#my labor of love... 2!!!
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I was heavy into everything, you were heavy into innocence
#FINALLY. IT'S DONE. GOD#long post#whooooooooooooooEWWWWW WAAAAAAAAAAA#sonic adventure 2#sth#sonic fanart#sonic the hedgehog#shadow the hedgehog#sonic#sonadow#art from the den#artists on tumblr#digital art#thank u. enjoy my self indulgent labor of love
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— Our Lady of Destiny
#the gallery#scuderia ferrari#saint ferrari#charles leclerc#carlos sainz#cl16#cs55#charlos#f1 fanart#formula 1#f1#hhngngng falls over and DIES this took. 5 hours and 13 minutes exactly#theres symbolism here if u look hard enough alright#if this flops i will cry#PLZE this is a . monumental labor of love from kacey strwbrryfire#anyways. this in celebration of my beautiful lambs' austin 1-2#a worthy cause of jubilation if u ask me
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meant to post these sketches a few days ago? a week? but, well, life.
#red dead redemption 2#my art#my fics#arthur morgan#rdr#rdr2#rdr2 fanart#young arthur morgan#and a wee little hs of wolf!arthur#today is the first day of the last 3 ive gotten to eat more than a single meal a day#my bp dropped at work n since it was a vision black out i had to post up in the friggin stall like batman on a ceiling so i didnt fall#which sucks since i have a manual labor job but luckily i didnt reach the shakin stage just kept gettin the dots n focus static#been sleepin n readin to avoid attention on hunger pains since i had no energy for drawin#finally got to have dinner last night since we got some money and i gotta say i dont miss the feelin of chokin on food i wanted so bad#man i love tags most ppl dont read em n i get some catharsis to vent in em
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hey i made The Falin Shirt™ embroidery style 💀
#dunmeshi#dungeon meshi#falin dungeon meshi#2 weeks and pure adrenaline fueled desire#a labor of love if u will#also IGNORE my linty ass shirt lol
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How have your interactions with your floormates been? Do any of them seem particularly friendly?
I think this might be your guy to talk to, Leo, just a hunch...
prev ask
#this post has been cooking since the beginning omg. and thus ends the chronicle of my long weekend of shenanigans...#now that magnus and annabeth's designs are out I can rest T-T. this is my lovechild post I have literally been g l u e d to either#my laptop or the books putting all this together. it was the Chases' hair and those damn strawberries from 2 posts ago. my labors of love#anyway not to glaze myself but isnt this post such a cutie patootie-off btwn the 3 of them?? Leo's lil 👀😮.#and the Chase cousins obviously have the most babygirl eyes to ever. that was so important to me#I'm gonna go try to be more normal now that I'm officially a week out from moving back to uni...#but I do have at least another post for this week and obviously the inbox is open#I think someone should get Leo & Magnus to be closer friends -- maybe then we'll get the chance to talk to Maggie & figure out whats up#V²AU#valhalla!valgrace#magnus chase#leo valdez#magnus chase and the gods of asgard#mcga#hotel valhalla#leo valdez responds#answered asks#art#annabeth chase#forgot to tag pookie oh no!!#hopefully context clues and tags help explain this one lol i thought it was cute
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it's fucking 2 am. i wish i had an answer for this
#the wizard posts#gravity falls#stanford pines#fiddleford mcgucket#fiddauthor#that sweet sweet old man yaoi#old man yaoi#is that a tag???#god i sure hope it is#they making out sloppy style as they fucking should#i'm loving the resurgence of old man yaoi of these 2#they were my fucking bread and butter back in high school#i still follow quite a few fiddauthor blogs after all this time#please enjoy the fruits of my labor
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J.M. Darhower, Sempre (2014) | Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat, Pray, Love (2006) | Bob Marley "He's not perfect" | Hermann Hesse, Narcissus and Goldmund (1930)
Media credit: @devisrina
#this was a labor of love#well worth it#their love story is the best thing that's ever happened to my hopeless romantic heart#carmy x sydney#carmy berzatto#sydney adamu#chef's kiss#sydcarmy#the bear fx#the bear#the bear hulu#the bear season 2
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fall out boy albums as tour posters (6/8)
american beauty/american psycho tour (2015)
#similarly to srar this one was a Bitch to make. hugeeee labor of love but my babygirl abap deserves it <3 so#i hope u all like it <333 only 2 more of this series left after this one!!!! ahh!!!#txt#c.txt#fobtp#fob#fall out boy#fobedit#abap#american beauty/american psycho#patrick stump#pete wentz#joe trohman#andy hurley#p: 100
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after that same rainbow’s end 🌈
#neil gaiman came to me in a dream and told me to draw them in their domestic bliss and who am i to say no to dream neil gaiman#good omens#ineffable husbands#aziracrow#good omens fanart#good omens art#im not kidding when i say i cried when i drew this. it was a labor of love but it took so long and i need them happy canonically#also this is my first time drawing with my ipad 😭😭😭 im not used to it so i was extra slow#good omens 2#gomens season 2#digital art#my art#gomens#go2 fanart#go2#fan art#artists on tumblr#drawing#crowley#aziraphale#art#i love them so fucking much my heart is burstimg#this time i fucked up crowleys face but tbf this angle is so fucking hard and all i had to go on was dt references from richard ii
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The story of Claudia is the story of a woman.
Made for the betterment of a man's self-image and esteem.
Kept for the happiness of a man.
Forced to play daughter, sister, nursemaid, and savior for the life and welfare of a man.
Even in death, she is used as a story device for a man.
The heartbreaking thing about Claudia is we never truly get to know her from her own lips. Her diaries are the closest we get, but we all know how much the written word and train of thought can be subjective or an imperfect picture.
Claudia was her own person, who fought to live and laugh and love, and she is gone.
This is the story of womanhood throughout the world, throughout history, and it is why most people feel a profound sense of connection and empathy for her.
#me the professional historian having to read so many accounts throughout my masters program of lost woman in history#labor by paris paloma anyone#i love her your honour with my whole heart#musings#claudia de lioncourt#claudia de pointe du lac#iwtv claudia#claudia iwtv#claudia#iwtv louis#louis de pointe du lac#lestat de lioncourt#iwtv lestat#iwtv season 2#interview with the vampire#m
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took a break from writing cuz i languished over a hard scene but i should start again tomorrow as im finally getting it to move.. when i worked on it at a friends house (we were doing parallel play lol) they were asking me about it so i full on told them the outline i have planned for Act 2 and they were like legitimately invested and asking questions and wouldnt stop talking about it after i was done it was the sweetest thing ever 😭 i cant wait to share with yall and hope u will enjoy it too
#im trying to break out of my funk rn but since ive finished inking my latest drawing im taking a break to focus on writing so i can finally#wrap up this first act 2 scene and have a good chunk to publish#sorry to keep teasing this its just cuz its a labor of love thats been a great comfort to me in a hard time rn
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klaine kisses + pride flag color meanings 🌈
#klaine#my stuff#happy pride 🌈#kurt hummel#blaine anderson#gleeedit#klaineedit#my edit#this was truly a labor of love#theyre so in love i love that theyre in love#episode: i do#episode: the hurt locker pt 2#episode: the first time#episode: love love love#song: got to get you into my life#song: all you need is love#episode: original song#episode: a wedding#bdaedit#kehedit
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I am super fucking pissed about Wee John in this last episode.
Why. The. Fuck. Was. He. Not. Included. AT. ALL. During. The. Escape??????????
Legitimately, where the fuck was he? I was fuming for a lot of that because he's my favorite character, so I was looking for him. While everyone was stripping the English of their uniforms and getting dressed up (at least partially) in disguise, he is the only character not included.
They make a point about Fang not getting a proper shirt, which already pissed me off enough, that he had to wear what was essentially prison stripes while everyone else was in uniform, but Wee John wasn't even there. He wasn't in the raid. He wasn't in the run down the beach.
He just wasn't even fucking there. And if it was something Kristian decided he didn't want to worry about hurting himself over, particularly looking out for his back and knees, I understand not asking him to run over and over again for reshoots. But the fact that he didn't even get dressed with them... and that's the second time he's been excluded from a plan apparently due to his size (remember that he didn't get to participate when The Revenge dressed up as rich boys for Nigel Badminton)...
It is legitimately breaking my heart. One of the things I love about this show is the love is gives to its fat characters and actors. Fang gets to have his tummy out 24/7 and he's treated like a snack by Lucius, Wee John got to have an incredible dress, Oluwande is the crew's most eligible bachelor, and we even got a delightful fat character in 2x07 who spent his whole time dressed in only some leather halters and pants...
But the fact that Wee John was singled out and left behind, and the fact that Fang was singled out and othered at that very same time... It fucking hurts. As a fat person who has loved getting to see so much love for fat bodies... it stung to see that the comedy couldn't even suspend its reality long enough to say "there are a few fat people in the Royal English Navy, so Wee John and Fang get to be dressed up too."
#Cae Has Lots of Feelings About Our Flag Means Death#Have I already cried about this? Yes. I have.#It seriously hurts so much to see the character I most saw myself in separated from the entire rest of the cast over his size again#It breaks my heart so much.#I was literally asking my tv 'But where's Wee John?' all the way from the montage of them suiting up - all the way through Izzy's death.#Because he just didn't exist onscreen again until the LuPete marriage. I almost thought they were writing him out of the show there.#I hope to GOD that Kristian was the one to decide he didn't want to deal with the labor of that scene#Because I cannot imagine how he could've felt if he had to sit there alone and listen to people tell him 'Wee John just isn't in this part.#'Just for logical reasons though. Just cuz there's no way there'd be a uniform jacket big enough for him.'#Because I would've been gutted.#Wee John is big. Kristian Nairn is big. But he is not some unreasonable size.#And it feels cruel that he keeps getting treated like it.#Sending all my love to Kristian right now. I hope he doesn't need any of it. But he has it all the same.#Our Flag Means Death#OFMD#Our Flag Means Death Season 2 Spoilers#Our Flag Means Death Spoilers#OFMD Spoilers#OFMDS2#OFMD s2 spoilers#Wee John#Wee John Feeney#OFMD Fang#OFMD Meta#OFMD Critical
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Shattered Upside Down
A kotlc wings au: masterpost here
Chapter 45: Epilogue (One Year Later)
word count: 10.6k
chapter summary: After freeing Olivia from Phoenix's clutches and (mostly) successfully defeating them and the Neverseen, what have the winged kotlcrew been up to in the past year?
warnings: death (non-violent, not mc)
taglist: @axels-corner @cadence-talle @ahecktonoffandomsinoneblog @loverofallthingssmart @cowboypossume @shellyseashell @imaramennoodle @dragonwinnie-kotlc @solreefs @fintan-pyren @jazzanddaydreams @xanadaus @valentinerose529
-> ao3 link here or read below one last time :)
The light had begun to turn a warm honey orange by the time Sophie Foster glitched into the grass fields of New Havenfield. All her friends should be inside by now, ready to enjoy the feast her parents had promised to prepare--partly in celebration of one year free, partly for personal reasons.
And this time they truly were free.
No more secret defeats or enemies crawling to the shadows to regroup. They’d actually done it this time--well, as far as they knew. If there turned out to be another resurgence they had to defeat again…Sophie was going to have some choice words with whoever was in charge of the universe.
Sophie’s wings buzzed lightly at her back as she surveyed the pastures, her vigilance a new habit she’d never break.
Grass shifted ever so slightly beneath the meandering air, and everywhere she looked she saw evidence of life bouncing back.
The gates had been reattached to their fences, new trees planted where they’d been torn that fateful day what felt like a lifetime ago. All the disturbed earth and rubble had been smoothed away, leaving clear paths to the house and pastures.
And there were animals in them.
Not as many as there’d once been, but anything at all was a huge improvement from the complete desolation that’d lasted months. Until, in a burst of inspiration, Sophie had dragged a dragon here.
It’d moved out long before Grady and Edaline had moved back in--it’d taken a while to rebuild the house, after all. Their faces had been grim when she’d first brought them for a brief visit and they’d seen the damage for the first time--the destroyed stairs, crumbling walls, the empty fields that’d once been teeming with life.
But even so, determination had steadily broken through.
Edaline’d even said she’d wanted to replace the stairs for years, but hadn’t had a good enough reason.
Sophie’d wanted to strangle her with a hug right then and there, but had settled for squeezing her hand as they’d continued along.
Sophie was mostly useless when it came to construction, and she had so many other new responsibilities to learn to balance, but she’d tried to check in on the house’s progress as much as she could.
Even though she didn’t have a bedroom there anymore.
It’d stung at first, even though it’d been her idea; and it wasn’t like there wasn’t space for her to visit--she still stayed over all the time.
It’d been bittersweet, a finality to all the rapid changes in her life. One more chapter of it closed.
Because as much as she loved her parents, it didn’t feel the same; something in her itched to keep moving, her mind desperate for the thoughts and colors and sounds it’d grown used to in the forest.
The monsters.
Even before their mission-gone-awry, Sophie’d already known what it was like to be different--and not in the way people liked. So now that she’d--mostly--gotten past her fears, she couldn’t help sympathizing with the things.
That didn’t mean there weren’t occasionally close calls, but they’d become fewer and farther between since Sophie had started working closer with Echo. Ever since the glitching not-cat had trusted her enough to show her the different pockets of monsters and things living in a sort-of-truce, she’d been spending more and more of her time with them, just like she used to wander the pastures at Havenfield.
Her parents weren’t necessarily happy about that--and a few of her friends had some reservations, even as far as they’d all come. But she had to. She couldn’t explain the feeling--plenty of her friends were successfully not spending ridiculous amounts of time around wild, potentially dangerous animals as they all worked to right the world. And yet.
Grass swished as Sophie started up the path towards the house, hoisting her spoils beneath her arm to get a better grip.
She’d known she had incredibly talented friends, but they’d somehow risen above and beyond even that in the past year.
Wylie and Fitz had formed a duo of sorts, Tam occasionally a third member, serving as valiant ambassadors between the surface and the Underground. The elves couldn’t stay down there forever, afterall--the dwarves’ patience could only tolerate so much.
But they also couldn’t jump right back into their old lives, even with the Neverseen and Phoenix gone--at least as gone as they could be. There were still…complications, of course.
Several elven houses had actually survived the apocalypse intact, given how isolated they’d been--and the fact they weren’t animal preserves. That really hadn’t worked in the Ruewen’s favor.
Biana and Maruca were helping coordinate moving those who still had houses back into them--their charming personalities were a huge help when dealing with so many haughty elves, but both of their abilities to detect and understand monsters made them invaluable when scouting out the surrounding areas to determine if they actually were safe to live in again.
Of course there were still thousands of displaced elves--those who had lived in Atlantis, or who hadn’t been so lucky with their homes--who needed a place to live. Last she’d heard of that, Dex had been deep in conversation with some dwarves, goblins, and council members about the logistics behind building temporary housing. Their plan sounded a lot like what she’d known as apartments back when she’d lived with humans.
She was sure people would have a lot to say about the smaller quarters and having to live near each other--but they’d also been doing that for over a year already, and underground at that. They’d be ridiculous not to recognize just how much of an improvement it would be to actually get some sunshine again. She was no physician, but everyone’s vitamin D levels had to be seriously hurting.
She could ask Elwin the next time she saw him. He’d probably tease her, again, about when she’d first come back.
~
“You know, it’s a miracle this flimsy piece of crystal was enough of a defense to keep this place safe,” Fitz observed, screwing the thing back in place after everyone had filed inside. He had one leg hooked over a new, stronger ladder--Sophie had broken the original--and the shiny new prototype of his knee brace clanked against the metal.
“I think Ro mentioned a couple times that she rigged it up with some bacteria, so anything that tried to get close learned the hard way that that was a bad idea,” Sophie offered as Olivia slipped her hand back into hers--they’d had to let go for the brief climb.
The little girl’s other arm was resolutely wrapped around Bee, holding the black and blue stuffed bumblebee tight to her chest; when she’d seen Sophie’s house last night after the campfire, she’d gasped so loud Sophie’d feared something had broken in, but she’d just rushed to the bed and grabbed the thing from where it’d been left next to Ella.
And Sophie suddenly remembered a note in the back of a diary and the hasty doodle next to it--a doodle Olivia had drawn. Of a little bee.
“Is that yours?” she’d asked, but the way she’d held it tight and trembling was all the answer she needed; maybe it was only a small toy in the grand scheme of things, but with what Olivia had been through? Any comfort was monumental.
She hadn’t set it down since, not even as they got ready to visit the Underground--all of them. And no one had said a thing about it.
Her friends, so far, had mostly been leaving Olivia to her. They weren’t ignoring her, but what were you supposed to do when someone added a very traumatized 8 or 9-ish year old to the group who had spent the last several months of her life witnessing and perpetuating horrific violence and mind games? And who had just witnessed two very influential people in her life die right in front of her--after watching her parents die not even a year before that?
Keefe kept making jokes and Fitz kept smiling encouragingly, and Linh was always so gentle, but some things just needed time.
She didn’t know why Olivia had chosen to stick to her side over everyone else’s, but she was going to do everything she could to be supportive and helpful…whatever that actually meant.
For now, it meant holding her hand as they climbed down the stairs into the Underground full of so many eagerly waiting people Sophie thought her brain might explode trying to list them all, even with her photographic memory.
All the parents who hadn’t seen their monstrous kids since they’d run away desperate to get their hands on them, bodyguards, Black Swan members, and maybe more; Sophie fell to the back of the group with Olivia so that when they finally crested the bottom, they wouldn’t be in the center of the chaos.
Just because she’d said she’d come didn’t mean she was ready for something as emotionally intense as this--especially with strangers. Sophie was barely more than a stranger herself.
“Dex!” Juline cried as she could only assume he reached the bottom, followed by what sounded a lot like him getting tackled.
She could hear Alden sobbing as he held tight to Fitz and Biana, and Tiergan’s soft voice as he spoke with Wylie under his breath--he was trying to keep it between the two of them, but unfortunately for him, all ten of them could hear it.
“Sophie?” Edaline’s voice called, nervous. Sophie still hadn’t shown her face; she and Olivia were a spiral up.
Tam reassured her mom. “Don’t worry, she’s here. She just…needs a minute.”
“Why?” Grady asked, and she smiled as she imagined the furrow in his brow.
Sophie looked down at Olivia. “Are you ready? I promise everyone will be very nice.” Well, Ro might make some stupid jokes, but we can deal with that when we get to it.
“Miss Foster truly has a knack for suspense,” Mr. Forkle said, a voice she hadn’t heard in so long she couldn’t help the way her eyes widened as she glanced toward the edge.
When she looked back at Olivia, something inscrutable had changed in her face. “Okay.”
Sophie took a breath and led the way down the stairs.
~
“You’d think erasing them would be the hardest part, not giving them back,” Fitz groaned from where he lay sprawled on the ground. There were plenty of chairs he could’ve chosen, but apparently the siren call of the hard earth was irresistible.
Elwin had chosen a chair, and now rubbed at his temples with his eyes firmly shut.
Adjusting to the influx of memories they’d poured back into his head.
Well, they’d already been in his head, just wildly out of place. They’d put everything back properly--and while some of the memories had found their place on their own, several had wandered aimless.
Meaning Sophie and Fitz had had to manually find where they went.
It’d be too soon if she never had to do anything so meticulous ever again.
“That’s the consequence of improper washing technique,” Tiergan told them, but his stern demeanor had been unusually softened since they’d come back--she suspected Wylie and the twins had something to do with that.
Sophie made a noise from where she’d collapsed in another chair, Olivia crossed legged on the floor beside her. “I’ll make sure to consult you next time we run away and need to hide our location from you and the Council.”
“Better idea,” Grady jumped in. “What if you don’t run away at all?”
Even though they were in one of the biggest rooms in the Underground, it still didn’t feel like nearly enough space for the number of people crammed into it.
All of her friends, all of their parents, Mr. Forkle, plus Sandor, Grizel, and Ro, Livvy to check up on Elwin, and Elwin himself. And there was little Olivia in the corner, but she was making herself so small she might as well not have counted.
Everyone had been incredibly nice to her, just as Sophie had promised, but it was still a lot of people.
And there had been a lot of confusion.
~
“Soph--oh?” Edaline had paused midway to her, head tilting to the side as her mouth dropped open. But she shook herself off as Sophie kept moving forward.
Edaline carefully closed the space between them, wrapping her arms around her.
“Hi, Mom,” she whispered into her ear, wrapping her free arm around her tight in response. She felt Grady’s join a moment later.
“It sounds like you have quite the story to tell us,” her mom said with a meaningful look as she pulled back, hands resting on Sophie’s shoulders.
Olivia’s face went carefully blank and tense, aware they were talking about her.
“Are you going to introduce us?” Grady asked, and Sophie realized it was more than just her parents Olivia was worried about. The whole room had gone silent, waiting in anticipation as they caught sight of her fiery red hair. Of someone new.
“Everyone, this is Olivia,” she said. “Olivia, this is everyone. She was…well, it’s a long story, but let’s just say she needed some better role models.”
Mr. Forkle raised a brow at that. “I do hope you plan to tell it, Miss Foster.” He watched Olivia with curiosity, a far-away look creeping around the edges like he was remembering something long past.
“Hang on, are you saying you think you all are role models?” Ro snorted, shaking her head and making the vivid purple of her pigtails sway.
“Hey, we may not be perfect--well, most of us, since I clearly am--but we’re definitely better than Murad and his creepy half-elf Phoenix people,” Keefe shot back.
Did you have to use every single buzzword possible? Sophie asked him, sighing as questions broke out; overlapping each other and rising in volume, she couldn’t even make out one question from another.
What? he asked, grinning and totally aware of what he was doing. It’s easier this way! Now everything’s out there.
Now I can’t even hear myself think, Tam put in, reaching up to tug on his bangs where he leaned against a wall near Linh, Wylie, and Tiergan, who was pinching the bridge of his nose and contributing to the noise.
“Don’t worry,” Sophie told Olivia, who had drawn back even further. “They do this all the time. It’s normal--and no one’s mad, I promise. And definitely not mad at you,” she said, guessing at where her reaction came from. “They’re just really confused…we kind of ran away from home a while ago, and everything has been chaos ever since. If they’re mad at anyone, it’s as us.” She gestured to herself and her friends. “We do stupid things a lot, and they’re kind of fed up with it.”
“Are you alright?” Edaline asked Olivia, brow crinkled. “I know you don’t know me, but we can fix that. I’m Edaline--Sophie’s mom. And if Sophie likes you, I’m sure I’m going to, too. She has great taste--don’t you agree, Grady?” she elbowed her husband lightly, drawing his attention away from the insistent inquisition her friends were undergoing.
Mostly it was them being asked any number of questions and going “you should ask Sophie about that” and “you’ll understand once Sophie tells the story” and “Sophie will explain.” Great. Really supportive of them.
“Hmm? Well, she does have some good friends, but there is that b--hey!” Edaline had elbowed him harder, and he seemed to actually be paying attention this time. And to realize there was a very overwhelmed little girl right in front of him. “Oh. Oh. Yes--Olivia, was it, kiddo? I like your little bee friend; it looks very soft. How’d you get wrapped up in all this mess?”
Olivia looked wide eyed between Grady and Sophie, and she wasn’t sure where this was heading or what she should do about it when Olivia opened her mouth.
The room had quieted by then, the adults getting nowhere with their questions and resorting to hugging their children again.
They’d overheard Grady’s question, however, and now watched with curious anticipation.
Olivia hesitated for a moment, then said. “You should ask Sophie about that, she’ll explain.”
Keefe cracked up.
~
“I think they’re going to explode if you make them wait any longer for that story,” Elwin said as he slipped his spectacles on and picked up her wrists. The leftover salve back at the village had helped some, but not enough. “So how about I take care of these while you start talking.”
Sure enough, when Sophie glanced back, it was to a room full of very tense, very expectant faces.
They’d sat patiently through Fitz and Sophie returning Elwin’s memories--and she couldn’t explain just how profoundly the relief had washed over her when she’d first seen him. Standing, full of color, wearing a ridiculous shirt covered in unicorns. Just himself.
She knew Livvy was good, but she hadn’t really believed he was okay until she’d seen the grin that’d split his face and he’d said, “There’s my thief!”, wrapping her up in an enormous hug.
But they’d stalled as long as they could.
Olivia was still curled up beside the chair, intensely aware of the attention she’d drawn as she nibbled on a puffed dessert. Kesler had offered it, promising there was nothing slipped into it to turn her green or anything--though she didn’t really understand the joke.
“Fine--but can you guys promise not to interrupt us with a million questions? We’ll be up all night if we do that.”
“I seem to recall you kids made a similar promise once--and were terrible at it.” Mr. Forkle smiled, silently settling into a nearby chair anyway.
“Hang on--us?” Keefe cut in. “You’re making us help, too?”
“Well obviously. Did you really think that ‘let’s make Sophie do all the talking’ thing was gonna fly?”
“Well…” Dex said, with a pointed look at her wings.
They buzzed under the intention--and from the tickle of Elwin’s fingers as he spread something over her burns. “That’s not what I--maybe I will tell the whole story myself then, if you’re all going to be so ridiculous.”
“I can help,” Linh offered, raising her hand ever so slightly.
“I told you, this is why she’s my favorite of you two,” Sophie directed at Tam, who only rolled his eyes.
“I’m beginning to wonder how we ever accomplished anything,” Tiergan rubbed at his temples.
“Simple. We’re the best!” Biana chimed in, appearing next to Sophie and startling her so hard she shrieked.
“You are,” Della agreed with a smile, but she continued. “Now about that story? Grady and Edaline already shared what you, Linh, and Sophie told them on your earlier visit. But it seems there’s been…some developments?”
Olivia sat very still as several people glanced at her again.
Fortunately for her, Fitz chose that moment to fluff his wings, knocking a glass off the table behind him with a loud clatter--he jumped at the sound as all eyes turned to him, but she could’ve sworn a hint of satisfaction flashed through the mindbubble as Olivia blinked.
“If everyone’s done, I’d be happy to tell you what’s going on--it’s great news,” she saw a few shoulders relax--even though everyone had seemed to pick up on their light, playful moods already. “But if you’d rather mess around…”
Biana appeared at her brother’s side to clamp a hand over his mouth as he opened it to protest, smiling sweetly.
“Alright,” she said as the room fell silent, expectant. “You already know some of the story, but there’s a lot we haven’t shared. Do you remember how Dex found that tag on the mushroom that broke into the Underground forever ago? The one that had a broken chain on it?”
~
“There has got to be a better way to carry that,” Maruca shook her head, re-securing her locs back as she watched Keefe stumble by.
Sophie followed her line of sight, a snort-like laugh bursting painfully from her nose as she saw what Maruca was talking about.
Keefe had a beanbag chair in his arms, but had apparently decided that the best way to hold it was to pile it atop himself in such a way his head was nearly completely covered, holding desperately tight for purchase as he walked unsteadily onward. She was seriously concerned he’d walk right out of the village and plummet to his death, even with the new railings.
Strung with vine-braided rope and peppered with flower buds waiting to bloom, they were a recent restoration project. There’d been railings when the village had first been built, evidenced by Olivia’s account and the leftover remnants they could sometimes find around the place.
But with time, storms, and tragedy they’d almost all fallen apart. None of her friends had bothered making railings when they’d started restringing some bridges and clearing out rubble, but that was because none of them needed them. If they fell--though it would take an idiot to fall in the first place--they could just fly back up.
That wasn’t true for everyone here anymore, though.
There was Olivia to think of, who had chosen to temporarily stay in the village with them because she couldn’t bear to be underground again--and because her monster wouldn’t be able to come underground with her.
Their parents hadn’t been thrilled at the thought of leaving several impulsive teenagers in charge of a young child, so they hadn’t.
On top of Olivia’s safety, their parents were frequent visitors; Grady and Edaline had already been to the surface before, and apparently so had Della and Mr. Forkle, so they were adamant that they should come over as often as they could to…she wasn’t actually sure.
Just to be there and start making up for the several months they’d been torn apart.
“AAH!” Keefe shouted, cutting her musings short as he nearly lost his balance on one of the rope bridges.
“You have telekinesis!” Fitz admonished from somewhere far in the distance--so far Sophie couldn’t even see where he was. “Use it, you idiot!”
“I CAN’T HEAR YOU OVER HOW AWESOMELY THIS IS WORKING!” Keefe called back, though it was muffled since half of his face was pressed into the beanbag as he continued his stagger.
“What are you even doing?” Sophie called after him, barely containing her laughter, broom in her hand long forgotten.
“OLIVIA NEEDS SOMEPLACE COMFY TO READ HER NERD BOOKS!” he called back, and she realized that was, in fact, the direction he was heading.
With Olivia in the village--frequently visited by much more qualified role models than the ten of them--she’d chosen her own house.
She’d picked one nearby Sophie’s, though she hadn’t explained why. She couldn’t help suspecting it didn’t actually have anything to do with her; sure, Sophie had been the one to promise to get her out, but they’d all helped with that.
And they’d only spoken briefly when she’d been kidnapped, not long enough for them to form a strong connection. At first Sophie had just been the most familiar face, that was all.
Living in the village for the past month, she’d inevitably gotten to know the rest of Sophie’s friends, too. She’d taken a shining to Linh, both for the Hydrokinetic’s kindness and her dragons. Olivia had also started spending more and more time with Maruca, though she wasn’t sure what drew the two of them together.
Maruca sighed as they watched Keefe go, turning back around to get back to work; they were all having another cleaning day--and this time there wasn’t any horrible news burning the back of Sophie’s throat ready to throw it all to a halt.
They actually had even more help this time.
“Is he trying to fall?” Grady asked, returning from his trip to get more rope from the storage shed. He was helping Maruca with that--and originally Sophie had been part of it, but after a few too many close-calls, they decided she should sweep instead to preserve her fingers.
“AW, I THINK GRADY-O’S ACTUALLY WORRIED ABOUT ME!” Keefe yelled, even louder since he was further away and had a death wish.
Grady ruffled Sophie hair as he stood beside her, shaking his head. “Are you sure you don’t want to leave him in that creepy abandoned facility?”
None of them were willing to bring anyone else to the facility, since they didn’t know how it would respond to someone non-monstrous, but they’d told them all about it. And Keefe and Dex had been going back multiple times a week after Marella had showed them how to get there. They claimed it was because the Black Swan wanted to know what other valuable intel was hidden there--Dex’s first visit had been brief and under significant stress, after all--but Sophie was certain Keefe would’ve been there just as often even without the excuse. Dex was just covering for him.
Just because their families knew they had wings and some…interesting side effects from their first mission gone wrong didn’t mean they knew the whole story yet.
Even with minimal interruptions and half of the story already told, Sophie had spent practically the whole day recounting the last few months when they’d all gone back. Her friends had, of course, helped; they hadn’t really meant to make her do it all, but there still were some parts of the story only she could tell.
Like how she’d been kidnapped, and what she’d found in different monster’s minds.
There were other parts of the story only others’ could tell, but that didn’t mean they did.
Keefe had chosen not to tell anyone about what the being was to him, and none of the rest of them were quite sure either.
Biana hadn’t talked about the colors she saw with anyone but the ten of them--eleven if Olivia overhearing counted.
Maruca hadn’t mentioned what she’d done to keep them all safe.
Marella hadn’t talked about how she’d met her dragons.
Linh, however, was more than happy to share details about her own.
They’d been relegated to the forest floor when they had visitors--Elwin may have been fine getting jumped by a baby dragon, but they were starting to get bigger, and she didn’t think many others would take it as well as he did.
Even though Grady and Edaline used to work with animals. And even though they were slowly getting Olivia to open up more about her monster, Goldie.
They were taking it much better than she would’ve expected, given what had happened at Havenfield when the apocalypse first started and everything since.
She didn’t know if it was a testament to the strength of their natural courage, or if the need to comfort a traumatized little kid was enough to overpower any reservations they may have had, but she was grateful either way.
“You still with me, kiddo?”
Sophie shook herself off and smiled. “Always.”
~
Standing before Havenfield’s new door of crystalline wood, she hesitated before raising her hand to knock.
The gesture made her feel ridiculous and hope no one was watching, but she didn’t live here anymore. It didn’t seem right to just barge on in, even if she visited all the time.
Her knuckles were still against the wood when the door swung open and Tam’s face peeked out.
“Took your sweet time getting here.” He stepped back to let her pass, eyes reflecting the waning light. “I should’ve guessed,” he snorted as he saw what she carried.
“Am I the last one?” she asked, though she already knew the answer was yes.
“Sophie? Is that you?” Edaline’s voice called from the dining room, raising it to be heard over the lively chatter from dozens of people all in one space.
Sophie trailed behind Tam as she joined the group. “Sorry I’m late, Mom.” She used her free arm to wrap it around her mother, who had rushed her the moment she’d seen her to press her close; her wings gave a fond buzz.
“I was beginning to think you weren’t coming at all! What kept you?” Edaline pulled back, brushing a stray strand of hair off Sophie’s forehead; it was constantly sticking out every which way since she’d cut it, but it was infinitely better than all the tangles she’d dealt with from flying. Now she didn’t even have to think about tying it back before taking off, and she’d gotten all that weight off her neck.
“Is that for me?” Olivia asked, appearing beside them and pointing to Sophie’s arms.
“Sophie!” Fitz admonished from across the table where he sat between Keefe and Alden, wings relaxed and draping to the floor. “I thought we agreed stealing was wrong!”
“Stealing is great, actually, Golden Boy,” Marella answered for her, leaning back in her chair at a dangerous tilt that had Wylie frowning next to her.
“You’ve never even stolen anything before!” Tam protested, re-taking his seat between Linh and Maruca.
Sophie turned away from the debate that broke out to refocus on Olivia, who still looked expectantly at her with those wide bright eyes, arms folded over her chest. Her hair had been braided back, though a few curls were escaping and frazzled, matching the dirt stains on the knees of her overalls. She must’ve spent the day running through Havenfields pastures--maybe chasing Goldie.
“Yes, these are for you,” she answered her earlier question, and handed over her spoils.
A DVD of Labyrinth and a chapter book she’d swiped on a quick visit to the Forbidden Cities.
When she wasn’t with Goldie, Olivia liked to spend her down time reading or obsessively rewatching the same human movies over and over again, listening to the languages of her childhood.
Labyrinth had been one of Sophie’s childhood staples, and when she’d seen it she couldn’t help grabbing it to pass the classic on.
“You’re going to run out of space to keep all those at this rate,” Grady teased as he emerged from the adjoined kitchen with platters of pastries in each hand. His apron said “KISS THE COOK”, which Sophie had grabbed for him on a different Forbidden Cities run; it was becoming quite the habit of hers.
“I’ll keep them in your office when that happens,” Olivia decided, darting off with her goods; footsteps pounded up the stairs as she raced to her room to deposit them.
A bittersweet pang coursed through Sophie.
She’d worried about leaving her parents alone when she’d decided she preferred to stay in the village; she couldn’t bear to be so far from Echo and all the creatures, and visits weren’t enough.
Even going back every single day, the distance grew as she stayed at Havenfield to help with the rebuilding efforts. Even though the most she could do was carry things sometimes. Construction really wasn’t her thing.
But they weren’t the same people she’d moved in with who were lost and grieving and needed someone to guide them back to living, and they weren’t the same parents she’d left in the Underground who needed reassurance she was still alive.
Grady’d definitely shed a few tears, but all his arguments had been half-hearted when she’d told them.
And she wasn’t leaving them alone.
There was Olivia now.
Sophie didn’t have a bedroom here anymore, but Olivia did.
There wasn’t a single moment she could pinpoint where Olivia had started melding into the family. No one had meant for it to happen; it’d simply been the result of a series of decisions trying to make the best out of a bad situation.
Grady and Edaline weren’t the only ones who had been kind to Olivia, who had visited the village and brought her gifts and been willing to put in the time to get past the thick shell Murad had put around her.
Not that that could be resolved in just a year--or ever; she’d bear the scars for the rest of her life, but they’d made significant progress in earning her trust.
But even with so many people offering her a peace she’d nearly forgotten, Sophie’s own parents had stood out above the rest.
Olivia trusted Goldie, her giant gold-threaded midnight bear, more than she trusted herself.
And Grady and Edaline had a way with animals.
As soon as they’d earned Goldie’s trust, it was like this arrangement was inevitable.
Of course she’d stay with the elves who literally worked an animal preserve; of course they’d look after an experimental little girl thrust into a new world without any family left to remember her--they already had experience with that, after all.
The only blip in the process had been the rest of the half-elves.
There was no simple solution to what to do about or with them, and they still didn’t have everything worked out.
With the help of information Dex had retrieved from the abandoned facility, the bits of intel recoverable from the burnt husk of the main facility, and the scraps of knowledge Olivia had from experience, they’d started searching for survivors of the facility fire.
And, with time, they’d found some.
There was no way to anticipate how any one person would react.
Some of them vehemently believed in Murad’s cause and had been indoctrinated by his revenge since birth, spewing vitriol against anyone who came near.
Some hadn’t even been a part of the experiments and plots, they’d just lived there because there was nowhere else in the world they could find a population of people like themselves. They’d been born into it and didn’t know anything else.
Some didn’t know what to think when Sophie found them and asked to talk.
And neither did the elves.
Originally the councillors had wanted to keep this knowledge to themselves, but there was no way Sophie was going to let them stay quiet about it; she’d understood why they’d kept quiet about Lady Vespera’s Nightfall--but she wasn’t going to sit by a second time.
They must’ve seen something in her expression that made them realize there was no keeping this quiet, so they’d elected to spread the news gradually themselves, and their world had never been the same.
Especially not after the Council had asked to meet with any half-elves willing.
The burden of arranging that meeting had fallen to Sophie and her friends, since they were the ones actually going out to find former Phoenix members.
It’d taken months, but with their combined efforts they got a dozen of the half-elves they’d found to agree to represent their people before the Council.
That wasn’t to say everyone was happy with the arrangement--the half-elves they’d found had only been the tip of the iceberg, hundreds more having survived, escaped, and reconvened around the globe.
And they were just as divided about the issue as the elven world.
Their main advantage had been surprise, as virtually no-one had been aware of their existence--not even the few elves who’d been alive when the banishing decree had been issued. It was too long ago; their ancient minds hadn’t held onto the memories, especially with the washers deployed throughout the Lost Cities and the rewritten history books replacing the gaps.
But now they’d been discovered, and they were far fewer in number and power than the rest of the Lost Cities.
So despite intense debate, they agreed to the meeting.
A meeting that had grown to include all the intelligent species.
When the meeting had started, there were only six intelligent species.
When it ended, there were seven.
Of course Sophie’s attendance had been requested to represent her friends, given just how wrapped up they were in the whole mess--because describing it as anything less than was just wishful thinking.
There’d been arguments both ways--saying that half-elves should fall under the designation of elves and didn’t need their own classifications (of course with some arguments they should be classified with humans instead). Others that they were too different from both species to be anything but their own category.
Regardless of what everyone else thought of them, the half-elves refused to align themselves with the elves given their history. And with that solemn reminder, the Council voted in favor of their own classification and broke the tie.
It was the least they could do, a first step, though they were a long way from making up for the mistakes of the past. If they ever could be.
The other species had left that meeting concerned that if half-elf/half-humans--who referred to themselves with which word depended on the person--could be considered an intelligent species, what did that mean for humans? Was it the elven-half that made them eligible? Or if the title was something that they could hand out based on a vote, whose to say humans weren’t intelligent after all? The thought had darkened and perplexed many faces, but it wasn’t what had screwed up Sophie’s--she already knew humans deserved to be considered intelligent, she just also knew that battle would be a long one, and wasn’t quite ready to take it on.
She was more worried about Olivia.
If the half-elves were establishing themselves again, would Olivia want to go back to them? She’d lived her entire live with them, after all. Spoken their languages, participated in their traditions; their faces were far more familiar than Sophie and her friends’.
Would they want her back?
Surely they knew about her--she’d been Murad’s favorite project.
But they hadn’t asked about her at all. Not until she’d broached the subject herself, the worry unbearable until she ripped off the bandaid.
They’d gone still.
“She’s alive?”
One of the half-elves from the meeting had pulled her aside, grip tight on her arm and desperately searching her face, brown eyes meeting brown. “Olivia’s alive?”
She’d stammered out some sort of affirmative, too caught off guard by their intensity to do anything else.
“Take me to her, please.”
It had taken a few days for security purposes, but when she’d brought them--Saya, she’d learned--back to New Havenfield, she’d never seen anyone so nervous.
Saya kept pushing back their dark curls, fiddling with the edges in anxiety, so different from the collected calm they’d displayed in the meetings as they waited in the pastures.
And then Grady, Edaline, and Sandor had walked out with Olivia behind them, and the unease on their face turned to bittersweet heartache at her small gasp.
Saya hadn’t said a word as they’d dropped to their knees, arms holding Olivia tight as she crashed into them and gripped them tight.
They switched to a human language Sophie didn’t recognize but still understood, and her eyes burned badly enough she had to look away--so did her parents, even though they couldn’t understand what they said.
But the love in the words was unmistakable.
“You’re alright? They’ve treated you well? When I heard--”
Olivia nodded. “They’ve--they’re nice. Where did you go?”
“I never went anywhere, honey. But when you left, I never thought I’d see you again. I thought something horrible had happened. But you promise you’re okay?”
“It’s better now since…since…” she trailed off, glancing at Sophie. “You’re not going to leave again, right?”
“Never again. I promised your parents I’d look after you, remember? I’m so sorry it’s taken me this long to find you. I had no idea where to start looking--but now I’ve found you, and I intend to keep my promise.” Saya tucked a curl behind Olivia’s ear, searching her eyes before pulling her close again.
They steeled themself then, remembering they had an audience, and switched back to the Enlightened Language.
“Sophie tells me you’ve been looking after her. Thank you,” they said, carefully even.
Edaline blinked. “Of course--Saya, right?” Saya nodded. “It’s the least we can do; no one deserves what she’s been through.”
“How do you know Olivia?” Grady asked, tightening his hold on Edaline.
Saya stayed on the ground, eyes on Olivia as they spoke. “Her parents and I were close, though they were far more involved than I was.” They didn’t say with what, but they didn’t need to. Involved with Murad and his experiments. “I promised I’d look after her if anything happened to them--though I didn’t know until recently--” they inclined their head to Sophie “--that she was still alive. I thought she’d died with Murad and Fintan in the fire.”
Olivia flinched at the names--nearly imperceptible, but there; Sophie swore she could hear a growl from a distant pasture.
“What are your intentions now?” Sandor squeaked out, squinting suspiciously at Saya. He’d taken to guarding Olivia instead of Sophie, and seemed glad to have someone to protect again.
Saya’s expression hardened, and they stood, a hand on Olivia’s shoulder; she looked anxiously up between the two of them.
“I intend to keep my promise.”
“How?” Sophie cut in, acutely aware of the rising tension.
“Thank you for looking out for her, but she belongs with her people. How would you like to come home with me?” they asked, looking down at Olivia and softening their tone.
Olivia stayed quiet, frozen--and this time there was no mistaking Goldie’s agitation as the growl sounded again, heavy footsteps approaching.
Sophie tried again. “Where are you staying?”
Saya glanced at her, debating with themself for a moment before answering; they’d worked alongside Sophie long enough not to immediately write her off. Saya had been the first to agree to the meeting, after all. And they’d stayed near Sophie throughout the whole ordeal.
“Murad established a number of unmapped bunkers in the event something went seriously wrong.”
Olivia wrapped her arms around herself tight and Goldie’s thundering form crested around a corner with all its hair on end.
“Underground?” Olivia asked faintly.
“Hey, kiddo, remember the breathing exercises we went over?” Grady said before Saya had a chance to answer. “Slow and steady, that’s it. You’re okay. Everything’s okay.”
Olivia squeezed her eyes shut tight as she listened, body lightly swaying with the rhythm.
They stayed quiet as she regulated herself, only broken by Grady and Saya’s gentle encouragement.
Goldie stalked up beside Sophie, fur laying smooth over its body--but eyes fixed intently on Olivia.
Sophie reached a hand out to brush against it; she hoped the soft strokes would travel through whatever mental link the two shared and help calm Olivia down.
When Olivia opened her eyes again, it was to Saya crouched in front of her, seeing her with new eyes.
“You’ve been through a lot, haven’t you, honey? A lot I don’t know about. Yes, the bunkers are underground. Would that be a problem?”
Olivia didn’t answer, but turned anxious eyes towards Goldie, who stared back.
“She doesn’t like being underground,” Sophie explained quietly, wings buzzing. “It reminds her of…everything. Since your facilities were underground.”
Saya stayed quiet for a few moments, brow furrowed. “Well, that’s a problem.”
They looked around then, surveying the pastures and the peaceful animals they’d been slowly accumulating, Goldie at Sophie’s side, her parents and Sandor tensely watching over the exchange, the new house of crystal and wood.
“Do you like it here?” Saya asked, switching away from the Enlightened language; Edaline, Grady, and Sandor’s expressions pinched.
Slowly, Olivia nodded. “Everyone’s very nice, and Goldie likes it here. There’s lots of space for it. And I have my own room--I even have some of the movies we used to watch!” She pushed up a little in a bounce of excitement. “We could--we could watch them together.”
Saya smiled. “I’d love to watch a movie with you. Do you like the people?”
Olivia wasn’t blind to what was happening. “I miss you. It’s…scary, sometimes, meeting so many new people. But Sophie promised me they’d all be nice, and that I didn’t have to meet anyone I don’t want to. And she keeps her promises.” Goldie shifted. “You could…you could stay here with me.”
Sandor’s face screwed up with impatience as Sophie’s eyebrows lifted.
“I wish I could, honey. And before we watch that movie, I have a very important question for you.” They waited for Olivia to nod. “Do you want to stay here? I know I don’t have a place for us aboveground, but just say the word and I’ll figure something out.”
Olivia took a moment, looking around at the new Havenfield just like Saya had, really considering her answer. She met Goldie’s eye, looked and Grady and Edaline, at Sandor, at the fields she’d started to play in and help with. “I like it here.”
“But do you want to stay? I promise I won’t be upset if you do, I just want to know what you think, okay?”
Something loosened in Olivia’s face and she nodded. “I like it here. Are you sure you can’t stay with me?” Her voice was near pleading, holding tight to Saya.
Saya’s face softened, and they pressed a kiss to Olivia’s forehead. “I can’t, honey. But I promise I’ll visit as much as I can. Every single day, even.”
They switched back to the Enlightened language. “You understood all that, I presume?” That part was directed at Sophie, and she nodded.
“Care to fill the rest of us in?” Edaline asked--polite, but strained.
“If Olive doesn’t want to be underground, I don’t have anywhere I can take her right now. And with what she’s been through…I’m not going to force her to leave.” Saya appraised Grady, Edaline, and Sandor as though they’d never seen them before. “She likes you, and she likes it here. If she’s finally found some stability, I won’t take it from her.”
“But you’re not going, right?” Olivia cut in, even though Saya had already promised to visit.
“I told you I’d be here as much as possible, didn’t I?” they said, squeezing her shoulder. They turned back to Grady and Edaline. “And in that case, I believe a proper introduction is in order, since we’ll be seeing a lot of each other--assuming you have no problem with that?” They raised a brow expectantly, almost in a challenge.
A smile broke across Grady’s face. “Of course not--if that’s what Olivia wants, we have no problem with it. Grady, Grady Ruewen,” he said, stepping forward to offer Saya his hand for a firm shake.
Edaline bent over to wrap Olivia in a tight hug, whispering, “I’m so happy for you, sweetheart. I promise, Saya can stay over as much as they want, okay? Whatever you want. And if one day you want to leave and stay with them instead, that’s okay too. We just hope you’ll visit sometimes.”
Olivia’s answering smile could’ve lit the world on fire.
~
“Was that all you grabbed?” Saya asked from their seat in the corner; they sat alone. Just because they were at Havenfield even more than Sophie these days didn’t mean they knew or liked everyone the Ruewen’s had invited. Sophie wasn’t sure they’d even met Alden before.
“Almost everything,” Sophie shook her head, reaching into her pocket to pull out a pack of mints and tossing them to Saya, who caught it with ease.
“And that’s why you’re my favorite elf,” they grinned, tearing off the plastic and popping one into their mouth.
Marella made a noise of protest, and Fitz opened his mouth to respond to Marella, but Biana kicked both of them under the table. “We are not having this debate again! Not at the table at least! Go fight it out outside if you need to, you animals.”
Tam had to cover his mouth with his hand to smother his laughter, and he wasn’t the only one.
“If you’re handing out presents, please tell me you got something for the rest of us,” Keefe begged, making puppy-dog eyes at her. Even though he knew the answer. It’d become a small tradition for her to bring Olivia a little something back whenever she visited the Forbidden Cities, and occasionally she grabbed something for Saya, too.
But the three of their’s connection to the Forbidden Cities--raised by humans and half-humans--was something they mostly kept between the three of them.
That wouldn’t stop Keefe from asking for treats and favors, though.
“Unbelievable. You save the world and this is the thanks you get?” Keefe complained with a small smile, because he knew he was about to start even more debate and arguments.
Sure enough, Maruca snorted, “You saved the world? Were the rest of us on vacation or something?”
Sophie tuned them out as Olivia came racing back down the stairs, giving Sophie a quick nod before she skirted around the chairs and mingling bodies to find Saya.
They smiled at her, running a fond hand over her head and fingering the braids Grady had done that morning.
“Saya’s taken the news well,” Edaline murmured next to Sophie, and she realized they’d both been watching them.
“Well, they said they were more ambivalent about Murad and his revenge dreams. Some of the others are probably taking it harder.”
Even after all the months spent working together, re-establishing the elven and half-elven worlds--sitting through meetings, traveling the world, and learning more about construction coordination than she ever thought possible--and even after all the progress they’d made, there was still one detail that bothered her.
A desperate, scared, lonely boy with eyes that couldn’t decide if they wanted to be blue or green standing alone in an evacuating village as his elven mother turned from him, never to return.
The defining moment of Murad’s life, the one that had sparked him to form Phoenix and shaped his vitriol against elves into what it had been.
But why?
Why had she walked away?
Murad had raved about how she’d chosen elves over him, but…she’d looked so devastated in that memory.
Sophie had so many responsibilities to balance, but the image of Murad’s mother’s bracing face burned against her eyelids every time she closed them, and she couldn’t stop asking why why why why why?
So she’d found herself before Councillors Bronte and Oralie, asking if they had any idea where to start looking for a vanishing elf.
Because there wasn’t any record of her in the Registry Files; Sophie’d thought that if she’d renounced her half-elven son and human lover, she’d have rejoined polite elven society and there’d be something to find.
But it was like she’d never existed.
Bronte and Oralie couldn’t say much to help--but they reminded her that elves don’t die, at least not naturally.
The elves from that time were still alive, even if their memories had been altered.
And so on the side, Sophie’d began the long and tedious process of identifying the few Ancients who were ancient enough to remember, of visiting them, getting permission to search for their washed memories--some were more willing than others.
There were those who didn’t want anyone rooting around in their head ever again, even if it meant they never got their old memories back--they’d been fine this long without them, after all, so what did it matter?
There were those nervous and distrustful about the process--especially if she kept her wings out for the meeting, so she’d taken to keeping them under a cape during her visits just to make it easier to talk to them.
And then there were those who were her favorite to work with: the ones eager to have their memories returned, who practically begged the Moonlark to find what had been stolen and set things right. They were few and far between.
All that didn’t even take into account how temperamental Ancients could be with how old and crowded their minds had become, nor how isolated they generally liked to stay. The majority of Ancients old enough to remember never responded to her initial contact.
Suffice to say, she’d had her work cut out for her--though Fitz had been sweet enough to help as much as he possibly could, and given the wide range of reactions to their varying levels of success, she was immensely grateful she didn’t have to suffer it alone.
Especially when, against all odds, they’d actually found something.
She’d been nearly ready to call the search off that day; she’d been here before, the infinite darkness in the outskirts of a mind that meant whatever memories there’d once been had been swallowed and lost.
The few flickers of ancient, ancient memories they’d already found were better than the complete emptiness they found in most minds.
But this particular ancient seemed so eager--desperate--to find something, that she nearly couldn’t bear the thought of telling them there wasn’t anything left.
She’d opened her eyes and looked into their imploringly blue eyes, that she found herself transmitting to Fitz, One more try.
The tug of exhaustion pulled at his mind, but he didn’t complain. Just rallied the little energy he had left to pool between them and squeezed her hand tight.
“One more try,” she repeated out loud for their benefit, and they nodded and closed their eyes, bracing themself in the chair. Their fingers dug so deeply into the wood she worried it’d crack.
With a final shove, they sliced through the fudgy edges of their consciousness as they shouted MURAD again, and Sophie sent a tiny bit of the power stored beneath her ribs in an attempt to get something to happen.
Maybe they aimed in the right place. Maybe it was her stored power. Maybe it just finally clicked into place.
Whatever it was, Fitz whispered, Oh fuck, before his mind immediately recoiled from its own vulgarity as a crackled memory surged forward. It buoyed them out of the recesses of this ancient’s subconscious with a startling instancy as they watched.
Even through the distortion Sophie could make out her face, pretty dark curls to her waist and deep blue elven eyes, dark skin, and a pinched expression overflowing with tears.
~
She burst into the room, not bothering to knock and sending them jumping to their feet.
“Nai--” they started, but she wasn’t listening.
“They won’t listen. They can’t see reason--they’re too afraid, and I don’t know what else to do,” she whispered, gripping her hair tight and frazzling it as she paced the living room.
“Slow down--what are you talking about?”
Murad’s mother stopped, turning to face them. “The council. Y--said they’d talk to them to appeal the decision, but he couldn’t make it. He messaged me, begging me to take his place. Because someone has to make them see how--how--how stupid this is. They can’t erase them, I’m not letting them take my family from me.”
“You met with the council?”
“If you can even call it that. He told me I had to go immediately, since they were already preparing to wipe their barbaric decision from their memories! Can you believe it?” she whirled to face them. “They know, they know it’s wrong--that’s why they erased it. Because they’re a bunch of cowards who can’t face the fact they’re doing this because they’re afraid--ruining thousands of lives over it.”
They struggled to keep up with her, heart pounding as they watched her pace back and forth and back and forth.
“I showed up and half of them didn’t even know what I was talking about!” she burst out, hands curling into fists. “I left Murad in--” she cut out, tension riddling her body as horror flashed across her face.
They stilled. “With Hati?”
Murad’s mother whirled, punching the wall and sending photos crashing to the floor. “I’m an idiot. How could I--I need to go back. I left him alone because I thought--what was I thinking!”
“You left him alone?” They could only helplessly repeat back what she said, could only try and understand bits and pieces of this whirlwind.
She darted back to the door, still ajar from when she’d burst in; she fumbled a starstone from her pocket and held it up to the light, not even bothering to look.
Instead her eyes were on the ground, but far far away and furious as she held a hand to her mouth and tried to brush away the tears.
They’d never forget the terrified sorrow on her face as the light started to pull her away.
Or the soft, “No,” she breathed as she faded from sight, muscles going limp and eyes wide as she realized all too late her carelessness.
And all they could do was reach towards their sister and watch her disappear.
~
Sophie opened her eyes to tears streaming down their ancient face, and as she opened her mouth to say something--anything--she tasted salt on her own lips, too.
“I’m so sorry,” Fitz said, hollow and automatic as their hands dropped from their temples.
They’d seemed too stunned to say anything in response for a long minute, and then they turned away.
Their bright blue eyes fogged over, and they hugged their arms close.
“I have always felt,” they began, pressing a palm to their chest over their heart, “that I was missing something. When I still spoke to my old companions, they told me it was the product of an old mind. Things slip through the cracks. It’s only natural. And I tried to believe them, that this space in my life was nothing more than an Ancient mind collapsing on itself. But some part of me never did, and when I heard that the two of you were searching the minds of those willing, I couldn’t resist. I had to know.”
They paused and took a breath. “And now I do.”
Sophie blinked hard. “I’m sorry,” was all she could manage. What else could she possibly say?
They continued like she hadn’t spoken. “I remember now…she was so passionate. If anyone could’ve convinced the council to revoke their decision it would’ve been her. That must’ve been why she risked it.” Their eyes fixed on her. “The general population doesn’t know the specifics of what our world went through, and us recluses even less so. But we all heard of the meetings between the species, and that there were half-elves there. Murad…I know it’s unlikely, but did you ever learn anything of him?”
Sophie’s breath caught, and Fitz’s wings ruffled behind them in surprise.
Their brow furrowed, anxiously looking between them and reading their reaction.
“You have?”
She couldn’t get her mouth to work, couldn’t figure out how to tell them that Murad had been responsible for their world falling apart, couldn’t figure out how to soften the blow.
Fitz beat her to it. “We did. He…he didn’t make it out.”
Their minds still held hands from their probe, and she felt his thoughts racing frantically past as he tried to school his expression and give this Ancient any peace he could.
They closed their bright blue eyes, as though they’d been expecting it. “Thank you; now leave me, please.”
They’d complied, numb. Fitz’s hand tight in hers as she drew them through the void and back to the village.
Neither of them moved or even said a word, simply standing there, until Wylie crossed their paths.
One look at them and he was calling a family meeting and gently pushing them into chairs beside the campfire; their fingers were still intertwined.
It’d taken a little bit to gather everyone, as busy as they all were with their different projects these days. Linh’s dragon had finally woken, and she’d been helping re-acclimate it to being awake and taking care of its no-longer-so-little ones. Marella had moved hers out of Havenfield, though Sophie wasn’t up to date on where it was now. It took Tam some time to get away from wherever it was he kept slipping off to--she saw him with Fitz a lot, and heard them say something about “knocking some sense into everyone.”.
But everyone trickled in, one by one, until the ten of them were silent around faux purple, yellow, white, and black flames and the questions became more and more worried.
When they’d mentioned calling Elwin, Sophie and Fitz had sent the memory through the mindbubble and watched it ripple into their heads, whispers falling silent as they watched.
Wylie and Biana, their resident experts on light, confirmed what they’d already suspected.
Murad’s mother, who’s name they hadn’t fully caught, had been too distraught and distracted as she’d held up the starstone.
They couldn’t see the specifics of the light, but Wylie and Biana said there was an impassive hunger to it, visible in the patterns it pulled her body apart in.
Never to reform.
She’d faded.
Murad had been wrong. She hadn’t abandoned him in that village to choose pure-bred elves over her family, her son.
She’d left desperate to keep him, and had died trying to get back to him.
His hurt, his motivation, his entire cause was built on something that wasn’t even true.
Millennium of work in retribution, months of chaos and torment, and this entire time she had chosen him.
Chosen him so entirely that it had torn her apart.
~
None of them had known what to do with the information, so Sophie’d told Saya the next time they crossed paths at Havenfield; it hadn’t taken long, they both visited as often as they could.
They’d gone quiet, then sought out Olivia to hug her close and apologize because they couldn’t stay.
Amidst Olivia’s disappointment, they silently pulled a starstone from their pocket and faded into the light; Sophie couldn’t help a pang of worry, remembering Murad’s mother being pulled so gracefully, so silently into its eternal light.
Edaline and Grady had come out then, just in time to watch them twinkle away.
They’d looked at Sophie in confusion. Did something happen? We thought they were staying the night.
So Sophie had silently pulled them inside to tell them what she and Fitz had found; something that changed everything and nothing at all.
That had been a little under a week ago, and she hadn’t seen Saya since.
But they’d shown up today, grinning at Olivia and exchanging polite conversation with all the guests they didn’t know.
Edaline and Grady had decided it’d been entirely too long since everyone had gotten together, and they all deserved an evening of fun and relaxation with how hard they were all working. For months Sophie’s days had been so crammed she could barely tell them apart. Between all the meetings the council wanted her sitting in on, helping Echo manage the forests and creatures, her Murad project, the reconstruction efforts, visiting Havenfield, and helping her friends with their equally busy schedules, she wasn’t sure she’d been this busy when the Neverseen and Phoenix had been at large.
And, another reason to celebrate, it’d been almost an entire year since they’d finally won.
But she set all of that from her mind, wings buzzing with excitement in their loose tailored shirts as she slipped into a seat beside Dex, nudging him affectionately with her shoulder.
He grinned back at her from his animated conversation with Elwin about something she didn’t understand, passing her one of the pastries Grady had baked.
As she bit into it, a small Brrr echoed through the room.
When she looked down, she found herself staring directly into Echo’s eyes as it perched in her lap.
She swore she could hear Tam muttering something that sounded a lot like weirdo as she pet it, trying not to sprinkle powdered sugar over it.
Linh flicked water at her brother, giving Echo a longing look from across the table.
Tam grumbled under his breath, and Keefe laughed at him with wings flashing white. They ruffled, bumping into Fitz, who’s own wings shot out and hit Biana.
She shrieked in indignation, laughing as she pushed out of her chair--Maruca reaching out to pull her back down as Wylie shook his head. Sophie saw Dex’s hand slip into his pocket, and she feared what he’d pull out of it--but that wasn’t nearly as wicked as Marella’s expression; she only ever looked like that when she knew something good was about to go down.
“Everything alright over there?” Grady called from where he’d returned to the kitchen, and Sophie couldn’t help grinning as she finished off her pastry, watching her family. Her ridiculous, weirdo family.
“Never been better.”
#kotlc#kotlc fanfic#kotlc wings au#quil's quill#shattered upside down#happy one year anniversary to the ending of shattered upside down my kotlc wings au <3#and i know I said it in the end note but thank you again to everyone who's ever read it. and to everyone's who left comments#and talked to me about it#it was a HUGE labor of love I cannot believe I pulled off#i don't know that i'm done with the world of sud. but. this story has come to its end#and I am going to let them enjoy themselves. they've earned it <3#going 2. go cry now or something
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in my quest to maybe move back to providence after 20 years, im looking at jobs down there and damn i think i might be better off financially pivoting to carpentry/construction work for a while
#messages from the ouija board#the biggest two hurdles there are 1) gender. on multiple levels. but maybe i could get my dad to put in a good word for me w an old contact#bc he seems to know every tradesman in rhode island somehow. a#but like. every manual labor job ive ever had other than assisting my dad. gender has become a Problem. and itll probably be worse now#and then 2) id have to get a vehicle and all the bells and whistles w that#though idk maybe i could ask my coworker marty about how to get into stage carpentry#bc hes trans and seems to be doing well in it#ive always enjoyed manual labor stuff like i love painting i love demo work i loved repairing tombstones i love building shit#but the few times ive actually been hired by people who arent family its been a real struggle to be taken seriously#in one case i got harassed (over being a 'woman') into leaving#and in another it just made the guys on the crew increasingly uncomfortable 'having a girl around' and when the current job wrapped up#i just got ghosted. no telling me where the next job was. no returning my calls. nothing.#and im scared of that happening again. but also. the money seems way better than museum work wrt what im qualified for
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When did 2 gallons of milk start costing over $10?
Minimum wage here is $7.25
#sorenhoots#milk is my samefood and i can drink over 2 gallons a week if im being diligent about staying hydrates. yes i know i should drink water. i#cannot make myself swallow water because the sensory is so bad. fun fact: water tastes fine if i start taking adderall. but the effect wears#off within a week. my point is: my sensory issues are probably tied to my Non-Ideal Nervous System that cause me widespread pain. and thus#it would be really cool if they could either properly study fibromyalgia and cure me... OR charge less than $10 for 2 gallons of milk.#or raise the minimum wage. or let me live in a community with a neighbor with dairy cows that i can impress with my ability to do the same#thing for 10 hours straight such as doting upon plants or animals and then we can be friends who share milk and labor#god i just reaalized i sound like im daydreaming of being a medival milkmaid. oh my god now i realized tumblr hasnt discovered the word#milkmaid yet. i bet Tumblr would love that word.#wow i just realized you can REALLY TELL i have unmedicated ADHD aldjskssisndks. what was this post even about? milk! i paid $10.19 for milk!#thats bonkers!! i distinctly remember that in 2022 it was about $6 or $7 and i thought that was way too high.
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