#but it was definitely the armour
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On The Altar
cw: kidnapping, size difference, attempted human sacrifice, indoctrination, culty vibes, blood, hunting animals for food, self-loathing, allusions to drowning, heights, non-human genitalia, voyeurism, oral sex, threesome, unprotected sex, everyone in this is having a rough time
male dragon x male knight x fem reader
word count: 12k
Your breath caught as you stared at yourself in the mirror and a sort of disappointment washed over you. The white ceremonial dress draped across your form, fitted perfectly to you.Â
You were supposed to look better than you ever had. Your heart sank a little when realized you didnât think you did.Â
Your birthday a few months ago. You thought you looked better then.Â
You should have toned it down, not given yourself such a high bar to clear. It was your own fault, really.Â
It had just been your last one. You'd wanted to make it count
Your head felt heavy with the ceremonial braids in your hair and the golden crown atop your head. It matched the rest of your accessories. Golden bracelets and necklaces and cuffs that circled your biceps.Â
You wondered if it was real gold. Of course, everyone said it was but it seemed like a difficult thing to manage, a whole set of new golden adornments made every year just for it to be lost. A Sisyphean task.Â
You didnât have to worry about that. Your responsibility was far from that of the clothing and jewelry makers. You didnât have to do any work at all, a crowd of women ensuring you didnât so much as lift a finger on your day, bathing you and dressing you in unfamiliar clothes.Â
Youâd spent the whole day preparing. This was the first time youâd had a chance to breathe.Â
Excitement and nerves all swelled inside of you, neither able to snuff the other out.Â
Time was flying by and you werenât sure whether you wanted it to slow or speed up. Part of you wanted to cherish these last few moments but it was almost here. It was almost your time.Â
They tied you up. Not that they had to. You werenât going anywhere. It was just tradition.Â
You forgot to treasure your last moments of sight before someone behind you pulled a blindfold over your eyes.Â
All you were left to do was imagine it. Being pulled from where you stood on the shore, being dragged under the water, the air leaving you as you fulfilled your duty.
And the town saved.Â
Theyâd do it again next year and again the next, just like they had for decades. But this year was yours. You would save them.Â
What a privilege it was to die for them.Â
You wondered if the ropes ruined the lines of your dress. You supposed youâd never find out.Â
Something hooked around your shoulders and you couldnât help but flinch. You took in a big gulp of air instinctually, knowing what was coming.Â
You braced yourself to be dragged forwards and instead slipped backward as you were lifted in the wrong direction. The ground disappeared from under you before you could fall.Â
Your legs kicked, searching for anything below you, but you found nothing. The wind rushed up around you and despite your lack of vision, you could feel that you were rising up and up and up.Â
You were meant to be dragged down to the depths and yet here you were, being hoisted into the sky. Claws dug into your skin and you were still blind and disoriented. Fear overtook you.Â
You reached up and felt at whatever was carrying you, finding scaly skin connected to the strong talons digging into your shoulders.Â
And then, as quickly as youâd been scooped up, you were being dropped. Rocks scraped your skin as you tumbled onto a hard stone floor. The bindings had come undone during the fall and you scrambled for your blindfold, squinting when the harsh light reached your eyes.Â
As your vision began to adjust, you saw an enormous figure in front of you. At first, all you could see was a silhouette. Massive wings curled into the figure and the dragon that was slowly coming into focus in front of you stared right back at you.Â
It was retreating into mounds of shiny things, gold and silver, old pieces of armour and crowns and candelabras piled into the cave youâd been thrown into.Â
It stood out amongst the collection, a hulking creature with scales that shone a dark bronze that matched little of his horde. It was probably 20 feet long, its head cocked to the side as it watched you.Â
Your instincts screamed at you to run, to get as far away from the creature as possible.Â
You took a deep breath and tried to steady yourself. If you tried to run it could just scoop you up again. Besides, the last thing you wanted to do was activate a hunting instinct. Maybe right now, covered in gold jewelry, he saw you as something for his horde. It was certainly preferable to the alternative.Â
He didnât seem to be eating you, which you took as a good sign. Maybe if you removed the gold from yourself, it would lose interest in you and you could sneak out. If you rushed and were lucky, maybe you could even make it back in time. A sacrifice without the ceremonial adornments wasnât ideal but it would certainly be better than nothing.Â
You slowly lifted your hand to the golden cuff on your bicep, praying it wouldnât think you were trying to take it. You tried to rip it from the white fabric of your dress, wanting to return home with at least some of your dignity, and your clothes, intact.Â
Its head tilted further to the side and then a voice sounded, echoing off the walls. âWhat are you doing? Why would you ruin such a lovely dress?â
You froze at the noise, looking up wide-eyed at the creature. It couldnât have. That wasnât possible. Dragons were forces of chaos. Mindless beasts, nothing more.Â
You blinked slowly, wondering if maybe you hadnât woken up this morning quite yet. Or perhaps youâd been pulled underwater too quickly to notice and this was the oxygen deprivation messing with your mind.Â
âHello,â you responded.Â
Its jaw opened to reveal layers of teeth in a ghoulish imitation of a smile. âHello!â
You felt your heart stutter in your chest. âWhat⌠why did you take me?â You tried your best to keep your voice steady. The last thing you wanted was to upset the creature.Â
âYou were out there to be taken, yes?â
Oh. You supposed you were. Perhaps youâd been sending mixed messages to the monsters of the world.Â
You wondered if maybe some town made sacrifices just like you to dragons.
âI was,â you said cautiously. âBut not for you. For the creatures of the deep. Fishing is our life, itâs how we survive. We need the waters to be safe.â
âNot⌠what? Youâre⌠but I thought. So you werenât out there for me?â He sounded heartbroken.Â
âItâs fine,â you said, keeping your voice level. âMisunderstandings happen. Just take me back and everything will be fine.â
âNo, it doesnât make sense. Youâre covered in gold. You canât just cover someone in gold and not expect a dragon to come snatch them up. You must have known. You must be for me.â
âWell, Iâm not. And I would love to go home now.â
âWhat do they even want with you?â it asked, avoiding any discussion of bringing you back. âI donât know much about humans but I know you arenât water creatures. They couldnât even take you anywhere, theyâd have to come all the way up to visit you every day.â
Now it was your turn to be confused. âWhat?â
Youâd assumed heâd taken you for the same reasons as the creatures you sacrificed maidens to every year. To take and consume, to feel worshiped. But it sounded like this dragon had entirely different ideas as to why a monster would want a sacrifice.Â
âI wouldnât have to just visit you,â he said. âI could be with you all the time. Take good care of you. No water involved. Iâd keep you warm and fed and completely dry.â
âIâm not given to be a pet,â you snapped.Â
The creature reeled back and began backpedaling instantly. âI didnât mean youâre like a pet, I just meantâŚâ
âThey were going to kill me,â you said. âIâm a sacrifice. They need to kill me. Itâs the only way.â
It took him a minute to understand what you could possibly mean by that. You could practically see the wheels turning in his head as he tried to understand.Â
You didnât have time for this. âJust take me back,â you pleaded with him.Â
He paused. âTheyâre going to kill you?â
âItâs none of your concern what theyâre going to do.â
He dropped his head low, resting it on his tail with a huff. âThen Iâm not taking you anywhere.â
Your heart sank. âI canât believe this is happening.â
âI canât let them hurt you.â
You let out an exasperated groan, burying your head in your hands. âIt has to happen, without it so many more will perish.Â
âWhat if I start terrorizing your village!â the dragon said, with the intonation of someone whoâd just had a great idea but none of the content. âOr say I would if I didnât have you. Then your sacrifice wonât have been for nothing.â
Reasoning with him was starting to seem pointless. âPlease donât.â
âWell, either way, Iâm not letting you go back. If I let you go, it would be like I hurt you. No, you can stay here.â
You could not do this, couldnât argue with this strange creature who was incapable of understanding how vital it was that you returned so your town had its proper sacrifice.Â
You stormed over to the corner of the cave, leaning against the cold stone wall with a huff.Â
He just stared at you, neverendingly, undeterred by your attitude.Â
âIt canât be comfortable over there,â he called out to you.
âLeave me alone!â you shouted back, curling in further on yourself.Â
He wanted to approach you, you could tell that much. His hesitation was evident and he took small steps forwards before pulling himself back, repeating the gesture over and over until he seemed to come to a conclusion.Â
âAlright. I can go for a while. Donât hurt yourself.âÂ
With that, he gave you a final once-over and flew out of the cave.Â
He was hard to read. The way a dragon worked was unfamiliar to you. The most you could do was take guesses and try your best. Hopefully, you wouldnât be around long enough to figure out the intricacies of dragon body language.Â
You should run. If you were going to have a chance to escape, this would be it.Â
As you edged out of the cave, your dreams of making it down the mountain were crushed. There was, technically, a sort of path down the mountain. It was barely a few feet wide with a sheer cliff at the edge of it.Â
You hadnât eaten since this morning. You were scared and exhausted and there was a slight tremor in your hands you couldnât quite seem to rid yourself of. There was no way you could safely traverse that path.Â
You went back into the cave with a huff, waiting for your captor to return.Â
Eventually, he did, blood dripping down his face as he dropped an animal in front of you. It was hard to tell what it was with the way it was mangled. It was clearly a fresh kill.Â
You stared blankly at him, edging further away and into the cave wall.Â
At your lack of reaction, he nudged the creature towards you. âYou should eat,â he said.Â
âI canât eat that.â
You prayed he wouldnât try and force you.Â
âWhy donât you just eat me?â you spat at him. âAt least it would be better than this.âÂ
At least then you wouldnât have to live with the knowledge that youâd failed, and your village would pay the price.Â
He tilted his head once more. âWhy would I do that? Iâve wanted to meet a human for a very very long time. Iâve got another friend too, come look.â
He started to wander back into the cave, behind piles of gold and you hesitantly followed him on shaky legs.Â
When you reached the back of the dark cave, you found a single, frightened sheep sitting atop a massive patch of grass that seemed to have been uprooted from the ground.Â
âI took him from a field. I couldnât eat him, he had sad eyes.â
��Do I have sad eyes?â you asked. Maybe that was why he insisted on keeping you, refusing to let you go back home.Â
He looked at you and as hard as it was to read the facial expressions of a dragon, you knew exactly what he was thinking.
âIs it that bad?â you asked as you looked away.
âNot bad. You just look like you're hurting.â
If you were it was because of him. This was supposed to be the best day of your life, the only day that mattered. And instead, you were here, looking at a poor terrorized sheep who was in the same position you were in.Â
âSo, what can you eat?â the dragon asked. Before you could give an answer, it said, âNevermind, Iâve got an idea.â
You didnât get the chance to ask him what it was. He was off again, moving through the cave until you heard the telltale flapping noise that meant you were alone once more.
You looked down at the sheep again.Â
Maybe not entirely alone.Â
He returned swiftly with a whole market cart in tow. It had piles of bread in it, although they were a little worse for wear from the flight. You had no doubt that some unsuspecting farmers had found it raining loaves of bread as he made his way back.Â
You were too hungry to worry about scolding him for the thievery. You grabbed the first piece you could get your hands on and took the biggest bite you were capable of.
Your dragon watched, seemingly entranced by the sight.Â
As you chewed your first bite of freshly baked bread he asked, âI did alright this time?â
You nodded, unable to speak through the mouthful of food.Â
As you finished scarfing down your bread, you sat in the grass with your new sheep companion and asked your captor, âDo you have a name?â
The dragon considered this for a moment. âNo. No one has ever needed to call me anything.â
âOh. I thought dragons would have names.â
âThey do. Just not me.â
You looked up at him, brow furrowed. âWhat, just you?â
He hummed in acknowledgment, the vibrations from the noise cascading through the stone under you. âDidnât bother to give me one. I was the runt so you know how it is. Or maybe you donât. I donât really know how people work. With dragons, the littlest one always has to go. Thatâs the way it is.â
âOh. Iâm sorry.â
âItâs fine. I get a little lonely but now youâre here!â
You rolled your eyes, collapsing back into the grass. If you closed your eyes you could pretend you were outside your village lying in a field instead of trapped in a dark cave on a cold mountain. âYeah, now Iâm here.â
The moment couldnât last. It was too cold, there was no wind. The air smelled different.Â
âYou know,â you said. âWe had stories about dragons. Big terrifying ones that wanted to hurt people. My mother used to tell me stories of Pytho. I was so scared of him when I was little.â
âOh.â You heard his wings rustle and opened one of your eyes to peek over at him, shuffling uncomfortably in place.Â
âI could call you Pytho,â you added. âItâs the only dragon name I know.â
âIf you think it fits, I suppose. I thought you said he was big and scary?â
You laughed. âWell, from my perspective, youâre pretty big and scary.â
Instead of being pleased at your words, he reeled back. âAre you scared of me?â
You shrugged. âI was. Not so much anymore. Honestly, I think on any other day, I wouldâve liked youâ
âBut not today?â
You shook your head. âNot today.â
âWell then,â he said as he began to curl up into a ball, âMaybe tomorrow.â
You backed up, leaning against the cold wall, and tried to suppress your tears at the thought that there would be a tomorrow for you at all.Â
When you woke up, it was all still real. A dragon snored beside you as a sheep stared at you with the saddest gaze youâd ever seen.Â
Maybe, as you looked at it, it thought the same thing about you.Â
Pytho stirred from his slumber, immediately turning to check on you. Â
When you felt his warm breath directed at you, you realized just how cold you were. Not that you were going to do anything about it. Your only source of warmth was the dragon in front of you and you were going to go nowhere near him.Â
You clench your fists, doing your best to stop the shivering.Â
He didnât seem to notice. With the warmth that he radiated, you were sure that the concept of being cold was something that was foreign to him.Â
You turned away from the creature. If he wouldnât take you back, the least you could do was deprive him of your attention.
It wasnât much but it was all you had.Â
The day passed slowly but still, it passed. You spent it wallowing in the corner.Â
Pytho left you alone after the first few outbursts. He seemed to understand that you needed your space. You could appreciate him for at least that much.Â
As the sun began to set once more, you began to realize just how much warmth and light the day had brought to this miserable cave.Â
You curled in on yourself, not far from how Pytho slept.Â
You watched him begin to settle in for the night and saw a moment of hope where he tried to move closer to you. You glared at him and he stopped in his tracks.Â
âYouâre still upset with me,â he noted.Â
âOf course I am. Thereâs nothing for me now. It was supposed to be over and now itâs not. You took that from me.â
âI took your ending,â he said, and you knew he understood.
âYou did.â
âYouâll find a new ending someday.â
âBut that one was mine. It mattered,â you said, frustrated that he couldnât seem to get it.
âYou matter.â
You scoffed. âI did.â
âYou do.â
You turned away from him with a huff. âYou donât understand. You canât.â
âGoodnight, little human.â
You fell into a fitful sleep against the cold stone of the cave. When you woke, however, you felt warm and safe.Â
You opened your eyes to find Pytho standing over you, his body heat covering you in waves of warmth, even when he wasnât touching you.Â
âYou were shivering,â he said, like it was that simple. You were cold, he was warm. There wasnât anything else to be done. You hadnât even known he understood what shivering was.Â
You slid away from him, back into the cold.Â
He watched you. Thatâs all he ever seemed to do. Watch you. âYouâre mad at me but youâre punishing yourself.â
You didnât dignify that with a response. âLet me go back.â
âI will not.â
You tried to sleep again but the cold felt harsher now, crueler. It was your turn to watch him, remember the waves of heat across your skin.Â
You waited until his breathing leveled out, the rise and fall of his chest becoming uniform. You couldnât handle a smug look or excitement. You just needed to sleep.Â
You took the few steps between you slowly and gently leaned against his side.Â
Almost instantly, without thinking, he curled around you, bundling you up in a nest of warm scales. His breathing was steady against your side.Â
Youâd never slept better.Â
You woke to find his head a few inches from yours, propped up on his tail and staring at you with a soft gaze.Â
âGood morning,â he said.
You gave him a hum of acknowledgment back.Â
You were wracked with guilt. How could you be enjoying this, allowing yourself even these minor comforts? It wasnât right. None of this was right.Â
You pulled away from him, feeling sick.
Traitor. Youâd betrayed them after theyâd put so much trust in you. Who knew what was happening to them now, while you slept feeling warm and comfortable.Â
âYou still want to go?â he asked in hushed tones as you backed away, clearly afraid of the answer.Â
You nodded. âIâm always going to want to go. I have to make this right.â
He let out a pained whine and moved towards you slowly, giving you the chance to stop him.Â
You didnât.
âYou could be happy here,â he insisted. âWhy wonât you just be happy here?â
âIt just wasnât meant to be."Â
âDonât want you to get hurt,â he whined out.Â
You pressed your forehead to his. âDoes it not matter what I want?â
He let out a huff and hot air cascaded over your face. He was always so warm.Â
You pressed a kiss to his scaly nose. âI know you want to help, but I have to do this. Please let me do this.â
And he stared. Just stared at you, like he was drinking it in, trying to memorize you.Â
Finally, his face fell and you knew exactly what it meant.Â
âIf you change your mindâŚâ he said. âIf you ever get the chance, come back to me. Youâll always have a safe place here.â
You nodded, still holding his head in your hands. You knew you never would, but it was nice to imagine returning someday.Â
You looked down at your dress, dirty and torn, and you finished ripping off the golden cuff youâd started to tear days ago.Â
âYou can have this if you want. For what could have been.â
His eyes were glassy. You didnât know dragons could cry. He grasped the golden cuff in his talons, tucking it away far from the rest of the gold, instead next to his beloved sheep. âFor what could have been.â
A forlorn laugh escaped you as you looked at him. All three of you had sad eyes now.Â
Before either of you had the chance to rethink it, he moved towards the mouth of the cave and you followed.Â
Familiar talons grasped your shoulders and you were off again.Â
This time, there was no blindfold. An entire landscape unfolded below you and you watched towns and rivers and forests pass you by at incredible speeds.Â
Your hands reached up to grab Pythoâs legs, the seer distance to the ground making you dizzy.Â
The flight was shorter than you remembered. You wished it wasnât but as your feet touched grass, real grass rooted in the real ground, you knew there was nothing to be done.Â
He dropped you off near the village but still outside of it. It was for the best, you couldnât imagine anyone inside the town would be particularly pleased to see him. Worst case scenario, they might even try and hurt him.Â
As soon as youâd properly landed he flew off, leaving you behind. No parting words, no last look. Before you knew it he was gone, a distant silhouette on a blue sky.Â
 Good. You didnât want him to see what might happen here anyways.Â
The walk back was too quiet. You could hear the birds and the wind but none of it was enough to drown out the blood rushing in your ears.Â
You didnât know why your heart was pounding so loudly. This was what you wanted. You were back, ready to repent for the crime of being stolen.Â
The first person who saw you was a boy. He couldnât have been more than ten. He wandered on the outskirts of the village but as soon as he saw you he turned and ran back into the town, probably telling tales of your miraculous homecoming.Â
Youâd been so caught up in your return you had managed to think of little else but now, as you neared society once more, you realized what a mess youâd become. Your sacrificial dress was brown with now much dirt it had collected, ripped and shredded and hanging off of you in tatters. You were sure your face and hair were just as dirty.Â
You walked further and further into town, unsure of what to do with yourself. Youâd assumed someone else would tell you what to do but instead, they grouped together and stared, whispering and pointing as you trudged your way through the village.Â
As you reached the center of town, you found a gathering waiting for you.Â
You stopped in front of them, waiting as they inspected you. The same people whoâd helped ready you and told you how vital you were to the town now looked down at you with thinly veiled disdain plastered across their faces.Â
âI came back as soon as I could,â you said, your voice sounding small and weak.Â
The man at the front of the group, the one who chose the sacrifices, made speeches about its vitalness every year, spoke. His voice boomed across the gathering. It didnât feel fair. He was accustomed to speaking to crowds like this. You werenât meant for this, of course you sounded small. âWe chose another,â he said, and his words echoed in your ears.Â
Your heart sank in your chest. Of course they did. What else would they have done? At least it meant the town was safe. So why did it sting so badly?Â
âI can do it next year,â you said. âPlease, let me do it next year. Iâm here now.â
The man turned up his nose at you. âYou abandoned your post.â
You could feel yourself getting more and more frantic as he spoke. âNo, I was taken. I came back as soon as I could, I promise! Please.â
âAn example must be made.â
You nodded, searching for a way out, any way you could still be useful. âAnything. Iâll do anything.â
The women whoâd helped you bathe and get dressed a few days prior surged forwards, grasping at your arms. They held you in place as you refused to struggle.Â
âThis is what happens to deserters,â he called out over the crowd.
You could barely think, barely hear his words.Â
The fact that youâd been replaced kept running through your mind. Youâd been raised for this. It was all youâd ever wanted. Youâd dreamed of it.Â
You werenât so sure you wanted it anymore.Â
It didnât matter anyways. It was too late. Youâd left.Â
The man chanting to the crowd pulled out a knife.Â
It felt like what you deserved. Your chest tightened with guilt and fear. Now it wouldnât even be for anything. Just an example, nothing more.Â
Maybe it was saving them, in a way. Saving them from an epidemic of girls who thought they could escape it and damn the town in the meantime. Maybe you still could die for something.Â
A thudding sound echoes in your ears, slightly out of time with your heartbeat. It felt almost grounding, helped you ignore the chants of deserter and heathen. You didnât have the strength to try and defend yourself, to insist that no, youâd fought to come back. You werenât even sure you believed that anymore. You latched onto the thudding, anything to get those words out of your head.Â
And then the arms that had held you down were being ripped away and instead you found yourself being lifted. This was not the endless upwards motion of your dragon. Instead, you found yourself hoisted onto the back of a horse.Â
Hard metal dug into your side and you looked up to see a knight in full armour, his face hidden by his helm and his arm hooked around your waist.Â
You pounded your fists against him, fighting to be let go. âNo!â you shouted. âI need to do this. I need to be forgiven.â
The knight's grip on you tightened and the horse you were both on sped up. Neither seemed to find your fighting anything more than mildly inconvenient.Â
Before long, your struggle slowed. You were becoming very used to the intense frustration that accompanied being trapped, being taken away with no regard for what you wanted.Â
You lost track of time as you rode. Youâd just been trying to make things right, even if you couldnât do what you were meant to do. The universe seemed intent on stopping you.Â
Maybe youâd done something wrong, offended the cosmos so severely you were no longer permitted to do what you were meant for.Â
As the horse slowed, the knight's grip on you loosened.Â
He set you gently on the ground in the midst of this unfamiliar forest and you glared up at him.Â
âCan I go now?â you hissed. âOr am I still being kidnapped?â
âThere were going to kill you,â he said as he dismounted his horse.
âYou donât know what was going on,â you insisted. âMaybe I deserved it.â
He rummaged around in his saddlebag. âMaybe.â
You reeled back a little, not expecting him to agree with you. âOh. Can I go back then?â
âNo. Here, eat this.â He held out some dried meat in your direction.
You refused it. It would be a waste anyways.Â
âWhy canât I go?â you asked. If he didnât even know if you were in the right, what reason could he possibly have for taking you?Â
âIâve heard about your village, you know. I was worried I was too late. Theyâve messed with your mind. Itâs not your fault but youâre not making good choices right now.â
âMy choices are fine,â you shouted. âWho are you to decide that? You donât even know what I did.â
âWhat did you do?â
âI shirked my duty. I should have been there.â
âFor what?â
âTo be their sacrifice.â
âYou didnât deserve that.â
You did, but he couldnât know that. It was beyond him.Â
It was hard to remember where you were. It didnât make sense. Why werenât you home? Or were you? You knew that you should be. Why wouldnât you be?Â
You saw your dress, dirty and crumpled and ripped. Youâd ruined it. How would you go through with the ritual now?Â
Something in you always knew youâd ruin it somehow. And now things were all wrong. Who elseâs fault could it be?
The knight pushed some food at you and once again you were in a forest far from home.Â
You threw it back at him. âI said I donât want it. Arenât you going to eat?â
That damn helmet stared back at you for a moment before he said, âMaybe later.â
âDo you have a name?â you asked, desperate to get anything from him.Â
âPhillip.â
You missed your dragon. At least you could see his face and try to figure out what he was thinking.Â
He got up without warning, and you jumped a little at the sudden movement.Â
He froze for a second as you did, staring down at you before continuing on, trudging through the nearby bushes.Â
He returned in a few moments.Â
âThereâs a pond back there,â he said, gesturing towards the foliage. âItâs not too cold, you should be fine.â He started to move back towards his horse before pausing for a moment and adding, âIt might make you feel better.â
You went to inspect this pond as he tended to his horse.Â
It was a small pond, the trees around it curling over the top of it, mostly blocking out the sun. You dipped your foot into the water and found that the knight was technically right, it wasnât cold enough to hurt you. It still wasnât a pleasant temperature but right now it was the best you were going to get.Â
As you tested out the water, you watched from behind the bushes as he mounted his horse and started to ride away.Â
It made sense. You wouldnât want to keep you around either. At this point, you were just ungrateful dead weight.Â
You considered taking off your dress and attempting to keep it dry but at this point, it consisted more of rips and dirt than anything. Dousing it in water might do it some good.Â
You sunk into the cold water, doing your best to get the dirt out of your hair. As long as you were in here, you might as well attempt to get clean.Â
You wondered if you could find your way back to Pythoâs cave. If you could manage to get close you were sure heâd be able to find you. At least you hoped he would. It was the only place you had left to go.Â
You had no real desire to prolong the bath in the cold water. You just didnât know what came next. After this, where could you even go?
Your fingers began to prune and you know you couldnât do this forever.Â
As you exited the pool in your sopping wet, muddy, ripped ceremonial dress, you decided you needed to go. You werenât sure if you were trying to find your village or Pytho but it didnât really matter, you had no sense of what direction either was in. You just needed to be headed somewhere.Â
You made it half a dozen steps before you collapsed.Â
You didnât even notice heâd returned until he was right in front of you, staring down at you collapsed in the dirt in your soaking-wet dress.Â
You watched his helmet as he looks you up and down, lingering a second too long on your chest before snapping his head back up towards your face.
He cleared his throat and you would have bet money that his face was bright red beneath his helm.Â
âApologies, my lady. I thought you might want some fresh clothes.â
He held out some folded clothes with a pair of leather boots balanced atop them.Â
No. It wasnât right. This was supposed to be the last outfit you ever wore. It felt like a betrayal to take it off.Â
âNo thank you,â you said from your spot on the ground. âIâll stick with what I have.â
âI know theyâre not much but theyâll fit.â
You shook your head again.Â
You heard a quiet, muffled sigh escape him. âThe sun is setting, youâll freeze to death if you wear those. You can change back in the morning if you really want to.â
You eyed him suspiciously. âPromise?â
He nodded. âPromise.â
You took the clothes with a sigh. âFine. Turn around.â
Youâd never seen him move so fast. It was like he was afraid youâd start stripping the second you decided to change.Â
A giggle escaped you and you watched his shoulders tense up at the noise. It seemed like the two of you were having entirely different kinds of crises.Â
You got dressed as quickly as you could, a chill starting to set deep in your bones. Heâd found you a faded red tunic that hung midway down your thighs and some pants that miraculously fit pretty well.Â
The boots had thick woolen socks inside and putting them on felt like heaven. You swore youâd never wear pretty shoes again as long as these were an option.Â
You didnât bother telling Phillip he could turn around. Heâd figure it out in his own time. Or he wouldnât. It wasnât really your problem.Â
As you got ready to sleep, you watched him, keeping track of time as best you could. It took him about twenty minutes before he finally peeked over his shoulder, finding you sitting with your back against a tree.Â
You gave him a halfhearted smile and he cleared his throat. âYou should rest now,â he said. âWe have to leave at dawn.â
âAnd when are you going to stop dragging me around with you?â
âWhenever youâd like. I can drop you off at a town tomorrow. I just have something I need to attend to firstâ
You knew by now not to get hopeful. âCan you drop me off at my town?â You kept asking but you didnât know what the point of it was. There was nothing for you there anymore. The most you could do was repent. Pay for what youâd done. But for what?
âI can drop you off at any other town.â
You slid down the tree, basically lying on the ground. âAlright.Â
He spent the rest of the night in full armour and you wondered if maybe part of him thought you might attack him. Either that or these woods were more dangerous than you knew.Â
He awoke you the second the sun began to peek over the horizon and you groaned, trying to kick him away from you.Â
He would not be deterred, coaxing you up and onto the back of his horse. You got on behind him and wrapped your arms around him for stability with minimal protest. You didnât have the energy to fight him on it.Â
It took you too long to realize you'd left your dress behind, discarded in the mud.
The ride was much more comfortable when you werenât being held captive.Â
Forests and plains and mountains passed, all foreign and strange. Youâd never left your town before, never seen anything like this. Even in your bad mood, it was hard not to admire it.Â
Your heart stopped as you noticed one of the mountains that the two of you were fast approaching seemed familiar.Â
It had taken you too long to recognize it but in your defense, you were used to seeing it from a cave right at the peak.
You shut your eyes and prayed to anyone that might be listening that youâd ride right by it.Â
If the gods were listening, they had a special hatred for you. You werenât sure you could blame them.Â
 Phillip lead the horse along the precarious path youâd deemed too dangerous only days ago.
You needed to figure out a plan but you had nothing.Â
With only a few minutes left before you reached the peak, Phillip dismounted, holding out his hand to help you down. You half considered trying to take his horse to go warn Pytho but you had no real idea how to ride one on your own and you couldnât shake the feeling youâd ride the pair of you right off the cliff edge. The poor creature didnât deserve that.Â
You dismounted and Phillip nodded, getting right back on the horse. âYou stay here, I wonât be long.â
âNo,â you yelled, a little louder than was necessary. Phillip flinched, probably worried it had echoed up the mountain and warned the dragon at the top of his presence. You hoped it had. âI want to come.â
âThese are dangerous lands, mâlady. I will not let you get hurt.â
You scowled at him. âYou know, people wonât stop saying that to me.â
The helm stared down at you, unwavering, before he gave his horse a swift kick in the side and it rode up the narrow path.Â
You took off in a dead sprint after him.Â
You neared the top of the path, panting, just in time to see Phillip creeping into the cave, sword drawn and at the ready.Â
You had no idea what to do. You couldnât just stand here and do nothing but you felt frozen in place.Â
The problem was, youâd rather neither of them were hurt. It felt like an impossible situation.Â
Pytho needed to be warned but as gentle as heâd been with you, he could decimate Phillip in a second. That much you were certain of, no matter how competent of a knight Phillip might be.Â
You finally willed yourself to move, darting into the cave to see Pytho standing over Phillip, who had his sword positioned right at the dragonâs neck.Â
Before you could even think, you shouted, âDonât hurt him!â
You had no real idea which of them you were talking to but both stopped in their tracks, heads spinning towards you.Â
For one moment you were terrified one would take advantage of the distraction to harm the other and then their blood would be on your hands. Before the worry had time to settle, Pytho swung his tail around, hitting Phillip over the head with it.Â
He instantly collapsed to the ground, going limp.Â
You rummaged around in the saddlebag as Pytho stared at you. When you finally found rope you raised it triumphantly.Â
Pythoâs gaze followed it up. âWhat is that?â he asked as you rushed towards the knight.Â
âItâs rope,â you informed him as you tried and failed to drag him across the floor. As soon as Pytho realized what you were doing, he swept him effortlessly into the corner for you.Â
You bound his hands behind his back, tethering him to some heavy golden chair that would at least slow any escape he tried to make.Â
âYouâre back,â Pytho said behind you, his voice airy and incredulous and so very grateful.Â
You turned from binding the knight with a big smile. âI am. I was afraid I wouldnât be able to make it back but this guy led me right here,â he said, nudging at him with your foot.Â
He didnât seem to hear any of it. âI canât believe youâre back.â His eyes were wide, refusing to leave you.Â
You nodded, grabbing Phillipâs abandoned sword and throwing it right off the mountain, listening to the clanging noises as it bounced all the way down. You glanced nervously at Phillip as you returned, leading his horse over by the sheep. âI am. This is so rude but can you please go for a couple minutes? If youâre still here when he wakes Iâm afraid he might perish from fright.â
He nodded. âIf thatâs what you want. I will be back.âÂ
He bumped his head lightly into you before heading out, flying off somewhere.Â
And not a moment too soon.Â
The knight stirred from his slumber. The only way you could tell was by how his helm slowly moved up, rising to meet your gaze.Â
The second he did he tried to move before realizing he was bound. âWhy?â he asked you. âI donât understand, you⌠Was this all a trap?â His voice cracked and he sounded genuinely hurt by the betrayal.Â
You felt a pang of sympathy in your chest as he struggled against his bindings. Quiet fearful noises escaped him as he glanced between you and Pythoâs horde.
You shushed him, your hands up in a quiet surrender. âWeâre not going to hurt you. Youâll be just fine.â
âWe? Youâre in cahoots with this monster?â
You bristled at the harsh langue but did your best to be forgiving to the frightened man.Â
âHeâs not a monster. He helped me. Why are you even here? He hasnât hurt anyone.â
âThatâs not what I heard. From what Iâve heard heâs been snatching up women.â
You groaned, rubbing at your temples. As you did, the knight leaned forward as much as he could and even through the stoic armour, you could tell exactly when he realized.Â
âNo. But⌠but youâŚ.â
âI just wanted to help my people. I donât know why every creature within a thousand miles is trying to stop me.â
âIf he took you, how did you escape?â
âI didnât. I asked him to let me go, to be able to make my own choices, and he did. Because he respects me and didnât kidnap me on the back of a horse!â You tactfully decided to omit the original kidnapping. At least for now. You had a feeling it wouldnât help your case.Â
âPlease, itâs a dragon, itâŚâ
âHe! Heâs a dragon! And at least heâs allowed me to make decisions.â
He reeled back. âI⌠you were going to get yourself killed. I couldnât just let you get yourself killed. It isnât right.â
âAnd itâs not your choice to make.â
He hung his head, helmet clanging against his chest plate.Â
Pytho chose then to return, his tail swishing happily as he walked. He rubbed up against your side, letting out a happy rumble as he did.Â
âSo they let you go?â Pytho asked, ignoring the man on the floor.Â
âNot exactly. They were going to kill me. They wanted to make an example of me.â You couldnât help but smile. âI canât imagine that the example they wanted to set was getting rescued by a knight but I suppose thatâs the hand they were dealt.Â
Pytho turned his gaze to Phillip. âYou saved her?â
He nodded hesitantly.Â
Another pleased noise escaped Pytho. âHeâs a good one. Iâm glad you didnât let me kill him.â
âAbout that,â you said and you watched Phillip freeze up, all of his limbs locking. You glanced at him, adding, âI said we werenât going to hurt you, calm down. I was just going to say, Pytho, you should let him go.â
The dragon tilted his head. âWhy? I like him, heâs shiny.â
You suppressed a laugh. âHeâs not shiny, his armour is. Itâs like clothing.â
âOh. Why do you creatures insist on that stuff? Seems awfully restrictive.â
Phillip cut into your conversation, saying, âI canât leave.â
You looked over at him, a wave of irritation rushing through you. âWhy not?â
âI canât leave you here with this beast.â
You had half a mind to throw something at him. âGet this through your head, I donât need you to save me.â
âIt wouldnât be right,â he continued, undeterred.Â
âFine. But Iâm not untying you and risking you hurting him.â
âFine.â
âFine.â
Pythoâs head swiveled between the two of you as you bickered. As the argument finally finished, he asked in a hushed tone, although still lough enough that Phillip could hear, âDoes that mean we get to keep him.â
You snorted. âGuess so. Itâs your lucky day.â
âIt really is,â he said, voice as genuine as it could be.Â
The sunlight was fast fading and you knew how cold it could get in here. You had no intention of sleeping alone but you glanced at your mostly willing captive.Â
âPytho?â you called out.Â
He turned to you immediately. âYes? Do you need something?â
âCould you go get some wood?â
âOf course I can,â he said, already speeding off.Â
When he returned, he had a whole tree in his mouth and another in his talons, dirt still clinging to their roots.Â
You bent over laughing as he dropped them both in front of you, tail swishing behind him. Theyâd barely fit through the mouth of the cave, filling up a significant amount of the room and knocking over at least one pile of gold in the meantime.Â
You got to work snapping off some of the more reasonably sized branches, having Pytho move the trees back outside as you finished.Â
You set them up a few feet away from Phillip, far enough away that heâd be safe but could still feel the warmth.Â
âYou can breathe fire right?â you called back to Pytho. It would be unfortunate if he couldnât because you did not have the proper tools to start one here.Â
He nodded, visibly eager. âDo you need one?â
âJust on the sticks here. Make sure not to burn anyone,â you said, nearing Phillip to ensure that he didnât forget there was a person inside of the shiny armour and cook him.Â
With a quick and surprisingly controlled burst of flame, the pile of sticks turned into a quaint little fire.Â
You gave Phillip a pat on the shoulder as you headed over to Pytho. âGoodnight. Have fun sleeping in full armour.â
He didnât respond.Â
You left the fire behind to go curl up with Pytho. No fire could compare to his warm scales, of that you were certain.Â
A happy rumble escaped him and ran through you as you leaned against him.Â
He spoke in hushed tones, face right in front of yours as his tail curled around you. âI canât believe you came back.â
âI shouldnât have,â you said, giving him a quick kiss on his snout. âBut I think I realized I didnât really want to be anywhere else.â
His head leaned into your touch immediately, a wistful look in his eyes.Â
âI wish I could do that.â
âWhat, kiss me?â you asked with a laugh. âWell, how do dragons kiss?â
Without another word he licked a long stripe up the side of your face, leaving a sticky residue behind.Â
You giggled as you felt his spit on your cheek. âWell, my way is definitely less messy.â
He let out a noise that sounded almost like a purr, resting his head in your lap. âI like it your way.â
You hummed quietly and you wished he could feel it reverberating through his body the way you did for him. You curled happily into warm scales, surrounded by an overwhelming sense of safety, and fell asleep in your new home.Â
The next morning, you realized you had no idea how to tell if Phillip was awake or not. He could have escaped and left only his empty armour behind and it would be impossible to tell.Â
What you did know was that he hadnât eaten.Â
Pytho still had some slightly stale bread from your last stay here and youâd brought in all of Phillipâs supplies. You grabbed some dried meat and the freshest of the bread that you could find, heading over to him.Â
âGood morning,â you said, hoping he could hear you.
He shifted, just barely, to turn to you. It seemed like the most positive reaction you could hope for.Â
âOkay, you need to eat. Here, just let me.â You went to lift his helm but paused as he flinched away from your hand.Â
âPlease donât.â His voice was low and shaky.Â
You backed off, keeping your hands up and away from him. âOkay,â you said, âBut you do need to eat.âÂ
There wasnât any other way to do it. You reached behind him, pressed close to him as you untied his hands. As you struggled with the knots, you felt his breath hitch in his chest.Â
After a few moments, you pulled away from the newly freed knight, rope in hand. âTada.â
He froze once more, something you were getting used to, and just stared down at the rope for a minute, flexing his hands by his sides.Â
With no warning, he grabbed the food youâd gathered for him and stood on shaky legs, giving you a small nod before he headed out toward the mouth of the cave. It was near where the animals were being kept, tied up to some golden pillar near the front. If he wanted to, he could leave here and now.
You waited patiently for him, avoiding looking in his direction, even if you were sure heâd gone far enough that you wouldnât be able to see him.Â
He quickly returned, fast enough that he must have scarfed down his food.
He presented his hands to you and it took a second to realize he was waiting to be tied up again.
You scoffed, looking at him dubiously. âIs that really necessary?â It seemed silly to tie him up again after that.
His hands stayed out and you rolled your eyes as you grabbed the rope.Â
You tied them in front of him this time, taking much less care with the knots as you did.Â
âWhere are you a knight of?â you asked as you pulled the knot taut. âI see no insignias anywhere on you. That doesnât seem normal.â
âMy kingdom is long gone, mâlady.â
âStill so respectful, even after everything Iâve put you through. Well, sir knight, how can you be a knight with no kingdom to serve?â
His head cocked to the side as if baffled by the question. âI know nothing else.â
You paused a moment before asking. âHow long have you been doing this?â
He remained ever impossible to read, although that never stopped you from trying. After a long, stoic pause, he simply shrugged and said, âIâve lost track of the years.â
âAnd so what? No kingdom to speak of, you just keep fighting?â
âI do what Iâve always done.â Like it was as simple as that.Â
âDonât you get tired?â
âI never have the time.â
âWell, sir knight, I think you were just about due for some rest anyways.â
He didnât respond, the helmet following you as you left him.
He was so stoic. You werenât sure how it was easier to get a read on a dragon than a man but somehow heâd managed it.Â
Anything other than silent staring began to feel out of place.Â
âMâlady,â Phillip called out. You turned, confused. It wasnât like him to start a conversation.Â
âYeah?â
âWhere is my sword?â he asked.Â
Youâd forgotten he was unconscious for that. âOh. I threw it off the mountain.â
âYou what? Why?â
Pytho chimed in immediately. âI can get it.â
You shifted between him and the entrance to the cave as quickly as you could. âNo, you will not.â
âWhy?â asked Phillip.
âWhat do you mean why? You tried to kill him.â
âI wonât attack him unprovoked.â
âYou already did attack him unprovoked.â
âI didnât have all the information. For that, I am truly sorry, sir.â
Pythoâs chest puffed up at the title. âYou are forgiven. And I am sorry that I almost destroyed you.â
That caused Phillip to reel back a little. âYou did not. I can best a dragon easily, I almost slit your throat.â
Pytho huffed and you smelled a bit of smoke on his breath. âYou did not.â
âOkay,â you said, cutting in. âYouâre both very dangerous. Iâd still love it if we could keep the sword where it is.â
Phillip nodded. âI understand your hesitancy.â
He said it tied up on the floor. Despite not having a weapon, despite his promise not to try and hurt Pytho, despite the fact that you'd already untied him so he could eat.Â
âThis is stupid,â you said, pacing up to him and immediately setting to work on the knots and ignoring his quiet noises in protest.Â
It didnât take long to undo them, youâd put barely any effort into tying them in the first place.Â
âWe have to free you so you can eat anyway, I donât understand your obsession with this little performance.â
Phillip froze, still holding his hands together despite the lack of rope.Â
âWhat should I do?â he asked you quietly.Â
You threw the rope to the side. âThatâs up to you.â
It took him hours before he was even willing to stand from his spot on the floor.Â
His movements were all colored by hesitation. You understood. The freedom made staying a choice. And even when he managed to stand, to move from his corner, he stayed.
He stuck to his corner as often as he could, but nonetheless, he stayed. Watching him sleep alone in the cold, you were certain that this was how Pytho had felt every night when you froze your ass off far away from him.Â
You both lit the fire for him every night. Pytho has started running off to get wood without you even asking, even if the trees that remained outside left you with enough wood to last years.Â
His armour got lighter as time passed, forgoing pieces from time to time. No matter what, the helmet stayed. It felt like a part of him, like you could imagine there possibly being a man under there.Â
He was adjusting to the newfound freedom about as well as youâd expected.Â
With every small sign of growing comfort, something else went wrong.Â
A few days after his freeing, while Pytho was out gathering more food for the two of you to eat, you heard him muttering in the corner.Â
You drifted closer and he paid you no mind. You couldnât make out any words but you could tell it was frantic.
âPhillip,â you said softly, doing your best not to startle him. âAre you alright?â
You had no idea if youâd frightened him, he remained entirely unreadable. All except for his hands. He had foregone his gloves and much of the armour on his arms and you watched as he nervously fidgeted, threatening his fingers together, cracking his knuckles absentmindedly, his hands never staying still for more than a moment.Â
âIâm wasting time here,â he said. âI have things to do. I have a duty to this land.âÂ
You knew it was near impossible to get through to him but you couldnât help the urge to try. âItâs a waste to rest?â
âIt is. I need to go, need to continue on.â
You sat beside him, as close as you could get without touching. âYou should take me back home on your way. Iâve got a duty too, you know.âÂ
His head fell back. Metal against stone sent a clanging noise echoing across the walls. âThatâs different. You were brainwashed.â
âI wasnât. The monsters are real you know. Iâve seen them. We all do, every year. I really would have been saving them. Whatever girl they chose instead of me really did save them. Maybe you donât think itâs right. Thatâs fine. Itâs an important duty nonetheless.â
âItâs not the same. Iâm not being marched to my death.â
âPeople will still need saving in a week, in a year, in a century. Thereâs no real, final end to it. There has to be ends to it for you. Little ones. There just has to be.â
His head was turned towards you and you squirmed, feeling like you were being studied.Â
Finally, he said, âIt upsets you.â
âWhat?â
âThat I never stop. That upsets you?â
You nodded. âIt does.â
âI can stand tiny ends to it. To ease your mind.â
A sad laugh escaped you. âIâd rather you did it for you.â
âThatâs the best I can do right now. Youâre the same, arenât you?â
And you supposed you were. âI canât go back. I canât do that to him. Or to you, I guess.â
A small laugh escaped him, a noise you werenât sure youâd ever heard from him before. âYou guess. Iâll take it.âÂ
Pytho returned, entering the cave a little too quickly and knocking one of his piles of treasure over. He dropped a cart in front of you, this one with boxes of pastries covering it.Â
âThe humans seemed to love this one,â he said with his disarming, open-mouthed grin.Â
âWho are you taking those from?â Phillip asked incredulously, and you were almost certain you could hear a smile in his voice.Â
You grabbed something that looked chocolatey and when you felt that it was still warm you almost sobbed. âI donât care who heâs taking it from,â you said, taking a massive bite of it. âThis is the best thing Iâve ever eaten.â
You scarfed down three pastries, offering a small piece to Pytho, just so he could taste it. He spat it back out, questioning how you could ever eat something like that.Â
And then you remembered your stoic knight, still sitting beside you, just watching you eat, and a sense of guilt overtook you.Â
âIâm sorry,â you said and he perked up as you addressed him. âYou know, I could turn around or we could close our eyes. We wouldnât have to see anything. So we could eat together.â
You didnât wait for an answer, didnât wait for him to politely refuse, instead turning around and signaling for Pytho to do the same. You shut your eyes, just for good measure, as you leaned against the dragon.Â
The quiet thud of the helmet being set on the floor made your heart swell.Â
As you took another bite of a pastry, this one filled with a beautiful lemon cream, he slid his hand into your open one and ate behind you, slower than heâd ever eaten before.Â
Even if it was for you, you hoped he enjoyed it.Â
And still, no matter how much progress you made, every night he still slept in that goddamn corner.Â
You were glad Pytho curled up around you at night because then at least you couldn't see him, sad and alone next to his fire, away from the two of you.Â
You knew Pytho could tell it bothered you. He always did his best to distract you, pull all of your attention to him. Heâd gotten pretty good at it.Â
He was nuzzling into your side, pulling giggles from you as he gave you a big, slobbery kiss on your face.Â
âWhat are dragon kisses for?â you asked.Â
âWhat?â
âIâm just curious. Humans kiss their kids, their partners, their parents, all sorts of people they love. Dragon kisses donât feel like something you can do as casually as a kiss on the cheek.â
Pytho perked up immediately. âYou love me?â
You pressed a kiss into his cheek. âOf course I do.â
He purred at you as he answered your question. âWell, dragon kisses are just for mates. We arenât an overly affectionate species.â
âCouldâve fooled me. You know, maybe you canât kiss like a human but I could kiss like a dragon.â
He tilted his head and you decided to take the gesture as a challenge.Â
You opened your mouth and licked a broad stripe up the side of his face. His scales tasted ashy and were incredibly smooth against your tongue.Â
A wave of heat passed through him as you did, a deep guttural sound escaping him.Â
You pulled back, trying to get a better look at him.Â
âWhat was that?â you asked quietly.Â
He ducked his head down in a poor attempt to hide from you. âNothing. It was nothing.â
Something clicked in your head. âHold on. You said dragons only kiss their mates.â
He nodded hesitantly.Â
âYou kiss me all the time though.â
He whined again, his tail moving away from you and curling in front of him. âIâm sorry. I know itâs strange, I know youâre human, I can't help it. You're so soft and nice and I love you so muchâŚâ
As his words got more frantic you kissed his snout again, shushing him. âYou shouldâve told me. If Iâd known my big, strong dragon wanted me maybe I couldâve done something about it sooner.â
You practically watched his eyes glaze over, head tucking into your chest as he purred more.Â
You gave him all the kisses you could, peppering them along his head wherever you could reach. After about a dozen, you decided to try another dragon one, licking along his jaw.Â
You were flipped and pinned under him in a second, looking up at a ravenous face. His wings were folded over the two of you, blocking you from the outside world. In here, it was just the two of you.Â
You couldnât be happier.Â
âPlease, let me see you,â he hissed and you struggled to get your clothes off as quickly as you could. You kicked your pants off and they got caught on your ankles, spurring on a minor giggling fit, feeling absolutely giddy.Â
And he just watched, perfectly content to stare down at you as you waged a minor battle against your clothes, desperate to get your bare skin against his.Â
As you lay below him, finally fully naked, you didnât feel shy or self-conscious. It felt right, the two of you, like this.Â
âI will never understand clothes,â he informed you. âWhy would you ever cover this up?â
His head shifted around, looking at every part of you heâd never gotten to see before.Â
As his head moved downwards, you could tell exactly when he noticed how wet you were. He stopped moving entirely, nostrils flaring and eyes locked on you.Â
He nosed at you and you opened your legs for him, spreading them as wide as they could go.Â
His tongue snaked out instantly, licking a hot stripe through your folds. Whatever he found there seemed to interest him because the next thing you knew his thick tongue was snaking deep inside of you, your walls stretching around him.Â
You let out a strangled cry, fighting to not snap your legs closed at how overwhelming the sensation was.Â
His content vibrations ran through you, causing a spark of pleasure to run up your spine.Â
His tongue found a spot deep inside of you thatâd didnât quite feel like the rest, rubbing against it experimentally and you slapped your hand over your mouth, trying not to scream.Â
It was too much. Youâd never felt anything like this before.Â
His jaw was cracked open over your stomach, his impossibly long tongue reaching as far into you as it could go.Â
His tongue slowly withdrew from you and you didnât know whether to beg for him to keep going or take your reprieve from the overwhelming sensation while you could.Â
You noticed his hips shifting and glanced down. Your heart skipped a beat.Â
He was massive, probably a foot long.Â
âThatâs not going to fit,â you whispered.
The dragon shook his head. âNo, I would never try. Youâre too small, it would break you. I wouldnât hurt you.â
âWhat about you?â you asked, feeling bad you couldnât reciprocate.Â
âI have everything I need,â he said, nuzzling into your chest once more. âBut if you want someone your size, we could always ask for help.â
Your face heated as you realized what he was implying. To be honest, youâd entirely forgotten Phillip was there, too caught up in what you were doing. Oh god, heâd probably heard everything.Â
Pytho lifted his wings as you looked at Phillip, who had turned to face the wall.Â
âI am so sorry,â you called out, embarrassment washing over you.Â
He turned to you slowly and you prepared to get yelled at.Â
Instead, his voice came out breathy and strained. âDo you want me to help?â
Your heart skipped a beat as you stared back at him. âI do.Â
He moved towards the pair of you. âI live to serveâ
You wanted to kiss him. You wanted so badly to kiss him and you just couldnât.
So instead you made do, grabbing his hand and pulling him towards you. He fell next to you, both of you leaning against Pytho.Â
He froze a little as your hands neared his helmet and you whispered, âTrust me.â
He untensed, although you could sense his anxiety.Â
You grasped the side of his helmet slowly, tilting it gently to the side to reveal a sliver of his neck. You moved towards it, taking all the self-control you had to go slowly.Â
He shivered as you neared him, your breath ghosting over his skin.Â
You started gently, pressing soft kisses into his skin.Â
Before long you wanted more, nipping at his neck and sucking marks into it as he let out little whines. You could feel his throat move as he swallowed, could feel his muscles tense as you moved.
Eventually, he pulled you away from him and you looked up at him, wide-eyed.
âUmâŚâ he said, his voice shaky and high. âIf you do want me to⌠to help. You need to stop doing that.Â
You smiled, resting your forehead on his helm. âIf you insist.â
The way youâd pulled at his clothes, shifting his shirt out of the way, meant you could see as he gulped.Â
His hand hovered inches over your hip, as if afraid to touch you. You covered it with your own, pressing it onto bare skin.Â
You didnât mind his staring so much now. You could feel the waves of awe coming off of him as his hands gently slid up and down your sides.Â
You hooked your fingers into the front of his pants and pulled him closer to you.Â
âPlease,â you asked.Â
He didnât bother taking his pants off, instead pulling them down just enough to get his dick out, already painfully hard.Â
Pythoâs tongue had more than prepared you and Phillip seemed like if someone breathed on him wrong he might come so you wasted no time, pulling him over to you.Â
Pytho sat there, watching as Phillip pushed inside of you. He was painfully slow, groaning with every inch.Â
Your walls fluttered as his hand pressed tentatively down on your clit and he had to stop entirely, breathing slowly.Â
âDo you know how hard it was,â he gasped out as he buried himself fully inside of you, unmoving. âHearing all that and not touching myself. It felt like torture.Â
You could feel Pytho shifting behind you, molding himself against your back as you saw his hips twitch, grinding against nothing.Â
You opened your mouth to speak when your words were cut off with a sharp thrust.Â
Phillip gripped your hips so hard you were worried it might bruise in the morning. You couldnât bring yourself to care.Â
He slowly found his rhythm, desperately trying to pull you impossibly closer as he thrusted inside of you.
You felt something hard against your back, moving as Phillip slammed inside of you again. And then, as if sharing one mind, you felt a sticky substance coat your back just as Phillip gave you one final, hard thrust, groaning as he came inside of you.Â
As soon as Phillip pulled out, Pytho rushed to snake his tongue back inside of you. It was so dexterous, pressing up perfectly inside of you as he tasted both you and Phillip.Â
Phillips fingers intertwined with yours as your back arched and you felt waves of pleasure run through you. Pytho seemed intent on working you through it, his tongue moving steadily until you could take it anymore.Â
You pushed at his head and he lifted it, mouth slick and eyes looking just as dazed as you felt.Â
You were all gross and sticky and youâd never been happier in your life.Â
Phillip snorted. âI was supposed to kill you.â
âPlans change,â you said.Â
âYou never could have killed me,â Pytho declared and you couldnât help but smile as their argument began again.Â
You woke up in a tangle of limbs. Your head was tucked into Phillip's chest, his arms wrapped around you with just the tip of Pythoâs tail betwixt you. You were both entirely surrounded by him, curled up protectively around you.Â
Pytho had to take both of you down to the nearest lake to get clean the next morning. He sat patiently at the edge of the pond as both of you washed off the mess from the night before.Â
Phillip helped you clean, scrubbing your back and running his fingers gently through your hair as you both stood in the waist-deep water.Â
Youâd had the good sense to remove your clothes but Phillip had to clean his along with himself, standing in the water in his pants, shirt, and that helmet.Â
It seemed a little silly but you wouldnât bother him over it. It would come in due time. Or maybe it wouldnât and honestly, you didnât think you would mind.Â
Pytho was content watching the two of you, occasionally shifting his tail to splash water at you, a favor you returned to him readily.Â
As the cleaning finished and the three of you sat on the shore, drying off, Phillip braided your hair as you both leaned against your warm dragon.Â
You were curious where heâd learned it but scared to ask, to remind him of anything other than this perfect moment.Â
He did not seem to understand how precious and fragile this moment was, breaking the silence by saying, âI canât stay here,â and shattering everything.Â
You looked at him with panicked eyes and Pytho hid his head under his wing.Â
âWhat?â
His next words came slower, more gently. âI think weâve made a little home here. I do. But I canât just stay.â
You nodded. You understood. âNeither can I. Youâre going off adventuring again, right?â
He nodded and you immediately added, before you could lose your nerve. âI want to come.â
âItâs going to be dangerous,â he said, his voice not commanding but instead cautious and worried.Â
âPlease. I need to do something, to help someone. I feel like Iâve got a debt on my back. I canât let it hang over me like this forever.â
He went to protest but you stopped him. âI donât care what you think, I canât live with it. Please.â
He nodded. âFirst, weâre going to need to find my sword.â
You gave him an apologetic smile. âIâm sure it wonât be too hard.â
âAnd we canât come back every night,â he continued. âYouâre going to have to spend days on the road. You sure thatâs what you want?â
You rolled your eyes. âI think I can manage for a few days.â
Pytho lifted his head from where he was hiding it. âCome back? You said you canât stay?â
It took a second to understand what he could possibly be asking. The idea of leaving him forever was so inconceivable to you that you hadnât realized what this must have looked like.Â
You rushed over to him, kissing his forehead. âNo, Iâm not leaving you. Neither of us are. We justâŚI just canât stay in a cave for the rest of my life.â
âPeople will still need helping,â Phillip chimed in, standing behind you. âI wonât ever stop doing this. Itâs what I was made to do. But it's been too long. I think it was about time I found a home to come back to.â
You smiled at him as you leaned into your dragonâs side. âI think it was.â
#terato#terato writing#monster x reader#monster x human#monster boyfriend#monster bf#dragon x reader#dragon boyfriend#dragon#dragon bf#The cws on this are wild#Phillipâs armour set up is a little wonky compared to most real armour#I attribute this to his accursed knight status#Definitely not just for narrative ease#I would never#also I came up with this idea and then wrote the whole thing in like 6 days#Everyone say thank you ducky#lol
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all the progress iâve made so far for isobel!!
maybe a bad idea to do all my cosplay firsts in one outfit but itâll be Fine what could go wrong
#ramble#cosplay#bg3#isobel thorm#the moonlantern is Hopefully going to function#iâve never made armour or used foam clay or done a glued hairline before so i was like#letâs do all of that#i havenât started any of the actual sewing yet and iâm definitely stalling bc iâm not good at it#idk if itâll be GOOD for mcm but it will definitely be done#people who are better at this than me pls tell me iâm doing ok i need the reassurance
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last night i had a dream where evbo said pvp!evbo was intended to be like 14 and i spent the rest of the dream just thinking âoh my god thatâs so fucked up what the hellâ
#this shows how brainrotted i am on pvp!evbo being a tragic character#i canât escape it even in my dreams#like. heâs referred to as âkidâ at LEAST two times#one of those by tabi who would definitely be young adult age at most#so like. yea this is a CHILD#def not 14 but still !!!!#heâs been in pvpciv for only a few months before he meets tabi!!!#he doesnât know anything about the world!!! everyone is constantly mean to him!!!#all he wants is human connection and he knows he can get that by leveling up and doing what other ppl want him to do#(find out more about pvpciv)#so he does that!!! and ends up being a fucking sacrificial lamb!!!!#treated like a fucking armour stand!!!!#THEY COULD NEVER MAKE ME HATE U PVP EVBO#sorry long tag rant#pvp civilization#evbo#evbo pvpciv#connie rants
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Inspired by @hayesflint latest piece
Hayes asked for some dialogue ideas for their pic and I gave them suggestions for before during and after. They nearly fell out of their chair laughing at my after suggestion that I had to draw it.
Alt: I've had these storm troopers for an hour and a half but if any harm should come to them I'd be very very sad. I've already started giving them backstories.
#kalluzeb#my art#pencil blorbo#is this armour accurate? no#did i just create two new ocs? maybe#do i have way to many headcannons about rex? definitely#my wifes art#kinda
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Trying to kick my art block by doing the opposite of an easy drawing
#click to enlarge ofc#guess the century! lol.#i try to give them a big mix of styles from different cultures and decades because i feel like they would pick clothes/armour up and#hang on to them for as long as they can. it's also definitely not accurate but i do my best#this was going to be a tiny comic too. i should sleep instead lmao#siggy draws#all the clothes and the weapons.... why do i do this to myself#.......but it's fun and i love it#fighting the self-hate demon by posting this#things i'm going to fix: nicolo's quiver which is not in fact filled with crossbow bolts oops#also the length of those arrows...#yusuf's shoe that's falling off#and many more things
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arl eamons worst nightmare
#who would win. years of child neglect done by arl eamon#or alistair and his new lover who goes 'why would you be king you literally couldn't handle leading this group which is why i do it'#<- the most reassuring thing he's heard in years#unsure if she'll still romance ali but im defo still digging it#the thing after reviving her after (checks notes) 2 years is that i've gotten better at immersing myself in characters#so they'll definitely still be close friends (which is also really good) but who knows if they'll kiss. shes got other things to worry abt#my art#dragon age#dao#oc: velka brosca#alistair theirin#drew the armour from memory so if it isnt good so be it
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fuck you, rivaini mermaid cape
#i know muted colour scheme enjoyers hate to see me coming#this is definitely the most whimsical one i'm making i just needed something related to the rivaini mermaid because i love it sm#next up is that one crow outfit with the jacket over the shoulders#and then the hero of the veilguard warrior armour#and then i think i'm done with my lords armour
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*chanting* Weird! Little! Dudes! Weird! Little! Dudes! Weird! Lit-
anyway here's the whole crew (or as I like to call them Team Golden Eyes) and their weird little dudesâ˘
if you don't know what rolling with difficulty is its a D&D podcast and its great you should go listen to it right now (they just started campaign 2 its very cool)
individual drawings under the cut:
#pancake's art#rolling with difficulty#rwd blue#rwd finbar#rwd kyana#rwd vhas#rwd dani#rwd vr la#vhas can have a little bit of hair. as a treat.#it was kinda hard figuring out what the lich queens armour would look like on vhas but we got there#im never drawing the staff of the clockwork storm again. god.#meant to post this yesterday but decided to spend most of today drawing a fun pattern as the background#i should do that more often its fun#sunny should probably be bigger but eh#also their heights are definitely not to scale. but I do not bother to keep track of such trifles
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KaikoâŹď¸ after being promised a vacation but ending up passing out 3 times in like 30 minutes, probably(definitely) getting a concussion and almost suffocating in a sea 'cave'(monumential)
#After that she definitely deserved a vacation#Little crazy that she was literally a few minutes away from dying#Like 5 more minutes and it might have been too late#Half considering writing a fic with a more realistic ending to this episode#Because she should not have been completely fine that soon after#But the Nektons have plot armour#the deep cartoon#the deep 2015#will nekton#kaiko nekton#fontaine nekton#ant nekton
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Robert Aramayo as Elrond in The Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power (season 2)
via Empire Magazine
#OKAY THAT'S DEFINITELY HADHAFANG#THE ARMOUR LOOKS SO GOOOOOOOD#elrond#rings of power#the rings of power#robert aramayo#mine
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tootsie noodles perhaps,,, hes So
ty for suggesting this!! it made me realise iâve never made Starship fanart so i got carried away and i also drew Junior and tried to do a redesign of Mega-girlâs costume hehehhee
#i fear i didnt quite do Tootsie justice#mayhaps iâll try to draw him again sometimeâŚ.#also i will DEFINITELY be revisiting the megagirl design#iâm gonna give her so much armour. iâm going to make her so functional.#she will have big gauntlets and big boots.#starkid#team starkid#starship#tootsie noodles#tootsie megagirl#junior#starship junior#megagirl#starship musical
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broos...
#i'm not 100% happy with this batsuit design#it's definitely a work in progress... a little too complex#as i quickly realised when i tried to draw literally any dynamic poses lol#the unpracticality adds to it#it's camp đđ#as much as i love a simple sleek design#i wanted to make her more gothic#more vampiric#with the batwing-like cape and with gargoyle-esque influences in the cowl#also thought it would add to the pretentious young bruce vibes#to give him a real medieval knight armour silhouette#with the boots pauldrons and cape#saviour complex ass#batman#bruce wayne#batman au#batman design#dan's art#batman fanart
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a relationship in ruin and no longer partners in search of new homes
#undertale#asgore dreemurr#toriel#utdr fanart#undertale fanart#my art#digital art#fanart#sketches#i hope i can keep a decently stable line of art posts#instead of taking like two months to post at all#im proud of that armour on asgore#looks veery solid#the shine definitely helps it
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scenes that make you take a stress lap around the living room
#I FORGOT. ABOUT THIS. CHRIST#yinsen..........................#how DO you be normal after this how do you be NORMAL. after this#the further i get into im1 the more i'm like. ah. tony's post-new york anxiety was definitely in part just like.#realizing his post-afghanistan post-obie Safety Mechanisms were useless#guy who comes home from Traumatic Experience and goes it's fine it's okay i'll just build a suit of armour. I'll just wear it all the time#i'll put it in a briefcase so i can always have it with me#vs guy who comes home from Alien Invasion and is like it's fine it's okay i'll just build 40 of them#they can fly without me i can call them from wherever i am i can be in 40 places at once i can protect everyone it's fine it's okay#I'LL BUILD A SUIT OF ARMOUR. AROUND THE WORLD#kayvswords#kayvsim12024
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At this, a black cloud of despair engulfed Achilles. With both hands he scooped up fistfuls of soot and dust and poured it on his head, and rubbed the dirt across his handsome face. Black ashes settled on his scented tunic.
"My friend Patroclus, whom I loved, is dead. I loved him more than any other comrade. I loved him like my head, my life, myself. I lost him, killed him."
Swift-footed Lord Achilles, in despair, told her, "I want to die right here and now, because I could not save my slaughtered friend. He died so very far away from home. He needed me to help and protect him. And I did not go back to my dear country, nor did I save Patroclus. I provided no light or help to him or anybody."
The Iliad, translated by Emily Wilson; Book 18: Divine Armor, lines 27-31, 99-102, 121-128
#furiosa spoilers#furiosa: a mad max saga spoilers#furiosa a mad max saga spoilers#furiosa#praetorian jack#(who could definitely have used some divine armour at this point)#the iliad#achilles#patroclus#There's a WHOLE lot more Iliad quotes where that came from#long post
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more of my simple ahsoka redesign because i love her
#she deserves armour too#and to whoever reposted the other ahsoka armour design i did saying it was definitely rex or obi wan who put her in armour#cause anakin is too irresponsible#youre absolutely correct#star wars#ahsoka tano#ahsoka#<3 i love her#an art tag for convenience when searching my page guys <3
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