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Marks of Loyalty: A Retelling of Maid Maleen
For the Four Loves Fairy Tale Challenge at @inklings-challenge
Seven years, the high king declared.
Seven years’ imprisonment because a lowly handmaiden pledged her love to the crown prince and refused to release him when his father wished him to marry a foreign princess.
Never mind that Maleen’s blood was just as noble as that of the lady she served. Never mind that Jarroth had been only a fourth prince when he and Maleen courted and pledged their love without a word of protest from the crown. Never mind that they loved each other with a fierce devotion that could outlast the world’s end. A handmaid to the sister of the grand duke of Taina could never be an acceptable bride for the crown prince of all Montrane now that Jarroth was his father’s only heir.
“Seven years to break your rebellious spirit,” the king said as he stood in the grand duke’s study. “More than enough time for my son to forget this ridiculous infatuation.”
“This is ridiculous!” Lady Rilla laughed. “Imprison a lady of Taina for falling in love? If you imprison her, you must imprison me on the same charges. I promoted their courtship and witnessed their betrothal. I object to its ending. I am Maleen’s mistress, and you can not punish her actions without punishing me for permitting such impudence.”
Rilla believed that her rank would save her. That the high king would not dare to enrage Taina by imprisoning their grand duke’s sister. She believed her brother would protest, that the high king would relent rather than risk internal war when the Oprien emperor posed such a danger from without. She believed her words would rescue Maleen from her fate.
Rilla had been wrong. The high king ordered Rilla imprisoned with her handmaiden, and the grand duke did not so much as whisper in protest.
Lady Rilla had always treated Maleen as an equal, calling her a friend rather than a servant, but Maleen had never dreamed that friendship could prompt such a display of loyalty. She begged Rilla to repent of her words to the king rather than suffer punishment for Maleen’s crimes.
Rilla only laughed. “How could I survive without my handmaid? If I am to retain your services, I must go where you go.”
On the final morning of their freedom, they stood before the tower that was to serve as their prison and home, a building as as dark, solid, and impenetrable as the towering mountains that surrounded it. In the purple sunrise that was to be the last they would see for seven years, Maleen tearfully begged her mistress to save herself. Maleen was small, dark, quiet, hardy—she could endure seven years in a dark and lonely tower. Lively, laughing Rilla, with her red hair and bright eyes, was made for sunshine, not shadows. She loved company and revels and the finer things of life—seven years of imprisonment would crush her vibrant spirit, and Maleen could not bear to be the cause of it.
“Could you abandon Jarroth?” Rilla asked.
In the customs of the Taina people, tattoos around the neck symbolized one’s history and family bonds, marked near the veins that coursed with one’s lifeblood. Maleen had marked her betrothal to Jarroth by adding the pink blossoms of the mountain campion to the traditional black spots and swirls. Color indicated a chosen life-bond, and the flowers symbolized the mountain landscape where they had fallen in love and pledged their lives to each other.
“Jarroth has become part of my self,” Maleen said. “I could as soon abandon him as cut out my own heart.”
With uncharacteristic solemnity, Rilla said, “Neither could I abandon you.” She rolled up her sleeves far to reveal the tattoos that marked friendship, traditionally marked on the wrist—veins just as vital, and capable of reaching out to the world. The ring of blue and black circles matched the one on Maleen’s wrist, symbolizing a bond, not between mistress and servant, but between lifelong friends. “I do not leave my friends to suffer alone.”
When the king’s soldiers came, Maleen and Rilla entered the tower without fear.
*
Seven years, they stayed in the tower.
There was darkness and despair, but also laughter and joy.
Maleen was glad to have a friend.
*
The seven years were over, and still no one came. Their tower was isolated, but the high king could not have forgotten about them.
The food was running low.
It was Rilla’s idea to break through weak spots in the mortar, but Maleen had the patience to sit, day after day, chipping at it with their dull flatware until at last they saw their first ray of sun.
They bathed in the light, smiling as they’d not smiled in years, awash in peace and joy and hope. Then they worked with a will, attacking every brick and mortared edge until at last they made a hole just large enough to crawl through.
Maleen gazed upon the world and felt like a babe newborn. She and Rilla helped each other to name what they saw—sky, mountain, grass, clouds, tree. There was wind and sun, birds and bugs and flowers and life, life, life—unthinkable riches after seven years of darkness. They rolled in the grass like children, laughing and crying and thanking God for their release.
Then they saw the smoke. Across a dozen mountains, fields and forests had been burnt to ashes. Whole villages had disappeared. Far off to the south, where they should have been able to make out the flags and towers of the grand duke’s palace, there was nothing.
“What happened?” Maleen whispered.
“War,” Rilla replied.
Before the tower, Maleen had known the Opriens were a threat. Their emperor was a warmonger, greedy for land, disdainful of those who followed traditions other than Oprien ways. But war had always been a distant fear, something years in the distance, if it ever came at all.
Years had passed. War had come.
What of the world had survived?
*
Left to herself, Maleen might have stayed in the safe darkness of the tower, but Maleen was not alone. She had Rilla, who hungered for knowledge and conversation and food that was not their hard travel bread. She had Jarroth, somewhere out there—was he even alive?
Had he fallen in battle against the Oprien forces? Perished as their prisoner? Burned to death in one of their awful blazes? Had he wed another?
Rilla—who had developed a practical strain during their time in the tower—oversaw the selection of their supplies. They needed dresses—warm and cool. They needed cloaks and stockings and underclothes. They needed all the food they could salvage from their storeroom, and all the edible greens Maleen could find on the mountain. They needed kindling, flint, candles, blankets, bedrolls.
On their last night before leaving the tower, Maleen and Rilla slept in their usual beds, but could not sleep. The tower had seemed a place of torment seven years ago. Who would have thought it would become the safest place in the world?
“What do you think we’ll find out there?” Maleen asked Rilla.
“I don’t know,” Rilla said. “Whatever it is, we’ll face it together.”
*
It was worse than Maleen could have imagined.
Not only was Taina devastated by war and living under Oprien rule.
Taina was being wiped out.
The Taina were an independent people, proud of their traditions, which they had clung to fiercely as they were conquered and annexed into other kingdoms a dozen times across the centuries. Relations between the Taina and the high king of Montane had been strained, but friendly. Some might rebel, but most were content to live under the high king so long as he tolerated their culture.
The Oprien emperor did not believe in tolerance.
Taina knew that under Oprien rule, Taina life would die, so they had fought fiercely, cruelly, mercilessly, against the invasion, until at last they were conquered. The emperor, enraged by their resistance, ordered that the Taina be wiped from the face of the earth. Any Taina found living were to be killed like dogs.
Maleen and Rilla quickly learned that the tattoos on their necks and arms—the proud symbols of their heritage—now marked them for death. They wore long sleeves and high collars and thick cloaks. They avoided speaking lest their voices give them away. They dared not even think in the Taina tongue.
One night as they camped in a ruined church, Maleen trusted in their isolation enough to ask, “If I had given up Jarroth—let him marry his foreign princess—do you think Taina would have been saved?”
Rilla, ever wise about politics, only laughed. “If only it had been so easy. I would have told you to give him up myself. No, Oprien wanted war, and no alliance could have stopped them. No alliance did. For all we know, Jarroth did marry a foreign princess, and this was the result.”
Maleen got no sleep that night.
*
Jarroth had not married.
Jarroth was the king of Montane.
*
The wind had the first chill of autumn when Maleen and Rilla entered Montane City—a city of soaring gray spires and beautiful bridges, with precious stones in its pavements and mountain views that rivaled any in Taina.
Though its territories had been conquered, Montane itself had retained its independence—on precarious terms. Montane was surrounded by Oprien land, and even its mountains could not protect it if the emperor’s anger was sufficiently roused. Maleen and Rilla could not be sure of safety even here—the emperor had thousands of eyes upon his unconquered prize—but they could not survive a winter in the countryside, and Montane City was safer than any other.
“We must find work,” Maleen said, “if anyone will have us.” She now trusted in their disguises to keep their markings covered and their voices free of any taint of Taina.
“The king is looking for workers,” Rilla said with a smile.
Even now, Rilla championed their romance, but Maleen had grown wiser in seven years. Jarroth’s father was no longer alive to object, but a king—especially one surrounded by enemies—had even less freedom to marry than a crown prince did. Any hopes Maleen had were distant, wild hopes, less real than their pressing needs for food and shelter and new shoes.
But those wild hopes brought her and Rilla at last to the king’s gate, and then to his housekeeper, who was willing to hire even these ragged strangers to work in the king’s kitchen. The kitchen was so crowded with workers that Maleen and Rilla found they barely had room to breathe.
“It’s not usually like this,” a fellow scullery maid told them. “Most of these new hands will be gone after the wedding.”
Maleen felt a foreboding that she hadn’t felt since the moment the high king had pronounced her fate. Only this time, the words the scullery maid spoke crushed her last, wild hope.
In two weeks’ time, Jarroth would marry another.
*
As Maleen gathered herbs in the kitchen garden—the cook had noticed her knowledge of plants—she caught sight of Jarroth, walking briskly from the castle to a waiting carriage. He had aged more than seven years—his dark hair, thick as ever, had premature patches of gray. His shoulders were broader, and his jaw had a thick white scar. There was majesty in his bearing, but sorrow in his face that was only matched by the sorrow in Maleen’s heart—time had been unkind to both of them.
She longed to race to him and throw her arms around him, reassure him that she yet lived and loved him. A glimpse of one of her markings peeking out from beneath a sleeve reminded Maleen of the truth—she was a woman the king’s enemy wanted dead. She could not ask him to endanger all Montane by acknowledging her love.
Sensible as such thoughts were, Maleen might still have run to him, had Jarroth not reached the carriage first. When he opened the door, Maleen saw the arms of a foreign crown—the fish and crossed swords of Eshor. The woman who emerged was swathed in purple veils, customary in that nation for soon-to-be brides.
Jarroth bowed to his betrothed, then disappeared back into the palace with his soon-to-be wife on his arm.
Maleen sank into a patch of parsley and wept.
*
Rilla was helping Maleen to water the herb gardens when the purple-veiled princess of Eshor wandered into view.
“Is that the vixen?” Rilla asked.
Maleen shushed and scolded her.
“Don’t shush me,” Rilla said. “Now that I’m a servant, I’m allowed the joy of despising my betters.”
“You don’t need to despise her.” She was a princess doing her duty, as Jarroth was doing his. Jarroth thought Maleen dead with the rest of her nation.
“I will despise who I like,” Rilla said. “If I correctly recall, the king of Eshor has only one daughter, and she’s a sharp-tongued, spiteful thing.” She tore up a handful of weeds. “May she plague his unfaithful heart.”
Since Maleen could not bear to hear Jarroth disparaged, she did not argue, and she and Rilla fell into silence.
The princess remained in the background, watching.
When their heads were bent together over a patch of thyme, Rilla murmured, “Will she never leave?”
“She often comes to the gardens,” Maleen said. “She has a right to go where she pleases.”
“But not to stare as if we each have two heads.”
Out of habit, they glanced at each others’ collars, cuffs, and skirts. No sign of their markings showed.
“We have nothing to fear from her,” Maleen said. “In two days, the worst will be over.”
*
A maid came to the kitchen with a message from the princess, asking that the “pretty dark-haired maid in the herb garden” bring her breakfast tray. Cook grumbled, but could not object.
Maleen tried not to stare as she laid out the tray. The princess sprawled across the bed, her feet up on pillows, her face unveiled. Her height and build were similar to Maleen’s, but her hair was a sandy brown, and her face had been pockmarked by plague. Even then, her eyes—a striking blue, deep as a mountain lake—might have been pretty had there not been a cunning cruelty to the way they glared at her.
“You are uncommonly handsome for a kitchen maid,” the princess said. “You have not always been a servant, I think.”
Maleen tried not to quake. There was something terrifying in her all-knowing tone. “I do not wish to contradict your highness,” Maleen said, “but you are mistaken. I have been in service since my twelfth year.”
“Then you have been a servant of a higher class. Your hands are nearly as soft as mine, and you carry yourself like a princess.”
“Your highness is kind.” Maleen nodded her head in a quick, subservient bow, then scurried toward the door.
“I did not dismiss you!” the princess snapped.
Maleen stood at attention, her eyes upon her demurely clasped hands. “Forgive me, your highness. What else do you require?”
“I require assistance that no one else can give—a service that would be invaluable to our two kingdoms. I sprained my ankle on the stairs this morning and will be unable to walk. Since I cannot bear the thought of delaying the wedding that will bind our two nations in this hour of need, I need a woman to take my place.”
A voice that sounded much like Rilla’s whispered suspicions through Maleen’s mind. The princess was proud and her illness was recent. She would not like to show her ravaged face to foreign crowds, and by Montane tradition, she could not go veiled to and from the church.
Knowing—or suspecting—the truth behind the request didn’t ease any of Maleen’s terror. “No!” she gasped. “No, no, no! I could never…!”
“You will!” the princess snapped, sounding as imperious and immovable as the high king on that long ago day. “You are the right build—you will fit my gowns. You have a face that will not shame Eshor. You are quiet and demure—you will be discreet.”
“I will not do it! It is not right!” To marry the man she loved in the name of another woman, to show her face to the man who thought her long dead, to endanger his kingdom and her life by showing him a Taina had survived and entered his domain, it was—all of it—impossible.
“It is perfectly legal. Marriage by proxy is a long-standing tradition. I will reward you handsomely for your trouble.”
As she had defied the high king, so Maleen defied this princess. With her proudest bearing, Maleen looked the princess in the eye. “I will not do it. You have no right to command me. You will find another.”
“If I do,” the princess said, “there is an agent of the Oprien empire in the marketplace who will be glad to know the king of Montane harbors a fugitive from Taina.”
Maleen’s blood ran cold.
The princess smirked—a cat with a mouse in its claws. “If you serve me in this, no one ever need know of your heritage. I will even spare your red-haired friend. Do we have a bargain?”
Maleen bowed her head and rasped, “I am your servant, your highness.”
*
That night in their shared quarters, Rilla kept Maleen from bolting.
“We must flee!” Maleen said. “She knows the truth! If we are gone before dawn—“
“She will alert the emperor’s agent and give our descriptions,” Rilla said. “Nowhere will be safe.”
“If Jarroth sees me!”
“Either he will recognize you, and you’ll have your long-awaited reunion, or he won’t, and you’ll be well rid of him.”
“He could hand me over to the emperor himself. He is king and has a duty—“
If you think him capable of that, you’re a fool for ever loving him.”
Maleen sank onto her cot, breathing heavily. Tears sprang from her eyes. “I can’t do it. I’m too afraid.”
“You’ve lived in fear for seven years. I should think you well-practiced in it by now.”
“Will you be quiet, Rilla?” Maleen snapped.
Rilla grinned.
But she sank down on the cot next to Maleen and took Maleen’s hands in hers. With surprising sincerity, she said, “We can’t control what will happen. That’s when we trust. Trust me. Trust heaven. Trust yourself. Trust Jarroth. All will be well, and if it’s not, we’ll face it as we’ve faced our other troubles. You survived seven years in a tower. You can face a single day.”
What choice did she have? What choice had she ever had? She loved Jarroth and would be there on his wedding day, dressed as his bride. What came next was up to him.
Maleen embraced Rilla. “What would I do without you?”
“Nothing very sensible, I’m sure.”
*
The bride’s gown was all white, silk and lace, with a high collar, full sleeves, and skirts that hid even her shoes. Eshoran fashions were well-suited for a Taina bride.
When she met Jarroth on the road to the church, he gasped at the sight of her. “My…”
“Yes?” Maleen asked, heart racing.
He shook his head. “Impossible.” Meeting her eyes, he said, “You remind me of a girl I once knew. Long dead, now.”
The resemblance was not great. Seven years had changed Maleen. She was thinner, paler, ravaged by near-starvation and hard living. She had matured so much she sometimes wondered if her soul was the same as the girl’s he’d known. Yet the way her heart raced at the sight of him suggested some deep part of her hadn’t changed at all.
Jarroth took her hand and they began the long walk to the church, flanked on both sides by crowds of his subjects. So many eyes. Maleen longed to hide.
She glanced at her sleeve, which moved every time Jarroth’s hand swung with hers. “Don’t show my markings,” she murmured desperately.
Jarroth glanced over in surprise. “Pardon?”
Maleen looked away. “Nothing.”
At the bridge before the cathedral—the city’s grandest, flanked by statues of mythical heroes—the winds over the river swirled Maleen’s skirts as she stepped onto the arched walkway.
“Please, oh please,” she prayed in a whisper, “don’t let the markings on my ankles show.”
At the door to the church, she and Jarroth ducked their heads beneath a bower of flowers. She felt the fabric of her collar move, and placed a hand desperately to her throat. “Please,” she prayed, “don’t let the flowers show.”
“Did you say something?” Jarroth asked.
Maleen rushed into the church.
She sat beside him through the wedding service—the day she’d dreamed of since she’d met him nearly ten years ago—crying, not for joy, but in terror and dismay. He had seen her face and did not know her. He believed her long dead. She was so changed he did not suspect the truth, and she didn’t dare to tell him. Now she wed him as a stranger, in another woman’s name.
When the priest declared them man and wife, Maleen dissolved into tears. He took her to the waiting carriage and brought her to the palace as his bride. Maleen could not bear it. She claimed fatigue and dashed in the princess’ chambers as quickly as she could.
She threw the gown, the jewels, the petticoats on the floor beside the bed of the smiling princess. “It is done,” she said. “I owe you no more.”
“You have done well,” the princess said. “But don’t go far. I may have need of you tonight.”
*
That evening, Rilla wanted every detail of the wedding—the service, the flowers, the gown, and most of all, Jarroth’s reaction.
“You mean you didn’t tell him?” she scolded. “After he suspected?”
“How could I? In front of those crowds?”
“You’ll just leave him to that woman?”
“He chose that woman, Rilla.”
“But he married you.”
He had. It should have been the happiest moment of her life. But it was the end of all her hopes.
After dark, a maid summoned Maleen to a dressing room in the princess’ suite. The princess��queen now, Maleen realized—sat before a mirror, adjusting her customary purple veils. “You will remain here, in case I have need of you.”
The hatred Maleen felt in that moment rivaled anything Rilla had ever expressed. Not only did this woman force her to marry her beloved in her place—now she had to play witness to their wedding night.
The princess stepped into the dim bedchamber—her ankle as strong as anyone’s—leaving Maleen alone in the dark. It felt like the tower all over again—only without Rilla for support.
What a fool the princess was! She couldn’t wear the veil forever—Jarroth would see her face eventually.
There were murmurs in the outer room—Maleen recognized Jarroth’s deep tones.
A moment later, the princess scurried back into the dressing room. She hissed in Maleen’s ear, “What did you say on the path to the church?”
On the path?
Her stomach sank at the memory. She could say only the truth—but the princess wouldn’t like it. “My sleeve was moving. I prayed my markings wouldn’t show.”
Another moment alone in the dark. Another murmur from without, then another question from the princess. “What did you say at the bridge?”
“I prayed the markings on my ankle wouldn’t show.”
The princess cursed and returned to the bedchamber.
When she came back a moment later, Maleen swore the woman’s eyes sparked angrily in the dark. “What did you say at the church door?”
“I prayed the flowers on my neck wouldn’t show.”
The princess promised a million retributions, then returned to the bedroom.
The next time the door opened, Jarroth loomed in the threshold, a lantern in his hand. His eyes were wild—with anger or terror or wild hope, Maleen couldn’t begin to guess.
He held the lantern before her face. “Show me your wrists.”
Maleen rolled up her sleeves and showed the dots and dashes that marked the friendships of her life.
“Show me your ankles.”
She lifted her skirts to reveal the swirling patterns that marked her coming-of-age.
“Show me,” he said, his eyes blazing with undeniable hope, “the markings around your neck.”
She unbuttoned the collar to show the pink flowers of their betrothal.
The lantern clattered to the floor. Jarroth gathered her in his arms and pressed kisses on her brow. “My Maleen! I thought you dead!”
“I live,” Maleen said, laughing and crying with joy.
“And Rilla?” he asked.
“Downstairs.”
He put his head out the door and called for a maid to bring Rilla to the chambers. Then he called for guards to make sure his furious foreign bride did not leave the room.
Then he and Maleen began to share their stories of seven lost years.
*
The pockmarked princess glared at Jarroth and Maleen in the sunlit bedchamber. “You are sending me back to Eshor?”
“I have already wed a bride,” Jarroth said. “I have no need of another.”
The princess spat, “The emperor will be furious when he knows the king of Montane has wed a Taina bride.”
“Let him hear of it,” Jarroth said. “Let him go to war if he dares it. The people of Taina are always welcome in my realm.”
Jarroth played politics better than Rilla could. A threat had no power over one who did not fear it, and Eshor risked losing valuable trade if Montane fell to war with Oprien. The princess never spoke a word.
*
Maleen wandered the kitchen gardens with Rilla and Jarroth, luxuriating in the fragrance of the herbs and the safety of their love and friendship.
“Is this wise?” Maleen asked. “To put all the people at risk over me?”
“Over all the people of Taina,” Jarroth said. “My father was monstrous to tolerate it.”
“We will have to tread carefully,” Rilla said. “No need to provoke the emperor. No need to reveal his bride's heritage too soon."
"We can be discreet," Jarroth said. "But what shall we do with you, Lady Rilla?”
Rilla bowed her head in the subservient stance she’d learned as a kitchen maid—but there was a sparkle of mirth in her eyes. “If it pleases your majesties, I will remain near the queen, who I am bound by friendship to serve.”
Maleen took her friend’s hand and said, “I would have you nowhere else.”
#the bookshelf progresses#fairy tale retellings#maid maleen#four loves fairy tale challenge#four loves fairy tale challenge 2024#theme: philia#theme: eros#story: complete#i set myself the challenge of writing this today and it got out of hand#no time for revising#you can probably pinpoint the spot where i started running out of time#so be it
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ghost of you
super quick Sua screencap redraw to celebrate the new video release - no I was not expecting it to be Like That and yes I was devastated
(no reposts; reblogs appreciated)
#my art#artists on tumblr#digital art#fanart#alien stage#mizisua#alnst#alnst sua#why is the acronym so hard to type correctly#drawing doomed yuri on valentines day </3#was not planning to make alnst fanart but i was contemplating violence and that reminded me of the show#long story short 3/4 of a class i'm in failed an exam#and the prof refuses to acknowledge that maybe he needs to revise his teaching methods#instead of blaming all of us for being stupid#anyway this isnt about him#i saw someone call sua the dead wife and wow so true#flashback queen#hyuna was actually my fave...time to pick a new one i guess!#now that im putting the art and the ref side by side i can see a billion mistakes#i will say the warmer tones + sua smiling more is on purpose tho#call it mizi vision with those rose tinted glasses#u ever think about how the ppl you love can haunt you#there have been so many times i thought a stranger was someone i knew bc i recognized their hair or clothes or the way they laugh#(yes lord huron is stuck in my head rn)
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#revised this piece so many times I think I took psychic damage#trafalgar law#trafalgar one piece#traffy guy#one piece#op#heart pirates#my art
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I will kill any god you ask.
#lucanis dellamorte#dragon age#dragon age: the veilguard#dragon age fanart#zazrichart#procreate#da fanart#FINALLY#who else would be first for a zevmancer?#it was my maker given duty to go for the crow with a grey warden first#his palette really gave me a generous middle finger idk why#i pushed it a little more into the reds#i shall not say how many times i revised his armor ✋😞#is he supposed to be mirroring my most recent zevran piece? maaaybe
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Stained glass project I did in school
#cool thing....#160 x 250 cm#that sure took a while lol very intense last couple weeks of the semester.... but I loved it a lot!! and I like how it turned out :]#stained glass#artists on tumblr#art school#painting#stained glass concept#painter#art#my art#art student#mural#also don't look too close at the clouds on both sides I know they're very different 😞😞 I was lowkey making it up as I went#ans definitely didn't have the time for more revisions lol#and by school I mean second year of art uni ✌️#painted with acrylic paint on 8 bristols taped together
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Casanova sketches!
#casanova#giacomo casanova#david tennant#my art#bbc casanova 2005#this series is SO FUN and so sad it's great#alright!! all 3 winners of last poll drawn!! I have to make a new poll#drawing him is a great form of stress relief for me rn and I have a lot of it lately#a client company ghosting without paying me after I've done and turned in everything after a million revisions and over a month of work#another company rushing me into and making me spend 400€ on travelling only to tell me they made a mistake and I could have stayed#🙃 please all I ask for is a little respect for my time and finances#anyway sorry for the rant I'm normal again#hope you enjoy these slutty Davids#tw blood
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you think it's over????? daniel's vampire eyes are normally blue but they turn orange when he talks about his maker armand AND YOU THINK IT'S OVER????????????? we have never been so back. keep your chin up princess
#daniel molloy#armand#devil's minion#iwtv spoilers#iwtv#interview with the vampire#armandaniel#armandiel#my last yap i have to go revise but#this is unprecedented. this is a never done before thing and they did it With Them.#devil's minion is on my friends don't you worry your pretty little heads#copying my reply: what i keep going back to is that the shift happens exactly as he says “i'm guessing you haven't heard from my maker”#which is a very strong narrative device because it visually cements the knowledge that he is /armand's/ fledgling#the feeling it was meant to elicit in the viewers is very clear because of the timing of it all!!!!
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𝐓𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐈𝐬 𝐍𝐨𝐭 𝐋𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐚𝐫: 𝐄𝐦𝐛𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐍𝐨𝐰
The idea that time is not linear comes from the understanding that it is merely a perception created by the human mind to organize experiences. In reality, everything that exists, has existed, or will exist is already present in the “eternal now.” This means that while we are accustomed to thinking of time as a straight line with past, present, and future, this is merely a mental convention to make it easier for us to understand.
How does this connect to manifestation?
If everything already exists, including your fulfilled desire, you do not need to “wait” for something to happen or “do something” in the present to achieve it in the future. Instead, you can simply align your consciousness and your internal state with the reality where your desire is already true. This alignment puts you in the position to experience that version of your life because, in the infinite field of possibilities, it is already there.
The practice of the “eternal now”:
1. Accept that the future already exists: Stop thinking of the future as something distant or uncertain. See it as a choice available to you in this moment.
2. Visualize as if it were now: Whenever you think about what you want, bring it into the present. Imagine that you are already living it.
3. Feel it as truth: The feeling is the link between you and the desired reality. When you feel that you already have what you want, you activate the corresponding state and allow it to manifest.
4. Let go of the illusion of “waiting”: If time is an illusion, there is no real “waiting.” You are simply experiencing in the physical what you have already accepted within yourself.
Why does time seem linear?
Our brain processes experiences sequentially to make sense of the world around us. This linearity is useful for practical tasks, but it is not the absolute reality. At deeper levels, time functions as a “field” where everything already exists.
When you understand that time is not a barrier, you realize that you can “jump” from one reality to another simply by choosing where to place your focus and energy. This change in perspective eliminates the idea that there is something to be “achieved” in the future — everything you want is already yours.
Conclusion:
Time is not linear; it is a construct perceived by our mind. Everything already exists simultaneously — past, present, and future are available in the “now.” This means that you can access any state or reality you desire, because, in essence, everything is already created. You just need to align your consciousness with what you wish to experience.
#law of assumption#loassumption#loa tumblr#manifesting#loa blog#neville goddard#loass#loa#manifestation#law of manifestation#loass success#loass states#loassblog#time#time travel#revision#loa success#live in the end#living in the end#loafers#loablr#shiftinconsciousness#shifting motivation#shifting community#shiftblr#reality shifting#shifting blog#shifting consciousness#shiftingrealities#desired reality
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You're the one person I refuse to lose to! You're the one person I refuse to lose.
🧤 Ta-da! Here's the comic I did for @rivalszine
#rivals zine#thank you for having me 🙇🏻#persona 5#goro akechi#shuake#fanart#comics#i usually do a lot of dialogue revisions in the process of making comics#but the amount of times i completely rewrote that 4th page...#words stopped being words lmao#i was like what am i even trying to say#i think it hits tho
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watch the radio drama on youtube or gdrive. ok goodbye
#cherry magic#my translation#finally finished my revision of all the tls so . it is rd promotion time once again#you guys WILL perceive it this time (<- has failed at promoting it for the last 2 yrs)#do it for me okay. Please.#also for ppl watching on yt: the revised subs are in the CC so pls enable those!! the old one has loads of mistakes lol
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No doubt he's a Megatronus merch collector
#chara_55#FINALS ARE DONE YAY#I wrote mystery book & made a cover for it for my finals. I can say I'm proud how that turned out xD#I had help from my love revising since my writing skills is not very great shjghf#anyways *rubs hands* I finally have time to draw transformers hehe#be ready cuz I'll be posting couple of silly robots#my files is filled with so much drafts. Most of it are Starscream & the Primes HAHAHGJHA#transformers#transformers one#maccadam#d 16#megatronus prime#transformers d16#megatronus
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Thinking about Bruce learning the hard way that kids are painfully honest and you have to be specific with them because he only told Dick not to tell people that he’s Batman. He didn’t say not to tell them anything else about his identity.
Batman is about to battle it out with some of Black Mask’s men when Robin blurts out, “You better stop what you’re doing ‘cause Batman is in a bad mood. He got a haircut and it looks bad.”
It was a good distraction but, “You don’t like my haircut?”
Batman brought Robin to his first and (probably not) last impromptu JLA meeting because Alfred was running down a time sensitive lead and he didn’t have a babysitter. He unprompted tells everybody, “Be nice to Batman. His girlfriend broke up with him and he fell in a fountain yesterday, and he doesn’t want to be here.”
Bats shows up at the Watchtower with Robin another time and Green Arrow makes a comment about Bruce’s new cape. He replies, “My other one is in the laundry.”
Robin side eyes him and says, “He doesn’t know how to do laundry. He took the washer apart and put it back together, and it caught on fire.”
#9yo Dick Grayson ‘he asked for no pickles’-ing Batman and Bruce is just like ‘don’t tell people this’#After each time Bruce revises what Dick can and cannot talk about as Robin#Despite having contingencies for everything he can’t always predict what Dick is going to find important enough to share#we need more fics where Batman’s dark knight persona is ruined by his embodiment of sunshine sidekick#dick grayson#bruce wayne#Batman#Robin
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celebrating a decade of being stuck in lawyer hell by drawing my favorite baffling concept art. What do you mean his father was supposed to be "returning from Egypt"....?!?!? What do you mean "Egypt power"?!??!???!?!?! Capcom please i'm desperate for info here
Also kind of became a game of "how close can I get to official (as of DD) styling"... I think I did ok..?
Concept art itself under the cut. If you're interested in more of my art feel free to check out @brodartrokihousuke
Interestingly I think this is the only time he's ever depicted without a vest or jacket on? anyways... wacky shit.
#ace attorney#apollo justice#brodoroki art#ace attorney fanart#dual destinies#(since this is concept art for that game)#could have improved a few things but I'm genuinely sick of working on this at this point LMAO#cloak was gonna have stripes but i couldnt get them to look right#I'll probably draw this a few more times and revise stuff later
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This year was my grand return to the jily community after a looooong hiatus and I'm so happy to return because--damn-- there's some incredible work being made for our cute little idiots.
I can't post everything that completely floored me this year, but here are some good standouts---some old some new. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did!
The Last Enemy: @chdarling
I've already made a whole other post gushing about this one so I will keep it brief. It's a commitment but it is 100% worth it. The slow burn, the dealings with political turmoil, the PINING. Every character is done with such care and kept me invested. I truly check everyday in hopes for updates on the next installement.
A Place for Hidden Things: @stonecoldhedwig
A soft, quiet thing of a fic that hits like a hammer to the head by the end. I love the concept of Harry discovering his parents through their objects and letters.
Notes: @scriibble-fics
It's hard to choose one of sciibble-fics works. No one does sexy, yearning jily like them. I love the passage of time in this one, the semi-friends to "omg, I need you RIGHT NOW" that comes with young love. Highly reccomend checking out the rest of their work.
When the Shadows Divide: @gigglesandfreckles-hp
I have to be honest with you---when I went to Abi's AO3 to choose one of her fics it was an impossible task. It's like a Sophie's choice senario--- and yes I am being dramatic but all of them are such treats.
A more angsty choice of her work but it left me staring at my wall with feelings for a good while afterwards. Please PLEASE also go check out her more fluffy because...my lord.
Love for the Summer: @missgryffin
I have to make a confession. I am a VERY picky fic reader. The worst honestly. I am a canon compliant, (mostly) Hogwarts era purist, and even if those are still present, I get weird if the fic takes place in settings that aren't traditional to the HP universe (I'm insane, I'm aware)
So imagine my surprise when this SUMMERTIME, jily fic keeps me so invested I'm basically biting my nails to nubs. Its so sexy and cute and jily are just so UGH. I love it when M/E rated fics are hot but then remember that they are still idiots, you know?
Up on the Rooftop: @beedaily
A jily classic! Your good old fashioned, bickering in love couple.
Patronus Material: @OgdensOldFirewhiskey
The classic Patronus trope, but so so adorable.
Aaaand if I think of more I will add them! Please go read fan work! Write comments! Give kudos and gush! Readers are what makes this lil' community strong!
#fic recs 2024#jily#jily fanfiction#this was an impossible list to make#lily evans#james potter#I'll probably revise it a million times and still not be satisfied
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Didn’t like how the majority of the mini comic turned out so here are 3 pieces of it. Wesker, guy who never gets ill, catches the flu and suffers pathetically. Obviously I make Birkin be doctor because clearly this is an individual who is adept and capable of the sensitivity it requires to aid an ailing patient. They cuddle. The end
#don’t look too long I freehanded the everliving hell out of their snuggle pose#idk it’s 3 am I might change my mind tomorrow and revise it#if time allows#who knows#who care really#resident evil#albert wesker#william birkin#willsker#silnaarttag#this isn’t unusual for them in my brain#William always ends up being big spoon… u just don’t get it..
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[writing]: god this is the worst. this is garbage. this is awful. it needs to be burned before anyone else can see it and my reputation is ruined forever
[reading back my writing]: oh this isn't so bad actually
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