#now we can get into building the relationship between these two fufufuffufufu
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How You Turn My World; Chapter 3
As the reality of your situation sets in, you try your best to survive in the Underground... and find a way out. Little do you know though, someone else is trying to find you.
Character; Lilia Vanrouge
Content; Gender-neutral reader, more shenanigans, getting more into the meat and bones of this fic
Content Warnings; Swearing
Word Count; 3.2 K
Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 |
Do not put my work into AI - I will push you into the Bog of Eternal Stench
Your night for the most part was uneventful. The horrid screaming had thankfully went in the opposite direction, away from your tree-top abode. Although throughout the night, little crowds of glowing eyes had amassed at the bottom of the tree, but they made no attempts to reach you. Even though they couldnât reach you, you couldnât help but feel unnerved, since all you could see was their eyeshine, and hear them chittering to each other.
Great, theyâre probably pointing and laughing at the new fool in town. âOh, look, Jim, a new plaything! Donât they look stupid hanging in a tree like that? Fufufu.â But you kept quiet, and just watched them, as much as they did you, making sure they didnât try any funny business.
They didnât stay for long though, either leaving due to their curiosity being quenched, or from how boring you were trying to be; silent, and watching, not moving. If worse came to worse, you would have started chucking rowan berries at them; if fae donât like the tree, they probably wouldnât like the berries either.
Eventually, the dark night dissolved into the dim glow of dawn, and once you could actually make out your surroundings and it wasnât just one large mass of darkness, you started making your way down the tree. You were a bit proud of yourself, seeing that you had 1) survived the night, and 2) not fallen out of the trâ
Snap! ⌠you celebrated too soon, since the branch you were using as a foothold gave way, and you tumbled your way to the ground. At least the fall wasnât too high up, but it still stung like a bitch, and youâd definitely have a bruise; both to your body and your ego.
At least there was no one around to see you eat dirt.
Sighing, you rubbed your eyes, and smacked your cheeks; fighting off sleepiness. Focus; you need to get home. Read the damn book Mr. Sparkles gave you⌠damn prick is probably gonna call in a favour laterâŚ
With a still sore butt, you found a mossy rock that looked somewhat comfortable and sat down, opening up your âHow Not to Die in Fairyland; For Dummies!â book (not really the name of it, but it was damn close).
âChapter nine; how to leave the Underground,â you muttered, flipping to the page. Weird, itâs only one page?Â
âWhile leaving the Underground is possible, it is a task that not many have accomplished.Â
Of the possible ways include;
Finding a portal; typically an enchanted faerie ring, or royal portal.
Finding a fae and tricking them into owing you a favour
One should leave the Underground before their thirteenth day. Should you stay beyond thirteen days you will not be able to leave the Underground, and will be a permanent resident.â
You shut the book, taking in a deep breath. What has it been, ten hours? It was hard to tell, the blurring of time. But at least you had a rough time of twelve days to find a portal â or have a fae owe you a favour â and get the hell back home. If worse came to worse, you were not above some benign trickery so you could see your idiots again.
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âŚ
Lilia had arrived home safe and sound, slept in his warm bed, and had some of his ⌠delightful home cooking before he was due back at the castle. And while he was eating the somehow overcooked yet still raw eggs, he couldnât help but wonder how the little Beastie was doing; how you were doing.
He didnât technically owe you any favours, since he had given you that handy dandy book â if anything, you owed him, since you did say âthanksâ and everything â but curiosity is a fickle thing, and you seemed interesting. Humans typically reacted more when they ended up here, and made no proper moves to ensure that they made it back. But you, the little Beastie? Lilia saw a fire in your eyes, of both ire and determination. You wouldnât give up easily, and while it was entertaining, he also knew that trouble could, and most likely would, follow wherever you go.
Last time a human like you ended up in the Underground⌠it didnât end well (said human nearly burnt the Queenâs labyrinth down to the ground). Hopefully though, you didnât prove to be as foolish, or as obsessed with fire as the last human. Who knows, maybe you would even escape! If you didnât though, the court could use a new fool, and you seemed amusing enough to please their majesties whilst not incenting their ire.
âHmm, wonder if their majesties have felt the intrusion,â Lilia hummed to himself, cleaning up his dishes. He could easily just magic it away, but the trip to the mortal realm had taken a lot out of him, so he was stuck doing some good old fashioned manual labour, not that he really minded. Doing the dishes was better than being digested by some mangy, overweight, cat.
A crack of lightning sounded outside, disrupting the otherwise beautiful and peaceful day. âThat answers that question!â Lilia sounded too cheerful for what many fae considered to be a bad omen, as lightning rarely meant a good thing when it concerned the royal family.
A raven came to rest on the windowsill, eyes glowing green; a messenger.
Lilia tapped its beak, letting the message play.
âGeneral Vanrouge, I require you to apprehend the trespasser on our land, lest they taint the soil,â the raven recited Queen Maleficiaâs message. âShall you deem it necessary to use drastic measures, so be it⌠To call this number back, place a coin into the ravenâs mouth. To save this callââ
Lilia groaned, but coughed up a bronze coin so that the Queen didnât send more ravens to his house on his day off. âOur guest shall be dealt with swiftly, I assure you of that.â Lilia ended his call, the raven blinked, coughed out the coin, and flew off in a ruckus of cawing.
He sighed, and cracked his back. âHopefully our guest can understand⌠and not hit me with a broom this time.â With a snap of his fingers, Lilia poofed into his trademark green sparkles, and he was a bat again. Instead of being lost in the mortal realm though, he was off to find you, who was most likely lost in the Underground⌠hopefully you didnât get eaten or fell into the bog again, since he doubted the Queen would want a dead(?) or putrid smelling guest.
âBeastie, Beastie, Beastie, wherever could you be?â
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âŚ
âWhere the hell am I,â you wheezed. You had been walking for a good bit, since hey, the bog really smelled bad, plus you didnât want to stick around long enough where the creature that was screaming last night decided to come back and make an appetizer out of you. So, you were walking. Where to? You had no idea, all you knew was that you needed to find a portal somehow, of the mushroom variety, or royally produced.
Currently, you were fighting gravity and making your way up a steep hill, but you knew you would be able to see over the dense forest canopy once you reached the top, and maybe, just maybe, you would be able to make sense of your bearings. Would you know where you were once you reached the top? Pfttt, no, but at least you would know what exactly was around. A sulfuric rotten egg-smelling swamp was one thing, but you wouldnât be all too surprised if you found out there was a man-eating daisy patch or some other nonsense here.
Finally, you made it to the top of the hill, and you caught your breath before looking out towards the horizon. To the north, the sea of trees continued for what seemed forever. East, the trees made their way into a grassy plateau where there seemed to be a village of some sort in the distance; quaint. South, uh, the swamp, definitely not going back that direction, youâve had enough of that swamp. And west, a castle, surrounded by a maze.
âAn enchanted faerie ring or royal portal,â you muttered, weighing your options.
You had about twelve days left to get out of this place. You could spend those twelve days trying to find a so-called âfaerie ringâ in the forest since those things were mushroom circles, but the chances of finding an enchanted one seemed to be slim to none. On the other hand, castles usually equaled royalty, which would equal portal. Knowing royals though, they were probably batshit insane. Also, if they felt like you were lying or trying to dupe them? Hey, they could apparently turn you into a slug or some other easily squishable being if they wanted to. And you really didnât want to be turned into a slug⌠now at the moment at least.
âForest,â you looked at the forest, âor castle?â You could also go east, but the grassland didnât exactly scream portal potential or had any rowan trees (or any trees for that matter). âThat is the question. Look for weird mushrooms and maybe get eaten by some critter, or potentially piss off some royal and end up as said critter. Hmmm.â
You groaned, and flopped down to the ground; both options werenât all that appealing, or even guaranteed that you would find a portal. Rolling over to your stomach, you opened up the book again, seeing if it had anything that could help you make up your mind on the options in front of you.
Scanning over the table of contents, there was nothing about where to find a portal in the woods. There was, however, a handy dandy chapter on fae etiquette, including government specificationsâŚÂ
You looked up towards the castle again, eyeing the maze. And started coughing out into laughter at your situation. âPfttt, didnât I wish that the Goblin King would whisk me away from my life,â you wheezed. âAnd here I am! In the fucking Underground with a labyrinth?!â Your laughing subsided into a tired sigh, and you set your eyes back towards the castle. âThe irony is astounding really.â
At least you didnât have to worry about some baby being turned into a goblin⌠right?Â
No, no, you only wished for yourself to be taken away, no one else. But would that mean you would end up as a goblin? Fae? Or as some weird pet or servant to a fae? Hopefully not⌠and at least you had the somewhat credible book that Mr. Sparkles gave you.Â
Shit, I owe him a favour though⌠CURSE YOU SARCASM!!!!Â
Well, maybe Mr. Sparkles will cut you some slack, since ya know, you did save him from Grim⌠but you also did hit him with a broom⌠and insulted him⌠I am so fucked, arenât I?
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âŚ
You eventually got to the entrance of the maze (the labyrinth?), and sat down on a bench outside of it, huffing and puffing. âDoes everything want toââ you stopped that sentence, knowing your luck, if you said it out loud, it was bound to happen. âNever mind thatâŚâ
âNever mind what?â A voice said to your right.
You shot up and whipped your head around, coming face to face with a door(?) with a face. âI-â
âYou never mind!â A second voice said, and on your left was another door, sending its counterpart a dirty look. âYou know better than to meddle in such affairs!â
The right door, which was a weathered red, rolled its eyes at its neighbour. âBah! Curiosity killed the cat-â
âBut satisfaction brought it back. I know!â The left door, a brilliant blue, huffed. âIgnore them, they do this to everyone.â They sneered (if doors could sneer) to their neighbour. âDonât you have anything better to do than trick people?â
Did I just get in between these two during something?
The red door got offended, turning even redder by some means. âLike you should be one to talk! âOh my dear traveller, one of us two doors is a liar and does nothing but lie! Do not let my neighbour fool you!â Itâs the same every single time with you!â
Itâs giving bitter divorced couple who for some reason still live with each otherâ
âI would do no such thing!â
âLIAR!â
âNO YOU ARE THE LIAR!â
You groaned, their bickering was starting to give you an all too familiar migraine. âWill both of you shut up?!â
Both of the doors tch-ed at your remark but stopped their nonsensical arguing, and you rubbed at your temple, easing away the building tension. But they turned their attention to you, looking at you with a mix of curiosity and something else⌠doors couldnât be fae⌠right? The book didnât say anything about talking doors⌠could they be portals? It couldnât be that easy, nothing was ever that easy.
âDid anyone ever teach you any manners, mortal?â The red door huffed, turning its nose up at you.Â
The blue door looked at you with a similar expression, âYes yes, awfully rude you know! Lucky it's just us though, and not the mistress. Oh ho ho! She would turn you into a newt for that!â
I wasnât too wrong about them turning me into a slug I guess⌠would a newt be an upgrade in this case? Since they have bonesâÂ
âAnd youâre a door,â you deadpanned, âyou both havenât been polite either, ya know?â You had better things to do than kissass to two sentient doors, so no, you werenât going to be polite. âSo the sooner you tell me which way to go, the sooner Iâm out of your⌠splinters?â
The doors grumbled but didnât raise any objections.
âAs you may have overheard, one of us is a liar,â they both said at once. âOne of us will lead into the labyrinth, whereas the other will lead you back to where you started your journey.â They both chuckled, looking at you with amusement. âIt is up to you to decide which is which.â
You looked between the two doors, weighing your options. âAnd what if I just walk into the labyrinth? What happens then?â
The blue door hummed, âWell, it would eat you!â ⌠why did it sound all too cheerful about that?!
âSo I donât really have any other option then, do I?â
âNope!~â They both gave you cheerful smiles, and you were half tempted to go off into the woods and find that magic portal by your lonesome. At least then you wouldnât have to deal with a pair of divorced doors, and a human-eating labyrinth that belonged to some mistress that would turn you into a newt if she felt like you were being snippy with her.
You sighed. Of both the doors, the blue one seemed more sympathetic, whereas the red door was more harsh⌠âOkay, red, open sesame!â
The red door looked shocked that you picked it over its counterpart, but it opened nonetheless. The blue door grumbled that you had chosen its neighbour over it, but stayed quiet.
When the door opened, all you could see was black.Â
âDo you actually lead anywhere?â You threw a rock in, but no sound came out.Â
The red door was silent though; apparently, when it was open, it couldnât talk. And while you didnât miss the bickering, you really wanted answers, and the blue door wasnât saying anything either.Â
Sighing, you walked forward, hoping that you had chosen the right door. Once both of your feet were over the threshold, light started to filter in. Did I choose right?! But before you got too ahead of yourself, you felt the ground give way under you, and you were falling; falling towards an all too familiar sulfuric-smelling bog.Â
âSHI-â
âŚ
You were back in the bog of eternal stench, and spitting the rotten egg-tasting water out of your mouth again. And this time, Mr. Sparkles wasnât here to make you magically smell better either. Nope, you were stuck smelling horrible until you could find a change of clothes.
Crawling out of the water, you grumbled and hissed curses towards that red door. Of course, you would end up here again! Why not! Laugh it up, Underground! Laugh it up!
âI hate it here,â you seethed, wringing out as much water as you could from your clothes.Â
Shit, the book! But the book was still dry⌠Fuck you, book. Fuck. You. Of course, the book would stay free of wet and stench, whereas you were now shivering, since the water was frigid, plus you were angry and embarrassed that you had been deceived.
It was no use though just sticking around here lamenting and fuming. So you hoisted yourself up and marched back to the labyrinth; and even though the trip was a good three hours, your anger and pettiness drove you forward.
âYOU-â you hissed, pointing a finger at the red door.
The red door looked at you, looked to its blue neighbour, and then back at you before it started laughing. âI see someone took a little dip-â
You got up in its face, âFuck you, asshole.â You turned around and marched up to the blue door. âOpen up,â you cracked your knuckles, not breaking eye contact. And either your intimidation worked, or your smell was so offensive that the door just wanted you gone; weaponizing the stench works wonders against prissy doors.
âTh-â You remembered your first blunder; do not thank the fae. âYou are too kind.â And you stepped through the blue door, which was as dark as the red one, but once the door closed, you didnât find yourself back in the damned bog. You were now in the labyrinth, and perhaps a step closer to finding a way home.
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Lilia found himself in the bog, looking around for the Beastie (you). But they were nowhere to be found, save for a wet spot on the grass and some torn-up moss.
âAh,â he suppressed a laugh, âthey fell in again, I see. Poor Beastie.â At least theyâll be easier to find.
He summoned a glass orb, a looking glass of sorts, and looked inside of it. âShow me the human,â he whispered, sprinkling it with some green magic. âAnd show me their location.â
The glass orb multiplied into three. The first orb showed a close-up of your face, an annoyed yet determined look on your face. The second orb showed that you were surrounded by hedges. And the third and final orb showed that the hedges were actually the Queen of the Undergroundâs personal labyrinth.
â⌠at least they canât really run off anywhere.â But this wasnât a great turn of events. Many people, both human and fae alike, had tried their best to navigate the labyrinth. But it was a fickle thing; you had thirteen hours to reach the castle, and if you didnât within those thirteen hours? You would be stuck within it, as one of the beings that tried to stop trespassers from reaching the castle.
Lilia pinched the bridge of his nose, âBeastie, what have you gotten yourself into?â And he turned into a bat, flying off to try and find you. While the Queen did want you apprehended, Lilia would rather it be with his own hands, and not be held liable for any further actions or decisions you made.
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Tags; @afunkyfreshblog, @cheezy-moon, @eynnwwyjth, @ithseem, @lucid-stories, @ryker-writes, @twistwonderlanddevotee, @xxoomiii
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Author's Note; After a little break from writing this fic, I'm back! I hoped you enjoyed this chapter, even if it was only for the pay-phone/raven and the divorced bickering doors!
If you liked this, do check out my masterlist for more content!
#twst#twst x reader#twst x gn reader#twisted wonderland#twisted wonderland x reader#twisted wonderland x gn reader#lilia vanrouge#lilia vanrouge x reader#lilia vanrouge x gn reader#now we can get into building the relationship between these two fufufuffufufu#mr sparkles = lilia | beastie = reader#i wrote 1K of this back in September and the rest in the past two days#too be fair i was feeling a bit burnt out so i did need to step back a bit#but i've been feeling inspired again!!! yippee!!!!#raven; mmmmmm MONEY!!! 'to continue your call-'#*sad trombone noises* reader ended up in the bog again; will they ever smell good again?!#a break from the horrors i'm writing for the twst murder mystery au; back to the labyrinth au!!!#twst labyrinth au#and my fun tags have returned too!!!!
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I CAN'T WAIT TO FIGHT MR SPARKLES FOR BRINGING US HERE AAAAAA
Also adding this of my list of things I want to do before I die
ILL TRICK YOU MR SPARKLES DONT YOU FORGWT IT
How You Turn My World; Chapter 3
As the reality of your situation sets in, you try your best to survive in the Underground... and find a way out. Little do you know though, someone else is trying to find you.
Character; Lilia Vanrouge
Content; Gender-neutral reader, more shenanigans, getting more into the meat and bones of this fic
Content Warnings; Swearing
Word Count; 3.2 K
Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 |
Do not put my work into AI - I will push you into the Bog of Eternal Stench
Your night for the most part was uneventful. The horrid screaming had thankfully went in the opposite direction, away from your tree-top abode. Although throughout the night, little crowds of glowing eyes had amassed at the bottom of the tree, but they made no attempts to reach you. Even though they couldnât reach you, you couldnât help but feel unnerved, since all you could see was their eyeshine, and hear them chittering to each other.
Great, theyâre probably pointing and laughing at the new fool in town. âOh, look, Jim, a new plaything! Donât they look stupid hanging in a tree like that? Fufufu.â But you kept quiet, and just watched them, as much as they did you, making sure they didnât try any funny business.
They didnât stay for long though, either leaving due to their curiosity being quenched, or from how boring you were trying to be; silent, and watching, not moving. If worse came to worse, you would have started chucking rowan berries at them; if fae donât like the tree, they probably wouldnât like the berries either.
Eventually, the dark night dissolved into the dim glow of dawn, and once you could actually make out your surroundings and it wasnât just one large mass of darkness, you started making your way down the tree. You were a bit proud of yourself, seeing that you had 1) survived the night, and 2) not fallen out of the trâ
Snap! ⌠you celebrated too soon, since the branch you were using as a foothold gave way, and you tumbled your way to the ground. At least the fall wasnât too high up, but it still stung like a bitch, and youâd definitely have a bruise; both to your body and your ego.
At least there was no one around to see you eat dirt.
Sighing, you rubbed your eyes, and smacked your cheeks; fighting off sleepiness. Focus; you need to get home. Read the damn book Mr. Sparkles gave you⌠damn prick is probably gonna call in a favour laterâŚ
With a still sore butt, you found a mossy rock that looked somewhat comfortable and sat down, opening up your âHow Not to Die in Fairyland; For Dummies!â book (not really the name of it, but it was damn close).
âChapter nine; how to leave the Underground,â you muttered, flipping to the page. Weird, itâs only one page?Â
âWhile leaving the Underground is possible, it is a task that not many have accomplished.Â
Of the possible ways include;
Finding a portal; typically an enchanted faerie ring, or royal portal.
Finding a fae and tricking them into owing you a favour
One should leave the Underground before their thirteenth day. Should you stay beyond thirteen days you will not be able to leave the Underground, and will be a permanent resident.â
You shut the book, taking in a deep breath. What has it been, ten hours? It was hard to tell, the blurring of time. But at least you had a rough time of twelve days to find a portal â or have a fae owe you a favour â and get the hell back home. If worse came to worse, you were not above some benign trickery so you could see your idiots again.
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Lilia had arrived home safe and sound, slept in his warm bed, and had some of his ⌠delightful home cooking before he was due back at the castle. And while he was eating the somehow overcooked yet still raw eggs, he couldnât help but wonder how the little Beastie was doing; how you were doing.
He didnât technically owe you any favours, since he had given you that handy dandy book â if anything, you owed him, since you did say âthanksâ and everything â but curiosity is a fickle thing, and you seemed interesting. Humans typically reacted more when they ended up here, and made no proper moves to ensure that they made it back. But you, the little Beastie? Lilia saw a fire in your eyes, of both ire and determination. You wouldnât give up easily, and while it was entertaining, he also knew that trouble could, and most likely would, follow wherever you go.
Last time a human like you ended up in the Underground⌠it didnât end well (said human nearly burnt the Queenâs labyrinth down to the ground). Hopefully though, you didnât prove to be as foolish, or as obsessed with fire as the last human. Who knows, maybe you would even escape! If you didnât though, the court could use a new fool, and you seemed amusing enough to please their majesties whilst not incenting their ire.
âHmm, wonder if their majesties have felt the intrusion,â Lilia hummed to himself, cleaning up his dishes. He could easily just magic it away, but the trip to the mortal realm had taken a lot out of him, so he was stuck doing some good old fashioned manual labour, not that he really minded. Doing the dishes was better than being digested by some mangy, overweight, cat.
A crack of lightning sounded outside, disrupting the otherwise beautiful and peaceful day. âThat answers that question!â Lilia sounded too cheerful for what many fae considered to be a bad omen, as lightning rarely meant a good thing when it concerned the royal family.
A raven came to rest on the windowsill, eyes glowing green; a messenger.
Lilia tapped its beak, letting the message play.
âGeneral Vanrouge, I require you to apprehend the trespasser on our land, lest they taint the soil,â the raven recited Queen Maleficiaâs message. âShall you deem it necessary to use drastic measures, so be it⌠To call this number back, place a coin into the ravenâs mouth. To save this callââ
Lilia groaned, but coughed up a bronze coin so that the Queen didnât send more ravens to his house on his day off. âOur guest shall be dealt with swiftly, I assure you of that.â Lilia ended his call, the raven blinked, coughed out the coin, and flew off in a ruckus of cawing.
He sighed, and cracked his back. âHopefully our guest can understand⌠and not hit me with a broom this time.â With a snap of his fingers, Lilia poofed into his trademark green sparkles, and he was a bat again. Instead of being lost in the mortal realm though, he was off to find you, who was most likely lost in the Underground⌠hopefully you didnât get eaten or fell into the bog again, since he doubted the Queen would want a dead(?) or putrid smelling guest.
âBeastie, Beastie, Beastie, wherever could you be?â
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âWhere the hell am I,â you wheezed. You had been walking for a good bit, since hey, the bog really smelled bad, plus you didnât want to stick around long enough where the creature that was screaming last night decided to come back and make an appetizer out of you. So, you were walking. Where to? You had no idea, all you knew was that you needed to find a portal somehow, of the mushroom variety, or royally produced.
Currently, you were fighting gravity and making your way up a steep hill, but you knew you would be able to see over the dense forest canopy once you reached the top, and maybe, just maybe, you would be able to make sense of your bearings. Would you know where you were once you reached the top? Pfttt, no, but at least you would know what exactly was around. A sulfuric rotten egg-smelling swamp was one thing, but you wouldnât be all too surprised if you found out there was a man-eating daisy patch or some other nonsense here.
Finally, you made it to the top of the hill, and you caught your breath before looking out towards the horizon. To the north, the sea of trees continued for what seemed forever. East, the trees made their way into a grassy plateau where there seemed to be a village of some sort in the distance; quaint. South, uh, the swamp, definitely not going back that direction, youâve had enough of that swamp. And west, a castle, surrounded by a maze.
âAn enchanted faerie ring or royal portal,â you muttered, weighing your options.
You had about twelve days left to get out of this place. You could spend those twelve days trying to find a so-called âfaerie ringâ in the forest since those things were mushroom circles, but the chances of finding an enchanted one seemed to be slim to none. On the other hand, castles usually equaled royalty, which would equal portal. Knowing royals though, they were probably batshit insane. Also, if they felt like you were lying or trying to dupe them? Hey, they could apparently turn you into a slug or some other easily squishable being if they wanted to. And you really didnât want to be turned into a slug⌠now at the moment at least.
âForest,â you looked at the forest, âor castle?â You could also go east, but the grassland didnât exactly scream portal potential or had any rowan trees (or any trees for that matter). âThat is the question. Look for weird mushrooms and maybe get eaten by some critter, or potentially piss off some royal and end up as said critter. Hmmm.â
You groaned, and flopped down to the ground; both options werenât all that appealing, or even guaranteed that you would find a portal. Rolling over to your stomach, you opened up the book again, seeing if it had anything that could help you make up your mind on the options in front of you.
Scanning over the table of contents, there was nothing about where to find a portal in the woods. There was, however, a handy dandy chapter on fae etiquette, including government specificationsâŚÂ
You looked up towards the castle again, eyeing the maze. And started coughing out into laughter at your situation. âPfttt, didnât I wish that the Goblin King would whisk me away from my life,â you wheezed. âAnd here I am! In the fucking Underground with a labyrinth?!â Your laughing subsided into a tired sigh, and you set your eyes back towards the castle. âThe irony is astounding really.â
At least you didnât have to worry about some baby being turned into a goblin⌠right?Â
No, no, you only wished for yourself to be taken away, no one else. But would that mean you would end up as a goblin? Fae? Or as some weird pet or servant to a fae? Hopefully not⌠and at least you had the somewhat credible book that Mr. Sparkles gave you.Â
Shit, I owe him a favour though⌠CURSE YOU SARCASM!!!!Â
Well, maybe Mr. Sparkles will cut you some slack, since ya know, you did save him from Grim⌠but you also did hit him with a broom⌠and insulted him⌠I am so fucked, arenât I?
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You eventually got to the entrance of the maze (the labyrinth?), and sat down on a bench outside of it, huffing and puffing. âDoes everything want toââ you stopped that sentence, knowing your luck, if you said it out loud, it was bound to happen. âNever mind thatâŚâ
âNever mind what?â A voice said to your right.
You shot up and whipped your head around, coming face to face with a door(?) with a face. âI-â
âYou never mind!â A second voice said, and on your left was another door, sending its counterpart a dirty look. âYou know better than to meddle in such affairs!â
The right door, which was a weathered red, rolled its eyes at its neighbour. âBah! Curiosity killed the cat-â
âBut satisfaction brought it back. I know!â The left door, a brilliant blue, huffed. âIgnore them, they do this to everyone.â They sneered (if doors could sneer) to their neighbour. âDonât you have anything better to do than trick people?â
Did I just get in between these two during something?
The red door got offended, turning even redder by some means. âLike you should be one to talk! âOh my dear traveller, one of us two doors away is a liar and does nothing but lie! Do not let my neighbour fool you!â Itâs the same every single time with you!â
Itâs giving bitter divorced couple who for some reason still live with each otherâ
âI would do no such thing!â
âLIAR!â
âNO YOU ARE THE LIAR!â
You groaned, their bickering was starting to give you an all too familiar migraine. âWill both of you shut up?!â
Both of the doors tch-ed at your remark but stopped their nonsensical arguing, and you rubbed at your temple, easing away the building tension. But they turned their attention to you, looking at you with a mix of curiosity and something else⌠doors couldnât be fae⌠right? The book didnât say anything about talking doors⌠could they be portals? It couldnât be that easy, nothing was ever that easy.
âDid anyone ever teach you any manners, mortal?â The red door huffed, turning its nose up at you.Â
The blue door looked at you with a similar expression, âYes yes, awfully rude you know! Lucky it's just us though, and not the mistress. Oh ho ho! She would turn you into a newt for that!â
I wasnât too wrong about them turning me into a slug I guess⌠would a newt be an upgrade in this case? Since they have bonesâÂ
âAnd youâre a door,â you deadpanned, âyou both havenât been polite either, ya know?â You had better things to do than kickass to two sentient doors, so no, you werenât going to be polite. âSo the sooner you tell me which way to go, the sooner Iâm out of your⌠splinters?â
The doors grumbled but didnât raise any objections.
âAs you may have overheard, one of us is a liar,â they both said at once. âOne of us will lead into the labyrinth, whereas the other will lead you back to where you started your journey.â They both chuckled, looking at you with amusement. âIt is up to you to decide which is which.â
You looked between the two doors, weighing your options. âAnd what if I just walk into the labyrinth? What happens then?â
The blue door hummed, âWell, it would eat you!â ⌠why did it sound all too cheerful about that?!
âSo I donât really have any other option then, do I?â
âNope!~â They both gave you cheerful smiles, and you were half tempted to go off into the woods and find that magic portal by your lonesome. At least then you wouldnât have to deal with a pair of divorced doors, and a human-eating labyrinth that belonged to some mistress that would turn you into a newt if she felt like you were being snippy with her.
You sighed. Of both the doors, the blue one seemed more sympathetic, whereas the red door was more harsh⌠âOkay, red, open sesame!â
The red door looked shocked that you picked it over its counterpart, but it opened nonetheless. The blue door grumbled that you had chosen its neighbour over it, but stayed quiet.
When the door opened, all you could see was black.Â
âDo you actually lead anywhere?â You threw a rock in, but no sound came out.Â
The red door was silent though; apparently, when it was open, it couldnât talk. And while you didnât miss the bickering, you really wanted answers, and the blue door wasnât saying anything either.Â
Sighing, you walked forward, hoping that you had chosen the right door. Once both of your feet were over the threshold, light started to filter in. Did I choose right?! But before you got too ahead of yourself, you felt the ground give way under you, and you were falling; falling towards an all too familiar sulfuric-smelling bog.Â
âSHI-â
âŚ
You were back in the bog of eternal stench, and spitting the rotten egg-tasting water out of your mouth again. And this time, Mr. Sparkles wasnât here to make you magically smell better either. Nope, you were stuck smelling horrible until you could find a change of clothes.
Crawling out of the water, you grumbled and hissed curses towards that red door. Of course, you would end up here again! Why not! Laugh it up, Underground! Laugh it up!
âI hate it here,â you seethed, wringing out as much water as you could from your clothes.Â
Shit, the book! But the book was still dry⌠Fuck you, book. Fuck. You. Of course, the book would stay free of wet and stench, whereas you were now shivering, since the water was frigid, plus you were angry and embarrassed that you had been deceived.
It was no use though just sticking around here lamenting and fuming. So you hoisted yourself up and marched back to the labyrinth; and even though the trip was a good three hours, your anger and pettiness drove you forward.
âYOU-â you hissed, pointing a finger at the red door.
The red door looked at you, looked to its blue neighbour, and then back at you before it started laughing. âI see someone took a little dip-â
You got up in its face, âFuck you, asshole.â You turned around and marched up to the blue door. âOpen up,â you cracked your knuckles, not breaking eye contact. And either your intimidation worked, or your smell was so offensive that the door just wanted you gone; weaponizing the stench works wonders against prissy doors.
âTh-â You remembered your first blunder; do not thank the fae. âYou are too kind.â And you stepped through the blue door, which was as dark as the red one, but once the door closed, you didnât find yourself back in the damned bog. You were now in the labyrinth, and perhaps a step closer to finding a way home.
âŚ
âŚ
âŚ
Lilia found himself in the bog, looking around for the Beastie (you). But they were nowhere to be found, save for a wet spot on the grass and some torn-up moss.
âAh,â he suppressed a laugh, âthey fell in again, I see. Poor Beastie.â At least theyâll be easier to find.
He summoned a glass orb, a looking glass of sorts, and looked inside of it. âShow me the human,â he whispered, sprinkling it with some green magic. âAnd show me their location.â
The glass orb multiplied into three. The first orb showed a close-up of your face, an annoyed yet determined look on your face. The second orb showed that you were surrounded by hedges. And the third and final orb showed that the hedges were actually the Queen of the Undergroundâs personal labyrinth.
â⌠at least they canât really run off anywhere.â But this wasnât a great turn of events. Many people, both human and fae alike, had tried their best to navigate the labyrinth. But it was a fickle thing; you had thirteen hours to reach the castle, and if you didnât within those thirteen hours? You would be stuck within it, as one of the beings that tried to stop trespassers from reaching the castle.
Lilia pinched the bridge of his nose, âBeastie, what have you gotten yourself into?â And he turned into a bat, flying off to try and find you. While the Queen did want you apprehended, Lilia would rather it be with his own hands, and not be held liable for any further actions or decisions you made.
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Tags; @afunkyfreshblog, @cheezy-moon, @eynnwwyjth, @ithseem, @lucid-stories, @ryker-writes, @twistwonderlanddevotee, @xxoomiii
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Author's Note; After a little break from writing this fic, I'm back! I hoped you enjoyed this chapter, even if it was only for the pay-phone/raven and the divorced bickering doors!
If you liked this, do check out my masterlist for more content!
#twst#twst x reader#twst x gn reader#twisted wonderland#twisted wonderland x reader#twisted wonderland x gn reader#lilia vanrouge#lilia vanrouge x reader#lilia vanrouge x gn reader#now we can get into building the relationship between these two fufufuffufufu#<- im so excited to see it#mr sparkles = lilia | beastie = reader#<- opt#twst labyrinth au#and my fun tags have returned too!!!!#<- your tags are amazing
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