thinks she is being helpful, it’s hard not to believe she isn’t pouring poison in his ear. Half expects her to say something akin to, “Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't.”
She doesn’t, and for that he is grateful. Instead, she melts away into the background and loops her arm through his father’s. And, sure enough, your brother does eventually leave your side only to be replaced by Mrs. Fairchild, who slips your wrist through a dainty loop of cream ribbon with a dance card and a small pencil attached.
The room stills, a pack of wolves lying in wait. Drinks are set aside, conversations cease; Amelia gives her son an unceremonious push forward, her gloved hand on his shoulder tipping him toward the inevitable. Steve nearly stumbles from the shock of it all.
Because in one moment he’s just another man in the crowd, an eligible bachelor at yet another ball prepared to drink the night away. And in the next, his eyes lock with yours, and he feels himself falling. It’s hopeless to fight it, this gravitational pull you seem to have over him; haven’t exchanged even two words, and he’s already in your thrall.
He can see your chest rise with your sharp intake of breath, eyes widening at his approach. Steve’s trying not to spook you, really he is. He thinks back to his favored horse, Balius, the clomping hooves and fierce breaths, tries to calm you in the same manner— a slow approach, a small smile, and soft words.
And while he would never bow to the stubborn dappled stallion, Steve does bow to you and says, “Steven Harrington, a pleasure to meet you officially Miss Fairchild.”
Your eyes light in recognition, of his name or him he cannot tell. But you curtsy all the same and offer him your hand, as etiquette dictates. He takes it gladly, marvelling at the fine fabric of gloves adorning it. His finger finds the racing pulse on the underside of your wrist, running along it slowly.
Another sharp intake of breath at the sensation, a heat skittering underneath your skin as his fingers loop around your wrist, your pulse thudding in their wake.
He opens the booklet and takes his time writing his name, well aware at the gathering of eligible suitors at his back. He’s loathe to release your hand and leave you to all of this, the wolves at the gate, but as much as he wants to whisk you away from what is sure to be an uncomfortable and tiring evening, Steve is required, as is everyone else, to play the game.
And Steven Harrington is playing to win.
Mr. Harrington—
It was a pleasure to make your acquaintance this past Friday, and thank you for your presence. I do hope the evening passed pleasantly for you and my apologies for not seeing to you more frequently, but other obligations, as you well know, prohibited me from seeking your company. Furthermore, I must apologize for being remiss in not offering my sincerest gratitude for the lovely flowers and the gracious use of your equipage. You are truly a generous man, and I am grateful for your friendship.
Cordially yours,
Miss Fairchild
P.S. Merci pour le sauvetage de Monsieur C—. Je n'avais aucune idée sur sa relation avec Mademoiselle C—. J’espère que vote intercession ne reflétera pas mal sur vous. Je vous suis redevable.
_
Steve’s postscript: Please accept my sincerest and deepest condolences on the passing of your parents.
Nell’s postscript: Thank you for the rescue from Mr. C—. I had no idea about his relationship with Miss C—. I hope your intercession will not reflect poorly on you. I am in your debt.
#steve harrington x reader#steve harrington x you#steve harrington fanfic#steve harrington fanfiction#fic: cf & dd
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(sorry youre havin a sad night <3) when you think about nature being beautiful, what the first image that comes to mind?
It's just a place and a time. The Ozarks as they sleep, basking in the May sun, their flanks covered in the white lace of the black locust trees. Their scent is like wisteria and honey. Pollen drifts in flakes through the air in a magical golden snow.
There are animals everywhere. Deer and foxes and rabbits and roadrunners and long black snakes. Raccoons and possums and coyotes, too little loved, and angry little chipmunks. Here and there, hordes of thick green caterpillars. Jeweled hummingbirds slit the air in their courtship dances, and goldfinches flutter-glide-flutter.
In the evening the setting sun lances through the great reaching spars of loblolly pines and it's new and wonderful every time. Black vulture families reel overhead like giant crows before settling down to sleep. The dark comes down. Fireflies bob and weave. Layered little trills and chirps give away the tree frogs, a hustle and rustle gives away the tiny rodents in the leaves, and at night nothing gives away the owls with their reaping claws. Just as silent, the cathedrals of inching kudzu spire the SWEPCO pylons in defiance of the works of humankind.
There's hogs and otters and bear and bobcat and cougar out there, which I have never seen. A thousand moving things in every corner, at every hour.
Even the shale and limestone bones of the earth move in a way, pouring out tiny seeps and rivulets of water. There are hidden springs thick with moss, whose water is as clear as glass. The hills are completely and utterly ancient and alive.
I don't live there, but I really, really love it.
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List 5 facts about a favorite sim of yours, and send this to 10 simblrs whose sims you adore ♥♥♥
Sorry this has been languishing in my inbox for so long but I was devoid of inspiration- but I finally have a (new) Sim I would like to answer this for! Her name is Hil (short for Hilary) Hawkins.
Hil's pronouns are she/ her
She is employed as a gardener by Connor's parents.
Gardening is Hil's lifelong passion and also her sanity.
Hil's hero is Vita Sackville-West and the garden she created at Sissinghurst (below)
Her favourite gardening hack is to burn incense sticks every full moon to placate Erra, ancient god of pestilence. If you do this you will never have to worry about hordes of locusts destroying your roses or rats eating the heads off your dahlias ever again! (it's also an effective deterrent against the bubonic plague, smallpox, cholera, and zombie apocalypses.)
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Escaping Gravity: Izuku went to Nighteye for a work study, but left after he insulted Ochako. And Ochako stole Overhauls Quirk during the raid, but Endeavor wasn't at the raid in canon. So who were Izuku and Ochako working under during the Overhaul Raid?
I was going to joke about the funniest possibility being that Uraraka was kidnapped and the entire Endeavor agency plus Midoriya descended on the Eight Precepts like a horde of locusts.
And then, as I gave my serious answer and researched canon a bit more, I realized it might not be a joke.
Because Midoriya wasn't there, Togata never encountered Eri, meaning that Nighteye never makes the connection regarding the origin of the Quirk-Destroying Bullets. This is important because that's what allowed the raid to happen--they didn't actually have any proof of the Eight Precepts selling the Quirk-Destroyers, it was conjecture from the groups that used it having made dealings with the Precepts in the past. Them seeing Eri covered in bandages is how Nighteye realized the origin of the human cells in the recovered drugs. Nighteye's clowenery only deepens the more I learn.
(Fun fact! Nighteye's investigation on the Precepts had only been happening for two weeks before the raid! That's a detail I forgot about!)
Without that connection, Nighteye is floundering to come up with something to actually pin the Precepts with while they continue to amass power. And Uraraka's relation to AFO was made public at Kamino. It's not a stretch for Overhaul to assume she has the ability to steal Quirks, meaning he can use her for the drugs as well.
(I doubt that would work with nowhere to transfer the Quirk to, but this guy thinks Quirks are caused by rats so he's clearly not the brightest)
Nabbing her on her way to--or, more likely, from the Endeavor Agency while she's tired wouldn't be that hard given the Eight Bullets' Quirks, especially if they ambushed her with the incomplete Quirk-Destroyer.
UA calls Endeavor to ask where Uraraka is, Endeavor replies that she was headed back to UA, they realize that means she's missing and both quickly mobilize. Endeavor finds the dart at the scene, compares notes with Fat Gum, and deduces why she was taken. From there, traffic cameras and similar means can help narrow down who took her and where, giving them plausible connection to the Precepts.
These also means there is a very funny possibility that the Nighteye Agency does not get to participate in this raid.
As for Midoriya, well, it's working out for Uraraka to be at Endeavor's Agency and he would absolutely refuse to sit out her rescue and the Endeavor's Agency is his best bet for that.
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[CHOIR]
(Thus saith the Lord, thus saith the Lord
Thus saith the Lord, thus saith the Lord
Thus saith the Lord, thus saith the Lord
Thus saith the Lord, thus saith the Lord)
Since you refuse to free my people
(Since you refuse to free my people)
All through the land of Gaza
I send a pestilence and plague
Into your house, into your bed
Into your streams, into your streets
Into your drink, into your bread
Upon your cattle, on your sheep
Upon your oxen in your field
Into your dreams, into your sleep
Until you break, until you yield
I send the swarm, I send the horde
Thus saith the Lord
[ISRAEL]
Once I called you brother
Once I thought the chance to have some peace
Was all I ever wanted
[CHOIR]
I send the thunder from the sky
I send the fire raining down
[ISRAEL]
And even now I wish that God had chose another
Serving as your foe on His behalf
Is the last thing that I wanted
[CHOIR]
I send a hail of burning ice
On ev'ry field, on ev'ry town
[ISRAEL]
This is my land
All this pain and devastation
How it tortures me inside
All the innocent who suffer
From your stubbornness and pride
[CHOIR]
I send the locusts on the wind
Such as the world has never seen
On ev'ry leaf, on ev'ry stalk
Until there's nothing left of green
I send my scourge, I send my sword
Thus saith the Lord
[ISRAEL]
You who I called brother
Why must you call down another blow?
[CHOIR]
I send my scourge, I send my sword
[ISRAEL]
Let my people go
[CHOIR]
Thus saith the Lord
[ISRAEL & CHOIR]
Thus saith the Lord
[HAMAS]
I had never called you "brother"
This attack, and every kidnappee and blow
This is what I wanted!
[CHOIR]
I send the swarm, I send the horde
[HAMAS]
Then let my heart be hardened
And never mind how high the cost may grow
This will still be so:
I will never let your people go
[CHOIR]
Thus saith the Lord
[ISRAEL]
Thus saith the Lord
[HAMAS]
I will not...
[(ISRAEL & CHOIR) & HAMAS]
...let your (my) people go!
#ישראל#ישראלבלר#ישראלים#טאמבלר ישראלי#ישראבלר#עם ישראל חי#israel#טמבלר ישראלי#israeli#i stand with israel
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credit to my amazing mutual @butchlesbian-chiprevvington for coming up with the ttcc/disco elysium mix, and unleashing a horde of locusts in my mind /pos.
Detective Monsoon!! Not REALLY on brand with disco elysiums design philosophy, i got MASSIVELY carried away with the color symbolism which i might do a in depth post about later, with this AND the next portrait.
this one is from canon? du bois' perspective, if he met canon misty, though i think he'd just call her STORM WOMAN and almost fall off the pier like twice.
#ttcc#toontown corporate clash#misty monsoon#rainmaker#disco elysium#holly grayelle#gatekeeper#i really loved doing this abstract painterly style so if anyone has any ttcc portrait requests i will try my best to do them!#man i really need 2 set up an askbox huh.. hm.
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*releases a horde of locust*
*eats your horde of bugs again*
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Figured out I can draw an AU where Reyna wasn't kidnapped and taken away from Myrrah. So she'd have grown up with her mom and the locust horde.
Bonus:
Guess im going back to my comfort fandom
#gears of war#my art#they are all my bbgs#I would like to believe that Myrrah would have been a good mother but at the same time I doubt it after gears 5#They will be friends#im so delusional😏#skorge#raam#karn#jermad#reyna diaz#theyre all so hot man#smash then all ngl
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