#sawyer: extras
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Charlie, Calista, Sawyer: The New Arc
ou o que muda agora nas crias de Atena, Afrodite Ărtemis e Ăolo
Charlie:
Entre a missĂŁo de Charlie e o baile, muita coisa aconteceu: a semideusa que antes era apenas instrutora de estratĂ©gia agora tambĂ©m faz parte da equipe de estratĂ©gia e Ă© a conselheira de seu chalĂ©. Mas sua mudança nĂŁo se restringiu aos tĂtulos que recebeu; o fato de seu poder - antes visto como inĂștil por ser passivo - ter sido de significativa diferença tanto na missĂŁo quanto no caos do baile fez com que ela percebesse que possui mais força do que imagina. Ainda assim, decidiu aprender a lutar com a lança para ter formas de se defender a curta distĂąncia tambĂ©m. Charlie permanece sendo a mulher doce e amĂĄvel de sempre, mas ela estĂĄ mais confiante, decidida e participativa.
Calista:
A morte de Flynn pegou Calista completamente desprevenida e com uma intensidade que ela mal foi capaz de suportar. Principalmente por ela estar tratando-o de forma grosseira desde que voltou ao Acampamento, Calista foi invadida por uma imensa onda de luto e culpa por não ter tido chance de se desculpar com ele antes que ele se fosse. Por causa disso, uma mudança radical de humor vai ser notada na filha de Afrodite: ela vai estar melancólica, triste, magoada e com forte desconfiança contra os Filhos da Magia.
Sawyer:
Se tem uma coisa que os Ășltimos tempos vĂȘm ensinando para Sawyer, Ă© que a vida nĂŁo Ă© brincadeira, apesar da forma como ela a vem levando desde que se entende por gente. Desde que perdeu o olho, a filha de Ăolo vem passando por uma montanha-russa de emoçÔes; a revolta da perda com a queda violenta da autoestima, os episĂłdios de negação que a faziam agir como se nada houvesse acontecido, o cargo de conselheira de chalĂ© que a pegou completamente de surpresa e exigiu responsabilidade de si. Agora, com o ataque no baile de Afrodite, algo fica claro para Sawyer: estĂĄ na hora de crescer. Sua personalidade alegre e amigĂĄvel permanece, mas agora ela estĂĄ mais calma, madura e responsĂĄvel.
#sawyer: extras#calista: extras#charlie: extras#fiz isso aqui mais pra registrar o processo de desenvolvimento e evolução das meninas#e pra vocĂȘs entenderem as mudanças nas atitudes delas
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God knows what that stance is but somehow it worked.. đł
ps. wren said congrats.. in her own way âĄ
#ts4#sims 4#simblr#fib#fib extras#wren#byrd#sawyer#pixie#courtney#ivan#frankie#we may have had a disastrous few days (longer for us ;-; oughggh) but normal life must go on!!#and watching sims bowl is almost as fun as karaoke#ivan laughing at pixie failing sent me tho ksjk lmao
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GUESS WHO FOUND A CHICKEN????đâ€
#Bubba Sawyer#Leatherface#The Texas Chainsaw Massacre#Texas Chainsaw Massacre#tcm#horror#movies#slashers#slasher community#I was so excited to find a little chicken figurine in the toy store today when I was out#it's just dirty enough to fit with Bubba so well!#it might be a little large but like... he has a chicken idc!!!!!!!#also yes this is the third mask and now i have posted a picture of him in all 3#this Leatherface figure has so many accessories and extras - like the chainsaw actually makes chainsaw sounds and comes with blood splatter#he has a cleaver and a bone knife and so many different hands#i love him so so much im so happy with him <3#im gonna look into a miniature cage for this chicken now - either making one or buying one#admittedly a lot of the ones online are round and not square but like i'll see what i can do#mine
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you guys will nev3r guess who's my favorite character is......
#; nova visualize#heathers#heathers the musical#heathers musical#veronica sawyer#heathers 1988#heathers 1989#heathers fanart#chansaw extra coming soon
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The Oldest Dance
you knew a werewolf when you were younger. your lives went in different directions, but you find yourself suddenly reunited under the worst possible circumstances.
->explicit. contains kidnapping, drugging, power imbalance, mentions of noncon and conditioning, biting, feral behavior, mild gore.
.
.
.
Youâve never seen so many stars before.
The thought strikes you only after the sharp burn of adrenaline dies to a simmer. Fear curdles into exhaustion. Time gets fuzzy. Between the hairpin turns of the road and the lush sea of furs and bedding all around you, thereâs no way to get your footing or your bearings. You test the rope around your wrists again and thereâs no give, no weakness, just an unpleasant, stinging friction where theyâve been chafing your skin. You hear the rumble of the engine, the scrape of tires over dirt, branches dragging like nails across the windows. You can barely see a thing, and itâs not just your blurry, swimming vision, the exhaustion clinging stubbornly to your eyes. Itâs dark here and dark outside, the whole world just a mass of merging shadows.Â
And the starsâŠyou must not be in town anymore. Not even close to it.
Thereâs nowhere to go but you still fight to sit up, to get to your knees at least. Itâs not a dip in the road or a sudden turn that throws you off balance this time. Someone grabs the back of your neck and shoves you down again. That large, callused hand could almost wrap all the way around your throat if it wanted, but it settles on your nape, squeezing with the gentle but firm chiding of an animal scruffing its young.Â
âFirst oneâs awake,â you hear.
Thereâs a sharp, amused exhale from the front seats, driverâs side. âThe one who barely touched their drink, Iâm guessing. You got a grip on them?âÂ
âYeah. Itâs fine, theyâre still groggy.âÂ
You run your hands through the blankets, hoping you look confused instead of searching, trying to make sense of your surroundings. Wool. Flannel. A zipper? Someone curled up on their side, breathing softly. Your elbow bumps into a warm body beside you, a bony shoulder exposed by a sagging, oversized sweater. They mutter in their sleep. The hand on the back of your neck eases when you settle and donât try to get up again, but it stays, thumb gently stroking. It takes everything you have to keep your breathing calm and even.
Three of you back here, you count. Captives. The other two still out cold. And four of them. Two in the front and two in the back, keeping watch.
âShould only be a half hour or so for the rest, as long as you didnât give them too much.â You recognize the voice from the passenger seat. He was at the club. Smaller guy, not huge like the one kneeling next to you. Dark hair. Dazzling smile. And touchy, always trying to get in your space, talking a little too close for comfort. It all starts coming back in a slow trickle. Right. The club. And that guy, Corbin, youâve seen him a few times before, thought he was a little weird but he always seemed to know when to back off. So howâŠwhyâŠ?
âWish we couldâve taken the fourth one, too,â the guy holding you down says wistfully. His hand rubs up and down your back in a soothing, absentminded motion. âSuch pretty eyes, and a sweet scent.â
Thereâs a grunt of agreement from the other guy in the back, a hulking figure sitting against the wall further from you. âBigger hunts are always more fun,â he murmurs.
âAww, I know,â Corbin coos. âBut trust me, they werenât a good match. These three, on the other hand? Theyâre perfect.â Thereâs a glimmer of light in the front seatâthe glare of a cell phone illuminating part of Corbinâs jaw. Itâs nearly blinding after your eyes have adjusted to the dark, and it suddenly occurs to you why you canât see anything. Not the men, not much more than lumpy silhouettes, not any trees distinct from the moving shadows beyond the windows; nothing but stars.Â
Theyâre not using headlights. These are wolves.
You surge up in a panic, scrabbling blindly for the doors. Itâs probably not a good ideaâeven if theyâre miraculously unlocked, you wonât accomplish much more than tumbling out in the middle of fucking nowhere, maybe skin yourself on the road in the processâbut your terror is louder than your rational thinking. You fight the hands that grab you, screaming, clawing, biting like an animal, thrashing with all your strength. It takes both of them to pin you back down and you savor that even through the humiliating briefness of your rebellion, wrestled onto your stomach with a hand shoving your head down into the blankets.
You donât expect him to bite you and that drags a shrill but short noise out of you. Youâre not ready for what it feels like, the weight of him across your back and the crunch of his teeth sinking in, a hot gush of blood dribbling past his snarling lips. It hurts like hell and it doesnât stop. Every time you squirm, every panicked jerk and attempted wriggling movement, makes him growl against your skin. He holds your hands down with his much larger, much stronger ones, fingers pinning yours on either side of your head, and thatâs when you finally give in. You arenât punished for the last nervous shiver that travels down your spine, or the whimper that slips out when he loosens his jaw and pulls away, strings of saliva and sticky blood slicking your neck.
âGood,â he murmurs. âGood human. Stay down.â The gentleness of his fingers stroking your scalp makes a sob build in your throat.Â
âYou got it?â the driver asks.
âYeah, sorry, I got it. Tried to keep the bite light, but they wouldnât submit. Might leave a mark.â He traces his thumb over the throbbing wound he left behind, ragged and still bleeding.Â
Corbin chuckles. âItâs fine, Iâll vouch for you if anyone asks.â You canât see him clearly but you can tell heâs turned around, leaning slightly around his seat to peer into the back. You can feel his gaze burning into you. âI wonât tell you not to fight. I hope you do,â he says, lowering his voice slightly. Talking to you rather than about you, you realize. âI chose you because I knew you would. Itâs a good thing. Good for the pack. Eventually, youâll learn how to pick your battles.âÂ
âFuck you,â you say, embarrassed by how shaky and hoarse you sound.Â
You canât see what kind of expression he has, but you can hear the smile in his voice. âYouâll thank me someday.âÂ
It doesnât take long for the other two to wake after all the commotion. One just stares in silent shock and disbelief. The other starts to cry. The other wolf in the back pulls them into his lap and nuzzles his face against their cheek and neck, as though they want anything to do with him. He grunts unhappily when they cry harder and shove him away. You can just make out a chorus of howls over the sound of the engine. The wolf who bit you starts stroking your back again, a melodic hum rumbling in his chest.Â
âThe heartland joining us tonight?â the driver asks.
Corbin hums softly. âTheyâre abstaining. A few might come to watch.âÂ
âAh, thatâs a shame. I hoped one of these might be a good fit.âÂ
âLinden needs an absolutely perfect match. Itâs my next project.âÂ
You donât catch what else they say because those quiet, miserable sobs turn to heartwrenching wailing. The other person in the back starts to plead for their life. The wolf closest to them strokes their cheek. âYouâre not going to die,â he murmurs. âHush. Itâll all make sense soon.âÂ
The van slows, relief and terror warring in your heart. You can runâand go where? You donât know where you are, donât know the way back to town. Outrunning a werewolf is a tall order under the best circumstances. Youâre on their turf, in the dark; you donât stand a chance. Doesnât matter. You have to try. The road gets rougher, the foliage thicker like grasping hands. The van rolls to a slow, grinding stop and the engine dies. Youâre surprised nobody tries to restrain you before the locks disengage and the back doors are thrown open, but it doesnât take long to see why.
Youâre deep in the woods. The full moon drapes a thin, silver gleam over the silhouettes of shifting figures, animal eyes shining in the dark. There must be dozens of themâthirty, maybe forty wolves, all sniffing the air, growling and pacing impatiently. More are still coming, slipping through the trees in the shape of both humans and beasts. Youâre completely surrounded. They form a wide circle around the van, all eyes trained on you and the other two petrified people huddled at your back. You can hear them talking to each other, their voices half-feral with barks and growls.
âThree? Just three?âÂ
âThreeâs a lot for the off-season.â
âAll awake, too. Afraid and alert. Gonna be a good hunt.âÂ
âAnd look at that one in front, bristling like that. Think theyâll bite back?âÂ
Laughter. Your stomach churns. One of the wolves gets out of the van while the other leans in close at your side, the two of them gradually easing you out and onto your feet. A door slams. The wolf who was driving gets out, stretches his legs. You see him kick off his shoes and shed his shirt, tossing his clothes into the driverâs seat before he suddenly falls down on all fours and shifts into a wolf. The change is nearly instant, a chorus of unpleasant, bone-cracking sounds, his skin engulfed in dark fur. Corbin wanders into view, glancing at the three of you with an expression of infuriating tranquility.Â
Golden light flickers in the corner of your vision. The crowd parts and the man who steps forward makes the wolves youâve seen so far seem small and delicate in comparison. Massive and towering over all the rest, his chest bare and broad, muscled shoulders adorned with tattoos, he comes forward with a lantern in his hand and a sharp grin on his face. The others all have that intimidating air about them but this one truly looks like a werewolf, overwhelming and wild. His sharp gaze flicks to each of you. Your heart leaps into your throat as, one by one, he looks you in the eyes and speaks your names.Â
âWelcome, chosen,â he says. âMy name is Vanagandr, and this is Hoarfrost Falls. The pack is eager to meet you. Are you well?â
It takes you a moment to understand this is a serious, genuine question. He waits patiently for an answer, studying each of you in turn. âAre we well?â you repeat in disbelief. âAre you for real?âÂ
To your dismay, he finds your anger harmless and amusing, a soft chuff of laughter escaping his lips. âLet me rephrase. Do you feel sick or hungover? Any injuries, particularly to the legs or feet? Be honest. We have a medic.âÂ
The two cowering behind you donât say a word, too afraid to even lift their gazes. One of them is shaking, clinging to your shoulder. Still, Vanagandr waits, and the uncomfortable silence stretches on. Eventually, one of them shakes their head. The other mutters a quiet, âIâm fine.â The wolves around you stare and point openly, muttering to one another about which one of you smells the best, which one looks the softest, the most defiant, the most fun to train.Â
âI was bitten,â you mutter.
He doesnât wait for you to show him, grabbing you by the shoulder and turning you in place. His hand is large, his nails sharp like claws. He traces the teeth marks in your neck and growls softly. The wolf who bit you stiffens and turns his head. Baring his throat, you realize.
Itâs then that you see Corbin slink closer, pressing himself against the enormous wolfâs side. âIt wasnât his fault,â he says in a soft, demure tone, his head bowed so he looks up at Vanagandr through his thick lashes. âHe couldnât let up because they wouldnât submit. It took a little while.â
âI figured as much,â Vaganadr chuckles. He rubs his face against Corbinâs neck and jaw, a gesture that strikes you as odd, affectionate, and a touch possessive. âGo on. Your alphaâs looking for you.â At that, Corbinâs eyes light up and he slips away with one last lingering touch to Vanagandrâs shoulder, but he doesnât rush to leave. He meanders through the crowd of wolves and the others greet him with the same eager affection, grabbing him, passing him amongst themselves like a toy to sniff and touch and grope shamelessly. The display unsettles you and in your haste to find somewhere else to look, you see something that makes your heart skip a beat.
A small group has just arrived. These wolves are younger, noticeably nervous and fidgeting. Theyâre led by a wolf who looks like he got stuck in the middle of shifting, limbs long and furred, hands and feet tipped with claws, a bushy tail swishing behind him. Heâs talking to them in a low, gravelly voice, something about herding and not rushing, but that doesnât matter. None of it matters except for one wolf who stands out from the rest. Not because he does anything unusual. Not because heâs particularly big or intimidating lookingâhe always was bigger than you but here, heâs average. Right at home.Â
You know that wolf. You recognize the scars slashed from his hairline to his jaw, long, jagged lines clawed across the left side of his face. You remember that nervous little twitch of the nose whenever he ran into something new, some situation that made him nervous. Heâs grown his hair out longer, let it spill over his shoulders and down his back in thick, black waves, but you know itâs him. The fearful expression on his face transforms into full-blown panic when your eyes meet.
âFlint?â All you can manage is a strangled whisper but you know he hears you. An unhappy, dog-like whine rises in his throat. âFlint? Whatâwhy are you here?â You arenât thinking when you push your way towards him. No one is stopping you but you barely notice, donât even hesitate to wonder why. You shoulder through the crowd, ignoring the whispers, the uneasy glances, Vanagandr gone completely still and silent behind you.
Flint lowers his gaze, staring at the grass by your feet. Youâre further from the lantern and the shadows are thick, his face half-hidden in flickering, lurching darkness, but you can hear him panting the way he always would when he felt overwhelmed. Your name comes out in a needy whine, his hands clenched into fists at his sides. âNoâŠno, no, no, not yetâŠâ He has trouble getting the words out, and even more trouble trying to look you in the eye. His voice is exactly the way you remember, low and rough and painfully quiet, like heâs afraid to speak any louder than a rumbling whisper. âIâm notâIâm not ready, I canâtâŠâ
âAre you okay? Are you hurt? Did they kidnap you, too?â you ask, your voice raising with anger the more you speak. You know next to nothing about wild wolves, but you know Flint is meek and easy to boss around, the kind of person who got picked on by other wolves when you were younger. The tall werewolf, the one who looks caught between human and animal, steps closer as though he means to separate you. âDonât touch him!â you snap. He looks down at you, an expression of muted surprise smoothing into understanding.Â
âCorbin,â he says quietly. The smaller man rushes over, now carrying the lantern Vanagandr held earlier. âYou two. Follow.â He doesnât tell you where heâs taking you. He just starts walking. Youâre startled that Flint obeys without question, keeping his head down. Corbin grabs your forearm and drags you along, frowning at your attempts to squirm free and pry his fingers off.Â
He leans in, lowering his voice. âRemember what I said before about picking your battles?â he asks. Youâre suddenly aware of just how quiet the clearing has become, all eyes on you. Vanagandr watches you very carefully, his gaze hardened and threatening. You glance ahead where the tall werewolf has stopped moving, looking back over his shoulder.Â
Flint is hunched next to him, head down, whimpering. The wolf has a hand on his forearm, gripping hard enough to leave marks. You take a deep breath. Fine. You can play along for now. Youâll do anything for Flintâs sake.Â
*
Wolves have their own gods.Â
Flint knew that when he was little, of course, but it was a vague sort of awareness. Hearsay, rather than knowledge. Wolves, he was surely told at some point, have many faiths and traditions depending on where they live or where they come from. But these things are distant for city wolves, even shameful at times. Why stick out any more than you already, unavoidably do? His family had distanced themselves from any sort of archaic, wild customs long before even his parents were born. When he followed the family tree as far back as it went, tracing those ancient scribbles on the old, yellowed parchment kept hidden in his fatherâs lockbox, he found strange symbols and names he wasnât sure how to pronounce. The word ulfhednar was written in thick, black ink.
When he repeated the word to his parents, they looked at him like heâd dragged a human corpse through the front door and dropped it at their feet. âItâs an old, awful thing that you shouldnât tell anyone,â his mother warned. And that was that. For years, he went on thinking there was something wrong with him, some secret shame heâd unknowingly inherited. It isnât until much laterâuntil Hoarfrost Fallsâthat he finds out the truth. Ulfhednar is not a dirty word, but it is something city wolves donât talk about.
That, and gods. They donât talk about those either. Not the old ones like the Poised Fang, god of the perfect strike. Some have forgotten and some no longer understand. Sawyer taught him all about that. Sawyer, who leads the three of them nowâhim and the hrefn and you, he can hardly believe it, you where he least expects to see you, exactly the wrong place and exactly the wrong time. He hadnât even planned on being there. He was still too new to take part in the claiming chase, still too uncomfortable with the realities of acquiring pack humans to even watch.
Sawyer had insisted. He was kind about it. He had waited until the evening lessons were over to pull Flint aside, dusk simmering like dying embers along the horizon. Flintâs peers had all come from loose, disorganized city packs. Like him, they had dulled senses and smothered instincts. Their shifts were slow and uncomfortable because theyâd all learned to do it quietly, stifling the popping of their joints and the rearranging of their bones in a way that left them winded when it was over.Â
There was comfort and camaraderie in being new and terrible at everything together, but Flint knew he was falling behind. The others were just as clueless but twice as eager, embracing each new facet of wild pack life while Flint was still reeling. He didnât think they were judging him for itâhe desperately hoped notâbut he wasnât sure. He was used to being an outcast. His whole life, heâd been the obvious werewolf in a room full of humans. He was tall, strongly built, his limbs thick with muscle, his nails constantly needing to be filed down as they grew quicker and sharper than he could keep up with. Heâd tried joining packs before. Things always started well and soured quickly. City wolves would look at him and assume he was something wild, and as soon as they realized he wasnât, heâd start getting pushed around and singled out. He didnât like making a fuss so he just did what he was told and kept his head down.
But youâyou would fight for him. You always did. Youâd find out, no matter how hard he tried to keep these things quiet, and youâd tell him you were going to his next pack meeting. Youâd be the smallest one in the room between all those werewolves, and youâd still march right up to whatever loudmouth was calling themselves alpha and tear them a new one. Youâd demand all of his stuff back if anything had been taken and placed in communal storageâfamily heirlooms, usually, fur-lined coats and old quilts. Sometimes youâd manage to get a few of his membership fees reimbursed by citing breaches of contract, listing all the ways his pack had failed to behave like his pack.
Youâd gotten hurt doing that, just once. It was the last pack heâd tried joining, the last desperate attempt to find belonging. The alpha had claimed his car as a pack asset and taken his keys, and youâd marched in there and refused to leave until they were put in your hand. Yelling had turned to shoving and someone had bitten you. Flint is ashamed to admit that he canât fully remember everything that happened, only that he woke up in wolfskin, lying on the tile floor of his shower. You were kneeling next to him beneath the spray of warm water and running your fingers through his fur, wet, partially shredded clothes hanging off your body. Blood swirled down the drain.
âNot mine,â you assured him. âNot all yours, either, but donât move around too much.âÂ
He thinks about that all the time. He dreams about it. Curled up with his head in your lap and your hands running up and down his body, your touch soothing and affectionate. Thatâs what he was thinking of earlier tonight when Sawyer stopped him as the others ran off to gossip excitedly with their elders about the new pack humans coming up the mountain. Sawyer led him down a trail that wandered away from the communeâs structures, deeper into the woods.
Flint smelled it before he saw it; perspiration. Excitement. Arousal. A human and a werewolf. The end of a chase. They were up ahead, tucked away in a grove of crooked, towering oak trees. The human was making soft, scared sounds as she was forced down to her knees and made to present herself in proper submission, but she smelled eager and Flint saw a smile before her head was shoved down into the leaves. The wolf growled playfully when he mounted her, nuzzling against the nape of her neck. He whispered something in Old Wolven Norse; a term of endearment, Flint guessed, from the tone.
It felt wrong to stand there and watch. Theyâd come here to be alone, hadnât they? But Sawyer looked at him sharply when Flint glanced back the way theyâd come. They were going to talk here? In earshot of another wolf and his human as they joined in bliss, rutting on the forest floor? Sawyer did nothing without a reason. There was something Flint was meant to see here, something he was supposed to learn.Â
âYou donât want to watch tonightâs claiming,â Sawyer said quietly. âI think you should.âÂ
Flint said nothing. He couldnât gather his thoughts. He was too focused on the humanâs alluring scent, their needy whimpers and squirming as the wolf took them. WouldâŠwould you look like that, under him? Would you be so open, so sweet? So much had gone unsaid between the two of you before. You werenât together. Youâd never broached the subject, even though he could smell your interest in him. He hadnât wanted to push, terrified of scaring you away.Â
âFlint.â Sawyer was studying his face in the subtle way wolves did, a sidelong glance whenever he let his guard down. âSomethingâs on your mind.âÂ
Flint swallowed. He could feel himself reacting to the couple in front of him, the tender flesh at the base of his cock where his knot swells up pulsing gently, and he was ashamed. âIâm thinking about studying a different trade,â he admitted.Â
Sawyer said nothing. Flint found himself looking desperately at his face, searching for signs of anger or disappointment, and found him completely unreadable. Sawyer was stone-faced and taciturn most of the time. Flint had to take a deep breath, relax himself, and remember to look elsewhere for answers. Sawyerâs scent wasâŠcalm. His tail was still, slightly raised in curiosity but there was no evidence of aggression or displeasure in his posture. He tilted his head slightly and avoided direct eye contact, looking in Flintâs general direction rather than right at him, trying not to make him feel threatened.Â
Emboldened, Flint continued. âItâs not your fault, itâs all me. Youâve done so much for me since I got here. Youâre always patient with me no matter what I screw up. I know I can tell you things and youâll listen. Itâs justâŠI donât think I can do this. I wouldnât be a good shepherd.â
Sawyer grunted. It was more of a wolf sound than a human one, a chiding growl and a resigned huff all in one. âYouâre the only one who decides your path. But if you want my opinion, I disagree. Youâd make an exceptional shepherd.â
Flint shook his head. âI could never hurt them. I canât wrap my head around it. The whole claiming thing, the biting, theâŠâ
âFucking?â Sawyer said it so easily.Â
âWeâre forcing them, arenât we? They donât want it.â
âThey do. They just donât know it yet.â Sawyer had barely taken his eyes off the wolf and the human since theyâd arrived, something nostalgic and bittersweet in his gaze. He nodded to the two of them, the human writhing in mindless pleasure and the wolf pounding her breathless, groaning into the flesh of her shoulder. âTheyâre no different from us. Strip the wild out of them and they become caged, miserable animals. Here, they learn to heed their instincts again.â
Flint knew that. Heâd been taught all of this before. Alpha Druian told him that most humans lived in societies of suffering, and Flint knew he was right because heâd seen it himself, had lived in it for most of his life. Taking pack humans, teaching them everything theyâd forgotten after centuries of isolating themselves from wolvesâit was all natural and beautiful. It was the steps in between that he had trouble rationalizing; the claiming and the training. The fear and the pain, how new humans shivered at the sight of him and whimpered when he came too close. He was told that this, too, was perfectly normal, a necessary and expected part of the process.Â
He heard a quiet chuckle. A smile tugged at the corner of Sawyerâs lips. âThis is why youâd be so good at it,â he said. âI stopped shepherding a long time ago, but those instincts never go away. I know what to look for. All that thinking and worrying, thatâs what weâre best at. The packâs most tenderhearted are the ones who should be closest to our humans. Confidence is important. Being able to make difficult choices and administer discipline, thatâs also important. But you have to care, more than anything. You have to want whatâs best for them.â
He didnât know what to say, so he hadnât said anything. Sawyer had simply stood beside him as the shadows grew and the sky darkened, night draping across the mountain. They watched the wolf bring the human to climax once, twice, a third time shuddering and wailing as her toes curled, the wolfâs hands roaming her sensitive body. When he finally spilled inside her, he sank his teeth into her neck. The spot was already marked and the precise way he angled his head, tonguing at the indentations before biting down, told Flint that was his mark. His human. A bond, renewed and made even stronger. He thought of you again and realized he was fully hard.
And nowâhere you are. Heâs not ready. He canât meet your worried gaze. Sawyer leads the way to the guest house, a large cabin where friends and allies stay while visiting the territory. Neutral, scentless ground. Youâre wary, probably because you canât see very well. Corbin sets the lantern down on a table but the light is dim, unable to crawl into all the cozy nooks and crannies in the spacious common area. Flint is happy that you go to him, sticking close to his side, but he doesnât like how stiff and standoffish you are. He risks inching closer, pressing himself against youâand he smells another wolf on you. Saliva. Blood. A bite? Without thinking, he tugs at the neckline of your shirt, nostrils flaring at the sight of the wound.
âIâm sorry, Flint. I had no idea,â Corbin says softly. âThe bite happened on the way here. It was intended to force submission.â He reaches out, trying to offer comfort. You slap his hand away. Flintâs hand twitches at his side, instincts warring within him. He wants to soothe you. Wants to scold you. Wants to protect you. Wants to protect Corbin. Paralyzed by indecision, he does nothing. Corbinâs attention shifts from Flint to you, his expression thoughtful. Part of Flint lurches in fear at the thought of Corbin getting his hands on you. Training you, the way he helps Druian train all the new arrivals. He sees that eager look in Corbinâs eyes, the way his gaze roams. Heâs sizing you up. Finding weaknesses. Memorizing all of your movements, conscious and unconscious, how you carry yourself, how long you can look him in the eye.
Another part of him, deeply buried, considers it with alarming calmness. Before Hoarfrost Falls, heâd blame those thoughts on his âinner wolf,â but Sawyer has cautioned him against that kind of mental partitioning. âDonât cut yourself into pieces,â heâd say. He is a wolf and a man and the melding of those things, all together, all at once. He is the clear-headed human understanding that you have every right and reason to be terrified right now, and he is also the feverish need to wrap around you in wolfskin as though his closeness can take all of your worries away.
âI think we got off on the wrong foot,â Corbin says. An absurd statement, intended to be disarming. You make a sound thatâs not quite a laugh, sharp and guarded, not taking the bait. Flint is proudâexcitedâfor reasons he is afraid to identify. âIâm serious. Thereâs been a big misunderstanding. I know how it looks from your perspective, butââÂ
âYou slipped something in my drink,â you say, accusing. âYou kidnapped me, and two other people.âÂ
ââKidnappedâ is a really loaded word.âÂ
âSit.â Sawyerâs voice comes from the far end of the room, by the windows. Heâs got the long, draping curtains pulled shut to hide your view of the woods, just in case the chase comes this way. Corbin drops where heâs standing, immediately settling onto the soft rug. Flint seats himself on the couch, dismayed when you donât follow his lead. Youâre still standing, looking Sawyer in the eye and glaring hatefully. Flint understands suddenly whatâs happening here, why youâre not just uneasy but furious.Â
âItâs not like that,â he tries to tell you, tugging at your hand. âThis pack, theyâre not like the others.â
âThatâs what you always say. And then they boss you around and take advantage of you,â you mutter. And thatâs true. He would always say that everythingâs fine. He didnât want to make a big deal out of his problems, and he didnât want you getting hurt trying to defend him. It was all backwards. He was supposed to protect you. The ulfhednar didnât just have pack humans, they had human allies, human trade partners, human settlements within their territory they defended from harm.Â
And yet, here you are with another wolfâs bite on your neck. Here he is, failing you again.
âSit down, human,â Sawyer repeats. âYou want an explanation. Iâll give it to you.â
âAre you the alpha?â you ask.
âBeta. Sit, please.âÂ
Flint lets out a shaky, relieved breath when you finally obey, sinking onto the cushion beside him. Sawyer makes his approach slow and indirect, pacing, pretending to fuss over the decor. He straightens out a blanket draped over the back of an armchair and returns a book left on the table to its proper shelf. It works. You donât relax completely but you follow his movements with your eyes, curiosity rounding the edges of your annoyance. You try to hide it when Sawyer finishes his minor adjustments and comes to stand in front of you, towering over Corbin beside him, but your sweetening scent gives you away.
Flint knows he should let the pack beta speak, but the guilt is eating him alive. âThis is my fault,â he blurts out. You look at him the same, soft way you always have.Â
âThatâs not true,â Corbin insists. âItâs mine. I shouldâve been more thoroughââ
Sawyer growls quietly. âItâs nobodyâs fault.â He mutters in Old Wolven Norse, âItâs fate. Keep your fangs poised.âÂ
Flintâs heart skips a beat. He canât. He canât do this. Heâs not ready. He feels a whine building in his throat and bites it back, embarrassed by how readily his feelings show. Heâs always been bad at keeping growls and barks out of his speech, especially when heâs particularly nervous or excited, overwhelmed by emotion. Sawyer glances at him, holds eye contact for a meaningful moment, before he returns his attention to you.
âThis is Hoarfrost Falls. Weâre what you would call a âwild pack,â although we welcome wolves of other backgrounds if theyâre willing to make the lifestyle adjustment. My name is Sawyer. Youâve met Corbin, our hrefnââ
âYour what?â you say.
Sawyer visibly bristles at the interruption but doesnât comment on it. He runs his hand through Corbinâs hair and Corbin melts under the attention, nuzzling his face into the dark, thick fur on Sawyerâs thigh. âItâs his rank,â Sawyer says, pausing to consider his word choice. âHeâs a pack human with authority over our other pack humans.â
âPack humans? Thatâs a real thing?â You sound horrified. Youâre looking at Corbin like heâs something wounded on the side of the road.Â
âItâs real. Itâs why you were brought here. Normally, youâd be enjoying your initiation right now, but I pulled you out for the packâs safety.â
âThe packâs safety?â you echo, disbelieving. âHow are you the ones in danger?â
Sawyer says nothing. He doesnât have to. He just looks at Flint, and Flint looks anywhere else, and you know. You remember. Heâs territorial. Obsessed, people used to say, as if theyâd never yearned for a human before. City wolves like to pretend they donât have instincts. He tried to pretend, too. But any little thing could happenâyou could scrape your knee on the pavement, or someone could raise their voice a little too loud while talking to youâand heâd feel himself growling, bristling, ready to fight and die for you.Â
When he saw you earlier tonight, knowing what would happen, imagining you stumbling afraid through the woods with some other wolf lunging and pinning you and leaving marks, he felt that reckless urge rise up like an inferno beneath his skin. Heâd nearly thrown himself at Alpha Vanagandrâwouldâve, if Sawyer and the others hadnât talked him down.Â
âItâs clear to me that youâre Flintâs. HisâŠfriend,â Sawyer amends, seeing your expression pinch in confusion. âI donât know much about you. He doesnât like talking about his old life and I donât like to dredge it up more than necessary.â
Flint bows his head, feeling guilty again. âI left someone behind.â Thatâs all he could bring himself to say when the subject came up. It wasnât entirely true; youâd both gone your separate ways. But heâd left firstâdecided to try his luck with distant family in another city, relatives his parents rarely spoke to. Youâd tried to keep in touch but things had fizzled out. You were both busy with your own lives and your talks became less frequent. You left messages for each other on occasion; pictures from you, embarrassingly long and heartfelt texts that felt more like letters from him. He wanted you to know he was okay. He was strong and capable, and you didnât have to worry.
âSo can we go?â you ask.
The corner of Sawyerâs mouth twitches, the movement very quick and very slight but unmistakably a suppressed snarl. âWe?â he repeats stiffly.
âIâm not leaving without Flint.â
Flint feels like heâs going to burst out of his own skin, terrified by your open defiance and how you wonât drop your gaze, even more afraid that heâll lose control himself at any moment. He trusts his mentor but Sawyer has a reputation. He forgets to go easy on pack humans sometimes. He can be harsh, less forgiving of trespasses, dangerously aggressive in the heat of the moment. Heâs not sure what heâll do if Sawyer comes any closer. Flint knows thereâs an old, awful story behind all his scars carving through the thick wolf fur he canât fully retract. Itâs not always easy to tell whatâll set him off.
Itâs just as hard to predict what heâll laugh off and deem unthreatening. Flint sags in relief when Sawyer lets out an amused huff, his posture loosening somewhat. Whatever he was looking for, whatever it is that reminds him of his scars, he doesnât find it in you. If anything, he looks a little fond of you. âYouâd better stay put,â Sawyer says. âThe claiming hunt isnât over. Wonât be for a little while. No one would purposefully antagonize Flint, but nobody is thinking clearly during a chase, either. Do you want something to eat or drink?â You glare at him. âSuit yourself. I have to speak with the alpha about this. Corbin, youâre dismissed. Letâs give them some space.âÂ
Corbin never takes his eyes off you as he gets to his feet, returning your scowl with a sweet smile. âIt was so nice to meet you,â he purrs.Â
Your frown deepens. âFeelingâs not mutual.âÂ
âMm. Give it time.â He winks before Sawyer herds him out the door with a playful growl.
Sawyer pauses on the porch, looking back at you with a sharp gaze. âStay,â he rumbles. He smirks. You think heâs making fun of you, but his gaze shifts to Flint just briefly. Flintâs heart skips a beat.Â
Because Sawyer does nothing without a reason. All of that, every little thing, had a purpose. Getting you accustomed to hearing commands. Keeping his distance to put you at ease. Bringing Corbin along showed you that the pack keeps humans, that theyâre fed, cared for, permitted some mischief from time to time. Giving you an order he knows you wonât follow wasnât for you, though. That was for Flint. Because Flint is a shepherd, and when you disobey, itâs his responsibility to do something about it.
Your shoulders sag, a long sigh slipping out when the guest house door slams shut. The silence that follows is deafening. Itâs just the two of you now. You and Flint. His hands shake. He tries to take deep breaths to calm himself but every inhale is full of your scent, the sharpness of your sweat and worry. Heâs not ready. Heâs petrified. What is he supposed to do now? What is he supposed to say? He wants to tell you so many things but the words wonât come. They never do. Youâve always understood what he tries to say, even when he canât say it, but you donât understand the situation youâre in now.
âCome on,â you say. âHeâs probably bringing the alpha back with him. We have to hurry.â You rub your face on a few blankets and pillowsâdecoys. He recognizes this trick. Youâll take those with you when you run, toss them around to hide your trail. Then you rush to the kitchen and he follows nervously, reminded of a dozen other messes youâve gotten him out of before. You turn on the sink and lather up the strongest-smelling soap you can find in the cupboards, scrubbing your face, your neck, your wrists, any exposed skin. Your natural scent isnât gone but itâs smothered in earthy musk because all of the packâs homemade soaps smell like the woods. Clever. Worryingly so.
âThey didnâtâŠkidnap me,â he admits. âI chose to come here.â
You pause to look at him, your stony focus softening with sympathy. âYeah? I bet it wasnât what you thought itâd be,â you say.Â
Youâre right. Just not the way you think you are. âThis isnât like before. Theyâre different. The alpha is good. I know it seems strange. Theyâre not like the packs weâre used to. ButââÂ
âFlint.â You look up at him and his voice catches in his throat. âCome here. Your turn.âÂ
He shouldnât. Shouldnât encourage this any further. He has to be honest with you, has to make you understand. âItâs not safe out there,â he says weakly. âSawyer wasnât lying about the chase. It getsâŠintense. If anybody catches your scentââ
âThey wonât,â you insist. You take one of his hands in his and his resolve crumbles bit by bit, eroded by the tender smoothing motions of your fingers over his palm and knuckles and joints. Heâs thinking about that shower you took together years ago. The warmth. The safety. The certainty that he was home at last, pack or no pack, that he had everything he wanted. Hoarfrost Falls is where he belongs, but something has been missing all this time, something important. He canât help it. When you tug on his arm, he kneels, letting you smooth your hands over his face and neck, shutting his eyes and savoring your touch.Â
Heâs not ready. But Sawyer told him he doesnât have to be. Now and then, when the other lessons are done, they sit under the moon and talk about gods. âThe Poised Fang is old. Very, very old,â Sawyer told him. âIn his time, wolves had no names. Humans were prey. Smart, vicious prey, worthy of respect. The hunt is the oldest dance, and he is the best dancer. There are others who came afterâgods of hearth-keeping and shepherding. But when you see a humanâyour humanâyou call on the Poised Fang first. Thatâs why we have that saying in Old Wolven. âKeep your fangs poised.â Itâs an invocation. Do you know the key to hunting humans?â
Flint hadnât known. The topic made him squeamish. But Sawyer reassured him they meant it differently now. That the Poised Fang, timeless and eternal, was pleased that the hunt continued, even if its end had changed.
âThe key is patience. Itâs not strength. Not readiness. Patience. Youâll see this firsthand someday. You donât have to be ready. You just have to wait. The moment will come.âÂ
Flint opens his eyes and youâre staring at him, your palms framing his face. He nuzzles against your touch and you blink, startled, pulling away. It makes him want to growl but he holds it in. âWe should get going,â you tell him. Youâre embarrassed. He can smell it. You shouldnât be. Thereâs nothing to be embarrassed about. He wishes the two of you had talked about it beforeâall of it. Your feelings. His instincts. The desire to hold you close and leave you drenched in his scent. The throbbing need to sink his teeth into your neck.Â
âItâs a long way to the nearest town,â he tells you, his voice low but steady. âHours. Too far on foot, for you.âÂ
âShit. They didnât take your keys, did they? Guess we could steal theirs.â You laugh. Flint smiles. Heâs not ready. Heâs a storm inside, hope and fear and revulsion all crashing against one another. Some part of him has always known he would come back for you, but he wanted more time. More certainty. Then again, hasnât he already had all the time he needs? Nobody knows you better. You peer through the front windows, then the back.Â
âIs there a river nearby?â you wonder aloud. âIt rained the other day. Should be able to cover our scent with mud, if we have to.âÂ
Flint inches closer. Afraid. Excited. Heâs panting. He canât help it. The truth is that heâs going to have to hurt you. Just a little. Just enough. Youâre going to scream and cry and itâs going to feel like a knife in the heart, but he knows youâll feel even worse. And thatâs okay, he tells himself. Thatâs normal. Natural. Part of the process. Like when you were children, and he got a splinter stuck in his paw, and you sat him down with a pair of tweezers and scratched under his chin while he whined. He didnât want you to touch it but you insisted. It had to come out. It would hurt just a tiny bit one last time, and then it wouldnât hurt anymore. Itâs just like that.Â
âLook!â youâd said, pointing up at a tree. âSquirrel!âÂ
He knew, logically, that you were just trying to distract him. But heâd perked up anyway, took his eyes off of you, and then it was done. Over in a blink. Itâs just like that, he tells himself. He whispers a prayer in Old Wolven Norse to the Poised Fang, begging to know if prey can ever forgive the predator for the sharpness of his teeth.
âI love you,â he says.Â
You freeze. Your palm hovers over the door handle. Looking up at him with wide eyes and mouth parted in shock, a question starts forming on your lips. And like the oldest of his gods stalking a primeval forest, Flint does not waste the moment.Â
#rotpeach writes#meanwolves#inspired by an ask i got a while ago about what happens if a new pack human recognizes a wolf as someone they knew before#im extra behind on asks gonna try and get to some of those tonight or tomorrow#this time of year is always pretty busy for me and this year is no exception#corbin#sawyer#flint
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Me? Finally updating my legacy pages and the Fleur family tree? It's more likely than you think.
#it's a slow process but a process still. we'll get there#ts3#sims 3#the sims 3#sims#simblr#fleur extra#sawyer fleur#archer fleur#dorothea fleur
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"nOw RiDdLe Me ThIs đ€âïž" aight but fr why's bubba be wearing makeup? I ain't judging just genuinely curious if bros having an identity crisis in 1970's
#tcm 2003#tcm movie#tcm meme#tcm 2#tcm#texas chainsaw massacre meme#texas chainsaw 2#texas chainsaw massacre#bubba sawyer#leather face#leatherface#hes still an extra pretty boy with makeup
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She grunts, barely having time to brace for his impact as he lunges at her and pins him beneath his heavy weight.
A groanâ but she won't be defeated. Letting him preen himself in what he thinks is his easy little victory as he rests his face against her breasts once more.
Her chest heaves, sweat starting to form already.
And again, she's petting him, like she's tamed some wild, rabid dog right into her lapâ hand smoothing over his messed-up hair. Then, she whispers to him, her voice thick and heavy with threat, "you think you're slick?"
And in a strenuous effort, she's quickly pushed him off and rushed him while they grappled on the floor. Panting and huffing as they thud about before she takes her place atop him. "You're soooo slick, huh? Think it's that easy?" she chives and goads. Taunting him harmlessly.
Stronger than she looks, sure, but that's a burst of strength and energy she can only bring herself to summon every once in a while.
Sat upon his chest, she lets her full weight sink down on him, not that it'd do much, besides being heavier than she seemed for her smallness. Clearly, it wasn't something that stopped her from wanting to tussle with a man that towered over her and could really hurt her if he wasn't careful.
Looking down at him with a huff, she answers, "this is probably what I'd do to you if you were to be that perfect little height again, except, probably more like this," she moves up, smothering his faceâ the denim of her shorts feeling semi-rough against his skin.
"But that'd probably kill ya when you're so little. You don't gotta be a giant to crush me either," she's almost breathless, still catching her breath from when she overpowered him with sheer determination. "But I'd gladly get crushed by those thighs, pythons, hands... ass... pecs, tits, whatever, any damn day." She shrugs, "just bein' honest~!"
It's a reward for Johnny to have his messy hair stroked, much like a dog he's living for the attention. Hungry for it. Nothing but a touch-starved beast as he lets his guard down to just enjoy it. Clearly a mistake, just barely hearing her words before they go tumbling off the couch with flailing limbs.
His back hitting the ground hard and a somewhat heavy weight following to land on his chest, winding him as he pants for breath with arms spread out wide and flat. Stunned for the most part to be bested, but soon laughing with mirth before letting up to grin up at the other as they looked down on him.
If he really wanted to win, he would have by now, but where would the fun in that be? Especially with this spicy woman sitting on his chest.
Or at least was before getting a face full of denim clad crotch and goddamned if he wasn't living for it. Rough as it was against him, the scent alone.. He was inhaling deeply, unashamed and panting hotly against the material. Her words and actions easily riling him up like they wanted, arms and hands unable to resist grabbing them around the space between waist and thighs to hook. Certain to keep them in place.
"I.. I've heard my ass cheeks clap, no idea what that means but I suppose it might imply it's good at crushin'." He spoke between panting breaths only to growl out, "Doubt you could kill me, tougher'an I look... I'd take ya on that bet."
#johnny slaughter#johnny sawyer#tcm game#ask the badman#johnny rp#extra spicy#too spicy for tumblr? who knows#if it does#can move it someplace else~
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I Loved The Rush (Because You told Me I was supposed to) - Chapter 2 - DarkMoon017 - Heathers: The Musical - Murphy & O'Keefe [Archive of Our Own]
GUESS WHO'S BACK? THIS RAT IN A HUMANOID COSTUME!
In all seriousness, I did not expect that hiatus, life kicked me in the ass ten times and then shot me for good measure, but I'm back now mentally stable enough to write my silly little stories about 4 gay bitches.
#also please read the beginning notes for extra-ish expansion on my sudden disapearness#heathers#veronica sawyer#heather chandler#heathers the musical#heather duke#chansaw#heather mcnamara#heathers 1988#dukesaw#mcnamawyer#poly heathers + veronica#poly!heathers + Veronica#poly Heathers x Veronica#Attachment Au#Smadfics#SmadNeedsTherapyButAmericanHealthcareWon'tLetThem
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Sleepy stargazers
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i am so down bad for sawyer. i swear i start giggling/ kicking my feet when he calls us baby...
I too am down bad for sawyer, lol, I love writing all the moments where he's extra extra sweet :')
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pride moodboard ; sawyer cho
Mulher GNC bissexual
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Dealing with all the extra people in the house for the holidays festivities
#was only just setting the table and all the extra people just sitting in the living room chatting is overstimulating me.....#like bruh we haven't even actually gotten to the dinner part yet and im already dying đđđ#*pretends im on the 1000sunny with the straw hats or with the sawyer family*#my post
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Muse as a Deity âš
Rules: Think carefully about your character and their development through their journey (canon or OC) within their story. Fill out the chart and tag whoever you want! Multi-muses, feel free to pick any of your characters-- just a few, or all of them. Please repost, so the dash isn't clogged with reblogs.
(Saw this floating around and it looked fun. Under a cut for length.)
God Of: Innovation
Associated With: machinery, time/clocks, the act of creation/invention
Sacred Plants: broccoli, wild radishes, apples
Sacred Stones/Gems: tiger's eye, quartz, siliceous rocks
Sacred Animals: chickens, blackbirds
Colors: orange, light blue, chrome, copper
Food: popsicles, broccoli stew
Scents: peaches, ozone, motor oil, cut grass
Accepted Offerings/Ways to Honor: tools, hardware, machinery, blueprints, ideas, dreams
God Of: Drudgery, Steadfastness
Associated With: chores, hard work, workplace injuries, getting back up when you're knocked down
Sacred Plants: Cucumbers
Sacred Stones/Gems: diamonds, limestone
Sacred Animals: peacocks, dogs
Colors: green, blue
Food: waffles, pickles, cucumbers
Scents: maple syrup, parchment, rich soil, cucumber blossoms, pickle brine
Accepted Offerings/Ways to Honor: favorite foods, first aide supplies, relaxing after hard work, praise and recognition
God Of: Journeys
Associated With: self-discovery, displacement, getting lost and finding your way back
Sacred Plants: dandelions (especially when they've gone to seed)
Sacred Stones/Gems: watermelon tourmaline, moonstone
Sacred Animals: hedgehogs, pigeons
Colors: red, grey
Food: beef stew, instant noodles, fast food
Scents: wet pavement, vanilla, wildflowers
Accepted Offerings/Ways to Honor: music, snacks, reflecting on how where you've been has brought you to where you are now
God Of: Entropy, Philosophy
Associated With: unexplainable happenings, true randomness
Sacred Plants: cilantro, lime, hot peppers, tomatoes, lettuce, onions, avocados, rice, beans, what, corn, oak trees
Sacred Stones/Gems: volcanic rocks
Sacred Animals: sea turtles, creatures that live in tide pools, livestock
Colors: warm tones, green
Food: beef, chicken, pork, hot sauce, tomatoes, lettuce, salsa, guacamole, rice, beans, cheese, sour cream, tortillas
Scents: spices, cooked meats
Accepted Offerings/Ways to Honor: meditation on your place in the universe, contemplation of the unknowable, colorful hats and scarves
God Of: Chaos
Associated With: chance, gambling, revelry, liars, absurdity
Sacred Plants: pumpkins
Sacred Stones/Gems: fire opal, rocks which have been painted
Sacred Animals: spiders, crabs, geese
Colors: orange, green, purple, black
Food: pumpkin cookies, pumpkin wine, grilled cheese
Scents: pumpkin, swamp gas, wine, sugar, sea breeze
Accepted Offerings/Ways to Honor: Soup (definitions of "soup" are broad and flexible), disguises, gambling paraphernalia, the laughter of children
I tag anybody who's looking for a good thought exercise.
#Soup to Go; Queue#A Full Pot; Everybody#A Dash of This; Dash Games#Turning Gears; Gyro Musings#Extra Syrup; Starchy Musings#Vinyl Records; Sawyer Musings#Extra Hot Sauce; Three Meat Musings#Pumpkin Cookies; Gourdon Musings
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plague on the house of whoever said the wizard or whatever shit about rush because now it's all i can think about every time i listen to them
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also even though we had to cancel our camping plans I did still get to fill my water bottle in a little mountain stream that was feeding into a reservoir which is really all I've wanted
#marietta: I brought extra water#me- a nerd with a backcountry water purifier: you don't understand#made me self conscious though I waited until she wasn't looking agskfkdgsks#I don't WANT the kitchen water I WANT the MOUNTAIN WATER#it's a water bottle with a built in purifier/ filter so it's not like I was whipping out a sawyer squeeze or anything lol#got it after seeing 'pfas in all rainwater on earth' headlines on our camping trip last year đ#I have a katadyn befree but this one can also filter chemicals#and I was VERY EXCITED to BRING IT CAMPING so I just had to bring it daytripping instead#about me
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