#shifter berold
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Claw Tracks
Pairing: Berold (Werebear/Bear Shifter) x Gender Neutral Reader
Warnings: Violence, Bodyhorror.Â
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âDisgusting vermin!â
âThief!â
âScoundrel!â
The words had hurt but the rocks hurt more as they were hurled at the back of your head. One had caught you at the base of your skull and you could still feel the burning pain down into your neck as you shivered in the snow. The storm was in full swing now, and the icy wind burned your face and fingertips as you waded through the snow drifts along the side of the mountain. It hurt. You felt your arms starting to go numb and you hadnât been able to feel your feet or hands for a long time. The cloak wrapped around you was tattered and worn. It had been years since you had had a new one, and this one was thread bare. It was the only thing you could grab before the townspeople had driven you out with pitchforks and fire. Your home was still smouldering in the distance. Theyâd called you a witch. A witch for what, you had asked, before they set the torches to your cabin. Nothing.
âDamn that stupid bakerâs boy.â You cursed through chattering teeth as spots began to swim in your vision.
 The cold was blistering. You stopped again to try and tug your cloak tighter, cursing the wind, ice, snow and cold, and especially the Bakerâs son. You had refused him one too many times. Proposal after proposal turned down. Now you were a witch to the entire town. The bell tolled below, signalling mass. It seemed ironic that they burned your home and almost killed you but were heading to mass like it was any other day. Suddenly, cursing anymore was exhausting, and you felt your legs finally go numb, the cold and trudging through the snow taking its toll. Suddenly your legs jittered, shaking violently before they sent you face first into the snow drift. The cold ached. You felt the burning in your joints and bones, deep into your core as you struggled with your hands deep in the snow drift. Your fingers wiggled in the snow but made no headway in getting you back upright. Snow pounded against your eyes, crystalising in your eyelashes as it melted and froze once again with the freezing wind. Agony. You were in agony. A sob wretched from your throat as the pain overwhelmed you and breathing became hard around your sobs and shivering.
 âIâm⌠going to die hereâŚâ You sobbed brokenly as the snow started to cover your thighs, burying you in the snow drift slowly. Black was seeping into the corners of your vision again and the cold was slowly becoming a numb sensation against your face. That was, until, a snort and a guttural growl rumbled over the drift. It was winter. Animals were hibernating. The only thing that should be alive and moving on the mountain was the reindeer that lived along a long, icy migration route. You wobbled as you clawed at the snow, peering over the ridge with a strained cry of burning pain through your body. A bear. A great, black cave bear stood in the drift in front of you, its nose lowered to your face, sniffing and huffing at your hair. The hot breath blew over your face before the wet end of its nose was pressed firmly into your hair. Dangerous teeth snapped in front of your face as the bear pulled away, strings of spit dripping from its jowls. It drew back enough for you to see its black eyes blown wide, staring at you through the left one. The other eye was cloudy, white and scarred. The bear grumbled again, watching you with one giant eye as you reached towards its muzzle. Your freezing cold fingers brushed the gnarled fur around its mouth, dipping into the thick, heavier fur around the bearâs ears.
 You collapsed into the snow. The burning cold met your face as you keeled over into the deep snow drift. Heavy breaths snuffled over your neck as blackness overtook you. A rumble sounded from the bear.
âDonâtâŚeatâŚme.â
 Warmth. There was something warm against your body. You felt a heavy weight over your back, stomach and legs. That was warm too. It was very warm. Cozy almost. Suddenly, drifting back to sleep seemed like the best idea.
âBest not to go back to sleep.â Someone rumbled from next to you, âYou���ve taken two days to come âround as it is. I suggest you open your eyes.â It was harsh, a deep voice that carried an immediate pang of authority.
Sleepily, you dared to open your eyes and were met with a goliath of a man. His eyes were so dark they were almost black, but one was clouded with blindness, and his hair matched that, but was ladened with grey, like a salt and pepper waterfall down his back. The hair almost blended into the beard on his face and the hair over his chest and down his stomach. He snorted and blew hair from his eyes as he loomed over you, bare chested and only clothed in a thin pair of linen bottoms.
âArenât you coldâŚâ You shivered, mumbling the words as your fingers finally came back to life beneath the thick, stitched fur quilt. Inside you were tucked in with several layers of blankets.
The man snorted before leaning over you to place another log onto the roaring flames. The fire was quick to start consuming the wood and you realised then thatâs why you were so warm.
 âIâm not cold.â He grunted at you, âI have thickâŚâ He looked at himself and then shrugged, âI donât feel it like others.â
With a sleepy blink you looked from the flames to the manâs hardened face. He was older than you initially thought, but age did not make him any less large and well built, aside from the fat around his tummy, over the heavy set muscles of his form. He was infinitely tall, towering over you, standing at well over six and a half feet. A giant.
âYouâreâŚa giant.â You cooed from the floor, eyelids drooping with tiredness.
âSomething like that.â He tutted at your drooping eyelids, âNow. Eat. Drink. Then you can sleep.â
A cup was thrust at you before the man helped you sit up, his arm lifting you before he cupped your head and poured small sips of water into your mouth. You swallowed slowly, before realising how parched you were and drinking greater gulps.
âSlowly. Youâll be sick.â The man complained before he pulled the water away and started to feed you bits of gravy stewed meat. It was thick but delicious. Between your chewing he ate pieces of bread and stew before offering you more. Eventually you both cleaned out a bowl, and he went for seconds, slurping the mixture down before moving onto a great bunch of red, ripe winter berries, pushing the popping fruit between his lips by the handful.
 Tiredness set into your bones and you looked at the man as he shovelled another mouthful of berries into his mouth and chewed slowly.
âWhat are you starting at, human?â He grunted.
âWhat happened to that bear?â You asked quietly as you closed your eyes.
The man was quiet for a few moments before he answered, âWe are one in the same.â He fluffed the pillow gently before sitting you up, âCome. You need to relieve yourself or youâll get another kind of issue.â He eased you to your feet and helped you to relieve yourself before quietly tucking you back into the heated furs, âNow sleep. I will wake you again.â He promised as he settled himself in a wooden rocking chair next to you. You fell asleep just as he finished his sentence.
 Warmth woke you up again but this time you felt much more coherent. Drowsily you looked at the fire, still roaring in the hearth, and wondered what time it was as you pushed the blanket away from your legs and felt the urge to relieve yourself burn in your gut. With a huff you dared to stand on your own, wobbling back and forth before collapsing back into the furs with a grunt. The furs rumbled. With a gasp you squeezed the fur underneath your hands and were met with the thick, hot fat of a giant sleeping bear, curled around your mattress and blankets on the floor. It grumbled a deep, threatening growl before opening one black eye. Your hands were pushed against a thick, puckered scar in its fur and you recoiled with a soft gasp as it opened its mouth to yawn, revealing sharp teeth. The front right canine was cracked. With a fumble, you tried to crawl away over the furs. A giant paw slapped on top of your back, pinning you in place before the bear dragged you back towards its face. Its blind eye made you quiver but the nose that pressed to you made you squirm. It snuffled before tucking you under its arm and laying its giant head back down with a grunt before it dragged your furs closer again.
 âHey, heyâŚNo. I need to pee.â You groaned under the weight of the bearâs paw, trapped in the warm, thick fur.
The bear snorted before releasing you and bedding itself back against the floor, laid on its side. It ignored you as you stood up and took a deep, long breath as it drifted back off to sleep.
âOne in the same huhâŚâ You whispered as the bear slept soundly by your bed, its head rested on one of your pillows. You made a quick exit towards the back of the cabin and thieved Beroldâs boots and giant fur coat before you headed to the small shed to relieve yourself. Your legs shook as you got back into the warmth, locking the door with a clunk as you headed back towards the nest in front of the fire. The bear was still asleep and you looked at the fur and then the scar over the eye.
âBerold the bear shifter, huh.â You looked at the bear as you warmed your face and hands by the fire, throwing another log into the flames to keep it alight, âHibernating are you.â
The bear opened his good eye before growling lowly.
âListening too.â You hummed, tucking yourself in with a fur before you looked back at the animal you assumed to be your saviour, âThank you, then. For everything. I wouldnât be alive otherwise.â
The bear eyed you before loping to its feet and shouldering its way into the other room.
 The sound of bones cracking and a man screaming sounded, and you rushed to your feet to see the last moment as Beroldâs face cracked and snapped back into place, from muzzle to flat and human. You gasped as he heaved on the floor, catching his breath before he dared to stand up on his legs, wobbling back and forth before he looked at you through his one good eye and gestured to himself.
âThe coat.â He grunted.
With a rush of embarrassment, you grabbed the fur coat and threw it to him before turning around. Berold covered himself quickly before tapping you when he was decent.
âYou donât have to thank me.â He said simply before he walked past you.
âWait a minute!â You rushed after him, still shaking and weak from the brush with death, âOf course I do! You saved my life andâŚâ
Berold held a finger to your lips, âSave your breath. Eat well, rest, and I will help you back to the village.â
 The village. Youâd almost forgotten about the villagers. You eased your hand up the back of your neck and touched the place you had been struck by a rock. It was a lump now, the skin raised and inflamed. You felt your head spin as you drew your hand away to see blood. Berold rushed to catch you as you fell forwards towards the floor.
âI did not know you were injured.â He grumbled as his fingers raised your hair and peered at the wound, which was dripping fresh blood, down the back of your neck, âSit.â He directed you down to the armchair he was sat in before and left you to go and collect some things. Your eyes rolled with pain as you leaned back, trying to stop the ceiling from spinning. Beroldâs hot fingers returned to your face and his old, grizzled looking face appeared in front of you. He said something, but the words rang in your deaf ears as white noise echoed in your eardrums. The bear-shifter shook his head and eased your head forwards, cupped in his palm as he plucked at the wound and tutted. What followed next, you couldnât remember. All you could remember was Beroldâs warm fingers as they cleaned and applied things to your head.
 You woke up again wrapped in furs, your head rested on several pillows and wrapped in gauze. You groaned and opened your eyes to see an elf leaned over you. The elf was dark haired with skin of a purple tone, his red eyes covered by a pair of thick lensed glasses. He hummed before whispering something to Berold and then another person appeared. A fae of some kind with soft feathered wings of pure white and a beak to match. She ruffled her feathers before laying out a long looking mushroom and snapping her fingers. The mushroom wiggled before arms and legs popped from its stem.
âCome on, little one, we need that fruit.â She cooed softly with a trill.
The elf was quick to notice your eyes were open and hushed her with a finger to his lips, âYouâre awake. Welcome back, but be still, human. We are not finished.â He pressed your head back and held you still as the little mushroom yawned and sat itself into a plant pot full of soil.
âCome, come, âock youâre a lazy one.â The fae complained as she ushered the fungus along and touched her fingers to the pot from behind her great snowy wings. She was covered in soft downy feathers and you were entranced before looking at the elf too, his red eyes judgemental of the mushroom.
 âBerold. Please hold them.â The elf asked.
Berold moved to your side, gruff and huffy as he held your head back and watched the elf move to tease the fruit from the little mushroomâs head, âThought you could handle this one, Slidrah?â He grumbled.
âSometimes even the most unassuming patients are the unruliest.â Slidrah complained as the mushroom sneezed out a sporous fruit. He plucked it carefully before placing the fruit into the mortar and beginning to grind it into the paste.
âSlidrah can ye be nice for just once?â The fae trilled.
âOh of course, Morganna, I will be the kindest elf to the rudest bear I know.â Slidrah complained as he mixed the paste and placed it over a thick padded bandage.
âYou wouldnât make it through the winter without me.â Berold growled as he touched your forehead and stroked your skin softly.
âSure, Berold.â Slidrah rolled his eyes before he took the bandage and eased your head up. He placed it against the wound before Morganna pulled out a feather from her wing and gently laid it over your stomach as the paste stung against your wound.
âGently now, dearie.â Morganna cooed at Slidrah before he whispered a word you had never heard before. Your eyes drooped suddenly as your fingers clutched at the feather, stroking the softness between two fingers before you gasped and reached for Beroldâs hand. He put a finger to his lips, appearing as double and then triple as your eyes rolled and closed.
 âI know youâre awake.â Berold said as he eased your head up and carefully removed the bandages from around the back of your head, âSit still.â He carefully peeled away the bandage before he took the paste and compress away, revealing a green mix with a very pungent smell.
âWhat happened?â You asked quietly, your throat dry and sore from being asleep.
Berold took a new compress to your head, the cloth smeared with a familiar looking paste, âMorganna put you to sleep to help you recover. The compress has helped. The wound is closed.â He eased your head back after he tied the bandage tight enough to hold the cloth and paste to your head, âYou were lucky. Skilled healers are the only people who could have helped you. Had I been alone here, you would have died from the trauma.â
You were still tired but the weight of his words sat heavy in your stomach, âThank you, thenâŚFor saving my life again.â
Berold snorted, âSlidrah and Morganna saved your life this time. They left this morning, but they will be back within the week no doubt, you can thank them then.â He stopped you from sitting up with a giant, warm hand pressed to your stomach. Even with one, blind cloudy eye, he still appeared viciously angry, âStay still. Too much movement could open the wound again. Bed rest. Until Slidrah and Morganna come back.â He insisted with a growl before standing and heading out of the room.
 You gazed around quietly before reaching for the water next to the bed. After a few careful sips, you tugged at the furs and ran your fingers through the thick beaver hair and the pelt of a shaggy goat, which lived up on the cracks in the mountain. They were incredibly warm and you eased back, thankful for the heat of the small bedroom. The cabinsâ rooms were made of solid, heavy timber, smelling of fragrant pine, and the small window was covered in glass, something only a rich man could afford, even if it was tiny. You looked at the chimney breast and again wondered how on earth Berold lived in such luxury. Your head swam with even the effort of turning it to peer around at the little room and you closed your eyes as your gut lurched and bile rose in your mouth.
Berold returned with a small bowl in his hands, his black eyes softening as he watched you retch against the furs, âDid I not tell you to stay still?â He said scathingly before he placed the food aside and eased you back against a great pile of overstuffed pillows.
The sweet smell of honey and oats made you wish you didnât feel so sick, âWhat did they do to my head.â You complained before Berold pulled your fingers away from your head.
 âThey healed itâŚWith magic we donât mention to anyone. What they did could get us all killed.â Berold seemed unconcerned despite the severity of what he was saying, âThe villagers donât come here. I want to keep it that way.â He brushed the greying streaks of hair from his face before he took hold of the bowl again.
âThat smells like what Mrs Freist used to make us.â You murmured at the bear-shifter, âShe had beehives.â
Berold held a spoonful of the mixture to your lips, âIts honeyed oat porridge. Eat. It will help you regain your strength.â He pressed the wooden spoon insistently to your lips and you opened your mouth to take the food inside, smiling like a child at the tooth rotting taste of too much honey.
âHave you eaten?â You asked quietly after a few mouthfuls.
Berold nodded, âHoney is a favourite of mine.â He confessed as he fed you another spoonful.
âLike a real bear.â You squeezed at the furs with a small laugh, âIts delicious.â
Dark eyes flashed with softness once again and you settled back against the cushions as Berold continued to feed you the bowl of food.
 It continued in a pattern. Twice a day Berold would sit and feed you and around midday he would come to check on you and offer you a meal you often never wanted. Slowly, your strength returned, and Berold trusted you to relieve yourself without falling over and dress yourself so long as you didnât move too quickly. It was a month before you could walk around and do things without your head spinning, and the snow never seemed to stop for longer than a few days. The mountainside thawed a little and Berold disappeared to gather food and wood before the snow started again and you were trapped once more. A month of snow and ice then lead to a calm week of thawing. Berold was at the windows, his nose raised as he tasted at the air, and opened the door to let the chilly breeze into the cabin. You looked at the massive man from the kitchen as you dried a large pan and placed it away in his rickety cupboards. You had both eaten a thick and heavy stew from the night before for breakfast but Berold had seemed very uninterested in the food in favour of looking out of the window longingly.
 âIt smells like spring.â He grumbled as he looked around outside at the slightly thawed snow, âLikeâŚfresh grass.â
âI think the cabin fever has finally gotten to you old man.â You joked from the kitchen, âMaybe in the valleys, it tends to be thawed now with some grass, but the winter isnât over just yet.â You placed away a spoon on the rack and turned back to see Beroldâs good eye turned to watch you. His milky eye twitched at the ghosts of the shapes outside but he grinned, exposing white, sharp teeth at you.
âOld man?â He asked with a huffy chortle, âIf Iâm old then youâre a cub.â
âA cub?â You asked, âIâm old enough to have at least three little parasites to my name.â You gave a dry snort, âBut that didnât happen, thank the gods.â
âThey make children have more children now?â Berold raised a dark eyebrow as he closed the door and headed towards the fire to look at the log pile along the side of the wall.
âIts worse elsewhere.â You insisted, âBut thankfully no one wants the orphan with no dowery.â
âDoweryâŚYou mean the money a father gives for a man to marry his child? I thought that practice ancient?â Berold looked at you in confusion again.
 âJust how long have you been up here?â You asked, not believing what you were hearing, âDid a snowball hit you too hard in the head?â You joked as you placed away the last of the bowls.
Berold chewed on his words for a minute, âI sleptâŚfor a long time.â He confessed, âWe are akin to dragons, but my hibernation took some years from me after the arenas. I was taken as a young teenager and forced to fight in the pits, tearing little knights to pieces for the entertainment of some elven king. A foul-smelling fucker. He gave me this.â He dragged a black nail over his eye, âI took his arm off for the trouble.â He snarled and pointed to the bone laid on the mantle, âBut I slept after that up in this mountain from beingâŚâ He shrugged, âI was old, but I was not grey.â He confessed, âBut we live for a long timeâŚâ
 âHumans who wore bear skins were once Gods.â You whispered.
Beroldâs teeth were exposed in another snarling smile, âWe were once Gods of wisdom.â He tapped the wall with his nails, âBut now we are dead and gone.â
âThere are tales of shifters to the north, beyond here, why donât you go there?â You asked.
âI have no need of a tribe, just as they had no need of me when they left me to die.â He shrugged and pulled his hair from his face, âNot one of them came to my aid when I screamed in the woodlands, impaled on spears and dragged to serve as a toy for a king of pointed eared fuckers. So, I will not go to them. They can rot in their woods with the nymphs.â Berold dismissed the questions with an annoyed flap of his hand.
âWhere are you going?â You asked as he dragged his coat from the wall and pulled his boots on his feet.
âTo bathe and ensure no one has decided this is now their territory.â Berold grunted as he opened the door again.
âThereâs somewhere to bathe?â You asked with glee, âCan IâŚâ
âYou will freeze. It is a freezing lake beneath a waterfall.â He snapped at you before he closed the door, abruptly ending the conversation between the two of you. You felt anger churn in your gut but you rushed to grab one of his coats and some boots before tying everything closed and rushing after the shifterâs tracks in the snow.
 The tracks lead up the mountain, through the thawing slush, before turning into those of the giant bear whoâs claws dragged along in the snow as he lumbered along. You cursed the giant bear-shifter as you followed him up the mountain side and then towards the crags where the path dipped down into an odd-looking alcove. You followed the path down into the hidden side of the mountain face until you heard the crashing of water. A great pool of water was hidden in the alcove, with a small waterfall crashing over the top of the cliff faces into the water below which led into another small waterfall and so on down the side of the mountain. It was surrounded with wildlife and greenery which could not survive on the mountainside against the wind, rain and cold, but could in the sheltered alcove. Beroldâs coat and clothes sat in a bundle under the shrubbery closest to you, hidden from the elements and animals.
 You got to the base of the path and watched as Beroldâs giant head exploded from under the water. The black bear shook his head and peered around, nose stuck in the air, and you made sure to duck low near his bundles of clothes, the coat and furs hopefully serving to disguise your scent on the wind. The bear huffed and growled before it swam to the edge of the pool and shook out its mass of shaggy fur before making its way to the tree, littered with claw marks and great gouges, before he began to rub his face and body over the bark, scratching and marking the area before the bear growled and fur began to disappear from its back. You watched as the bear howled, its head thrown up as the fur disappeared to reveal dark skin, which slowly melted into the scarred, pale skin of Berold. The muzzle snapped and flattened back towards the dark eyes, one cloudy and blind, and the other closed in agony as Berold began to take shape, his bones snapping and cracking back to reveal a tall, burly man, old and greying in many places. His chest was covered in a thick line of fur and his face was now beginning to grow a beard which was far too thick. He needed a clip, but the winter had left the both of you stuck inside, sleeping and eating most days. Berold seemed much more alert now as he sniffed the air again, naked, his muscles twitching with the cold, before he dove back into the water. He resurfaced a minute later with a snort of water and a grumble as he reached around the bank for his clothes.
 His hand wrapped around your boot, and before you could even yelp, you were dragged from under the bushes, leaves and rotten twigs catching in your hair and coat before you came face to face with Beroldâs face. His salt and pepper hair hung around his shoulders but stuck to his face as he snarled at you with sharp, long canines. Water streaked over the muscles of his neck and shoulders as he dragged himself over the edge of the pool, leaning out to keep his weight on you, and to keep you pinned in place.
âI told you not to come with me.â He growled as he pulled the hair from his face with his other hand, âWhat part of you would freeze did you not understand?â
You yelped as his wet hand slapped over your thigh, holding you in place in the mud, âI want to get clean as well andâŚwell I wanted to see where you were goingâŚâ You confessed in a rush as the werebear snorted over you, his nose twitching as he scented you and then the air again.
âFine then. Strip off.â Berold grunted.
 You felt yourself go hot with embarrassment, âWhat do you mean strip?â You snarked at him, âAre you some kind of pervert?â You looked away from him as he stood in the pool, the waterline barely hiding his genitals from sight.
âYouâre going to freeze either way, but at least your clothes will be dry if you strip them off.â Berold grumbled at you.
For a moment you considered throwing your clothes at him out of spite but with a huff you turned to strip away the coat, âTurn aroundâŚâ You asked. With a small sigh, Berold turned and the water sloshed around his hips, âThank you.â He only grunted in response. You carefully removed your clothes and folded the cloth and wool in a neat pile beside Beroldâs under the bush.
âIts best if you just jump in.â Berold joked from the water, though his tone was as gruff and mean as usual.
âI donât think I dare.â You confessed at the edge of the water, shivering before Berold whipped around, grabbing you by the thighs before he launched you up and into the water with a giant splash.
 Water blurred your vision until you broke the surface, coughing and splurting, gasping until you realised you could stand in the waist high water quite easily. Berold laughed, long and raspy as he leaned back and splashed back into the water. It was then you realised the water wasnât cold. It was pleasantly warm. The shock on your face made Berold heave a great laugh again from where he was floating around the pool, his hair cascading out from him in waves.
âItâs heated by lava I think.â Berold hummed as he floated towards you, his eyes closed, the scars on his face not turned with upset for once but bent upwards with the smile on his lips.
âSo why did you lie about it being cold?â You asked as you ducked to cover your body in water.
Berold opened one dark eye and shrugged, tipping himself into the water before turning to look at you, hidden against the edge, âSometimes I donât want you following me everywhere I go.â He offered gruffly, âYouâre barely recovered to add to that. I didnât want to have to carry you back home.â He confessed softly as he pushed water over his arms and pointed to the bank, âThereâs soap in my coat. I will let you go first, then you can be out of my way.â
 âSureâŚâ You huffed as you took the soap from the furs and quickly set to work scrubbing your skin as good as you could manage. Once you had lathered up and washed yourself, you dunked your body low and turned to be met with one gleaming dark eye and one blind one, watching you, apparently that whole time.
âPervert.â You hissed at the Werebear as you threw the soap at him.
Berold snatched the soap from the air, âThink what you want.â He growled as he turned to rub the soap against his shoulders, âDress. Iâll lead us home.â
You pulled yourself from the small pool and wiped as much water as you could from your skin, grateful for the warm, dry clothes as you pulled them over your chilly skin. Turned away, you looked up the face of the mountain at the snow which was dripping water over the rocks. Berold sloshed in the water as he soaped his skin, and you listened to him move in the water, beating down the urge to turn around and see what the giant werebear looked like. There was a rush of snow from the side of the mountain which made you smile. It was followed by a bleating mountain goat which peered over the side with dark eyes, its shaggy white fur flopping over its eyes once again as it turned and carried on up the mountain, ignoring the two of you in the pool.
 Berold caught your arm a moment later, dressed and still burning hot despite the coolness of the air. He peered upwards, his eyes following the mountain goat with a sniff, âThey make for good eating.â
âIâm sure we donât need anymore food just yet.â You replied as you smiled and watched the goat go.
Beroldâs gaze turned to your face, âYou donât smile like that often. It suits you.â He complimented gruffly.
âWhat do you mean?â You asked as he started back up the path towards his home, expecting you to follow him.
He waited for you to catch up before offering an arm for you to take as you clambered over roots and boulders, âEver since you woke up you had this far away look on your face, like you were looking for something and just could never find it.â Carefully, he lifted you over a particularly large boulder and followed with a grunt, âYou looked sad, until recently.â
You considered his words, remembering spending the first days recovering after Slidrahâs treatment staring longingly out of the small window as the snow battered up the mountainside, âIâŚâ The words seemed to stick in your throat, âI lost the place I called my home and the people who were once the only family I ever had in a single day.â You replied, âAll because the stupid bakerâs boy couldnât take a hint.â You picked up a stone on the path and threw it back into the pool, the anger fading with the splash of the water as the stone hit its surface.
 Berold watched the stone soar silently before he opened his mouth, âThen they werenât your real family, were they?â He scoffed, âIf a bakerâs boy could call you a witch and Satanâs whore then they were hardly ever your family.â
You felt anger burn in your throat, âThey were once. You donât have to word it in a way that makes it seem like no one ever cared!â
Berold laughed at you as you snatched your arm from his, âThe truth hurts, little cub, better get used to that before someone really hurts you.â
âI refuse to turn into a bitter, cruel man like you. Not everyone is out to hurt you!â You refused to let him see you cry as you stormed up the snowy banking, âAnd not everyone wants to become an emotionally stunted recluse like you either!â
The werebear grabbed you by the arm before you could carry on with your tantrum, âAs much as your words hurt me.â He rolled his eyes, âI refuse to let you storm off, get lost and develop hypothermia, again.â
âBite me.â You grumbled before Berold snarled and grappled you easily, hauling you over his shoulder as you struggled, pinning you in place before he started back to his cabin.
âYou can have your childish, ignorant tantrum back where you wonât die.â
 You didnât see Berold for a few days after the argument. He left you in the cabin and went out to collect wood and forage while the weather was good, and he could avoid being stranded in the snow. The tension was made somehow worse by his temper and you spent all the time you could avoiding him, reading the same books over and over in your room before collecting a meal and disappearing back into your room once more. You opened the tale of the origin of Solgren once more that day and huffed at the first page and its ancient map of the region. It was a hot country, far to the south, where it is said a race of snake creatures and lizardfolk are worshipped as deities and gods. You heard a merchant once talk about a Naga of fertility that birthed a thousand snakes into a ravine to produce a venomous pit into which no one could enter.
 A heavy knock sounded on your door.
âYes?â You asked with less of the usual venom, âWhat is it, Berold?â
The werebear opened the door and looked at you, his good eye roving over you tucked in the furs reading. You had even snuck into his honey stash again out of the top of the cupboard, âI see I need to find somewhere new to hide the honey.â He offered lamely as he entered, âI have come to apologise.â He stated, watching your eyes widen, âI was cruel and brash. I did not intend to upset you, but I did not think⌠But I am sorry.â
You met his intense gaze and nodded, âApology accepted, andâŚIâm sorry too.â You closed your book, âI was foul as well. I know youâve been through a lot, just like me, and I donât have the right to take that out on you.â
 Berold seemed satisfied by that statement, âIt seems we both need to learn how to not upset one anotherâŚâ He tugged over a stool and sat by the edge of your bed, âAnd I need to learn that opening up to people is not the end of the world.â With a gruff noise he reached and pulled his loose cotton shirt over his head, revealing the thick, puckered scars from over his shoulders. He twisted on the stool and you were graced with the full extent of the injuries. His back was covered in long, thick scars, pale and tough from where they had healed, now filled with collagen toughened tissue.
âIs this what they did to you?â You asked.
âWhen I did not perform, they used steel tipped whips. I could only ever endure about five, but it was five every time I couldnât stand for almost thirty years of my life.â He offered, âA woman would come and cover them with a mint paste when she could. She was in charge of the animals⌠They still hurt.â He reached to touch the ones on his shoulders before flinching as his tough fingers met your own, âThey are an ugly reminder of that place, but an even better reminder of what I did to all of them.â
 Burning fire flashed behind your eyes, a memory of your own tragedy, âDid you kill them all?â You asked quietly as you traced a thick scar down the centre of his spine.
Beroldâs burning, black gaze turned to look at you, holding your gaze he nodded, âEvery last one of them.â He curled his fist as his other hand took hold of your own, âIt felt good, when I pulled that fuckerâs arm off, butâŚIt was hollow after that. I left him bleeding on his throne and made for the mountains. Walked forâŚI donât know. Its hazy, the memories of my other side. I ate fish for days and slept in a cave before waking up with grey in my hair. Revenge made me old.â He finished with a sour joke as he turned back to face you head on and pulled his shirt back on over his head.
âIâm sorry people did that to you.â You wanted to cry but you tried to smile, âIt seems we both have a little tragedy, huh?â
âIt seems so.â Berold hummed before he offered you his hand, âButâŚThereâs no reason we canât build something a bit better.â He squeezed your hand gently.
âAre you asking me to marry you?â You joked.
He tugged your hand closer to his fangs, âHardlyâŚBut some company up here wouldnât go amiss.â
âThen I accept your proposal.â You squeezed his hand before offering him a look at the book cover, âHave you read this one?â You asked.
Berold shook his head of shaggy hair, âNo. Read it to me?â He asked quietly, âIâll make more honey tea.â
 Reading slowly became a routine. After dinner, the two of you would sit by the fire, and you would open a book to read to the werebear. Often, he ended up with his head in your lap and your hand in his hair, snoozing in the heat as you quietly read the story. It had started with him, shifted, curled on the floor by the fire, but as the days went on, Berold seemed to grow more comfortable and laid out his form over the cushions and furs and yourself. It was nice. His heat was soothing and his frame wrapped snuggly around your own. When he did finally drift off, you read for a while longer before easing his head onto a pillow and slipping away to bed. He never said anything the next day. This night was much the same, and you propped the book up in front of you as you stroked through his grey and black hair, winding the strands together aimlessly as you read the tale or Narbren and Senoot, two fae of the oaks who had once saved the fae realm. He was uninvested, but happily closed his eyes as you stroked through his hair.
âSenoot took the flames of the world tree in hand and cried, her tears dripping into the wood ashes with despair as she watched the leaves and bark burn before her eyes. Narben thrust his sword at the spirits, his own tears of fury soaking the ground. Together they mourned the tree in the burning fireâŚâ You paused as there came a knock on the door, removing your fingers from Beroldâs hair, âAt this hour?â You asked breathily before Beroldâs eyes turned angry. He pulled himself from the cushions and stood, his shoulders squared as he turned the lock with a clunk and opened the wood door inwards.
 The chilly breeze blew into the room and you tucked the furs around your legs as Berold filled the doorway, his giant, almost seven-foot-tall frame blocking much of his home from view. You peered around him to catch a glimpse of the guards stood at the door.
âGood evening, sir.â One guard tipped his helmet forwards, âIâm sorry to knock so late but we have a favour to ask of you.â
âGood eveningâŚIâm not much in the way of favours.â Berold grunted, âI canât spare you room to stay if that is what you are going to ask.â
âNo, sir. We are after a witch.â The guard scowled before he pointed into the cabin, âWe have a warrant to search every home until we find them.â
âHow does that warrant affect me? This mountain is the border territory.â Berold snapped, âI will not have you come in here and ravage my home.â
âIt is law. We will do it by force if necessary.â The guard threatened, âAnd we wish to speak with yourâŚâ
 Fear laced through you as Berold grunted, âThat is my partner. We are to be married in the spring.â He grumbled at the guard, âTouch and I will rip you open.â But he moved to the side to allow the group inside. Their cloaks caught on the doorframe and you nodded to them as they entered the room, praying no one had given them a detailed description of your face.
The rest of the party moved into the house, leaving one with Berold and you, âYou are to be married but why is your spouse with you?â
âThey have no family.â Berold picked at his teeth with a dark nail, âEvery winter we spend time here, but the weather has been too bad to return home.â
The guard gave a disbelieving look, âAnd visitors?â He asked.
âNone. I trade with a few people over the mountain but as I said, the weather has been too bad.â Berold answered. You could see his temper wearing thin as the guards dropped something in the kitchen, but he stood by the door, as calmly as he could manage.
 âYou.â The guard pointed to you, âWhere are you from?â He asked.
You swallowed and smiled as best as you could, âThe village Berold mentioned, sir, just over the mountain. I worked with a man named Slidrah, heâs the apothecary owner.â
âWhatâs the name of the place.â He pressed.
âIgnot.â You replied, praying you had heard Slidrah right on his last visit to the cabin. The guard eyed you for a moment more with his pinprick gaze before he seemed satisfied and moved back to questioning Berold about his comings and goings. You sat by the fire and pretended to read as they continued to look through the house and assess every nook and cranny of the building. Berold watched with furious eyes until they were ready to depart. The guards were curt with their depart and you watched them from the window, wrapped in a heavy blanket. Berold growled by the door, snorting and grumbling as he stretched and paced by the door.
 âBerold?â You asked as he reached for the door, his brows thickening and darkening as his sharp teeth protruded from out underneath his top lip.
âStay inside.â He demanded, âThey know. Theyâll bring more.â He reached for the door handle and opened the wooden door again, letting the cold air in once again as he snarled and snorted, âNo one comes in. You donât let anyone in unless they knock four times.â
âWhy four times?â You asked as you took hold of his shirt, âTheyâll know if you kill themâŚâ
âIâm doing thisâŚThis one thing to protect someone I care about, for once.â Berold confessed with another growl before he stormed out of the door, his face cracking with a shift, âKeep it locked until those knocks!â He shouted through his teeth and you slammed the door locked and removed the key with a deep breath as you listened to Berold stumble and howl in the snow, hobbling down the mountain on the tracks the guards had left behind.
 He didnât return that night and you spent it huddled by the fire, sipping honey sweetened tea as you watched the fire and kept it hot, hoping Berold would return later.
 Four knocks woke you in the morning. They came slow and were lethargic, as though the person was exhausted.
âIts me.â Berold growled from outside, âLet me in.â
You rushed from the pillows and blankets in the chair and took the key to open the door. It swung open to reveal Berold, tired and drawn, but otherwise clean and uninjured.
âAre you okay?â You helped him inside and watched as he set himself down in the armchair, exhausted.
âIâm fine.â He grumbled, âBut theyâre notâŚI took them into the village and told them a bear attacked. The villagers seemed to buy it. They wonât be able to deliver their message.â He yawned against the furs before opening his eyes and tucking his hair behind his ears. He scrubbed at his beard before sighing, âI did it to protect you. IâŚâ He took a long breath, âI think I have grown to love something but myself.â He uttered as his eyes slid closed a little, âYou sit right here.â He pointed to his heart, âAnd I think I wouldâŚbe sad if you were to leave me.â Berold reached for your face, tracing a gentle circle over your cheek before he smiled tiredly, âWhat this old bear is trying to say, is that I love you.â
 The words rang in your ears for a moment. Your face lit up with a smile.
âYouâre a thick-headed idiot, you know that right?â You tucked a fur over his lap before Berold dragged you to him.
âIs that you saying you feel this way too?â He grumbled next to your neck as his hair tickled at your skin.
You pulled his head up and smiled before laying one kiss on his cheek, âYes. I love you too.â
Berold dragged you closer and pressed your lips together, his teeth poking against your bottom lip as he turned his head and rubbed his hands along your sides. It was intense and you felt like you were drowning, smothered in the entirety of Berold for a moment before he pulled away and stroked at your neck and face, his face buried in your hair.
âThank you.â He whispered.
âDonât thank me.â You replied as you tucked his hair back, âBut promise thatâll youâll keep talking and letting me in.â
âI promise, dearest.â Berold whispered against your cheek as he dragged the furs over the two of you.
#werebear#werebear x reader#shifter x reader#monster x reader#monster boy x reader#monster boyfriend#monster bf x reader#gender neutral reader#terato#exo#berold x reader#reader insert#my writing#original works#berold the werebear#shifter berold
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I posted 479 times in 2021
143 posts created (30%)
336 posts reblogged (70%)
For every post I created, I reblogged 2.3 posts.
I added 345 tags in 2021
#apex legends - 51 posts
#jujutsu kaisen - 49 posts
#art - 46 posts
#revenant - 39 posts
#reblog - 32 posts
#gender neutral reader - 27 posts
#ask - 26 posts
#my writing - 26 posts
#answered - 25 posts
#choso - 24 posts
Longest Tag: 61 characters
#ive missed u i played titanfall on your faction forever wifey
My Top Posts in 2021
#5 Reboot
172 notes ⢠Posted 2021-05-18 14:54:18 GMT
#4 Who needs lights?
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230 notes ⢠Posted 2021-03-05 20:58:01 GMT
#3 Codex
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242 notes ⢠Posted 2021-04-03 15:41:08 GMT
#2 Parasite
342 notes ⢠Posted 2021-10-04 16:51:37 GMT
#1 Claw Tracks
Pairing: Berold (Werebear/Bear Shifter) x Gender Neutral Reader
Warnings: Violence, Bodyhorror.Â
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âDisgusting vermin!â
âThief!â
âScoundrel!â
The words had hurt but the rocks hurt more as they were hurled at the back of your head. One had caught you at the base of your skull and you could still feel the burning pain down into your neck as you shivered in the snow. The storm was in full swing now, and the icy wind burned your face and fingertips as you waded through the snow drifts along the side of the mountain. It hurt. You felt your arms starting to go numb and you hadnât been able to feel your feet or hands for a long time. The cloak wrapped around you was tattered and worn. It had been years since you had had a new one, and this one was thread bare. It was the only thing you could grab before the townspeople had driven you out with pitchforks and fire. Your home was still smouldering in the distance. Theyâd called you a witch. A witch for what, you had asked, before they set the torches to your cabin. Nothing.
âDamn that stupid bakerâs boy.â You cursed through chattering teeth as spots began to swim in your vision.
 The cold was blistering. You stopped again to try and tug your cloak tighter, cursing the wind, ice, snow and cold, and especially the Bakerâs son. You had refused him one too many times. Proposal after proposal turned down. Now you were a witch to the entire town. The bell tolled below, signalling mass. It seemed ironic that they burned your home and almost killed you but were heading to mass like it was any other day. Suddenly, cursing anymore was exhausting, and you felt your legs finally go numb, the cold and trudging through the snow taking its toll. Suddenly your legs jittered, shaking violently before they sent you face first into the snow drift. The cold ached. You felt the burning in your joints and bones, deep into your core as you struggled with your hands deep in the snow drift. Your fingers wiggled in the snow but made no headway in getting you back upright. Snow pounded against your eyes, crystalising in your eyelashes as it melted and froze once again with the freezing wind. Agony. You were in agony. A sob wretched from your throat as the pain overwhelmed you and breathing became hard around your sobs and shivering.
 âIâm⌠going to die hereâŚâ You sobbed brokenly as the snow started to cover your thighs, burying you in the snow drift slowly. Black was seeping into the corners of your vision again and the cold was slowly becoming a numb sensation against your face. That was, until, a snort and a guttural growl rumbled over the drift. It was winter. Animals were hibernating. The only thing that should be alive and moving on the mountain was the reindeer that lived along a long, icy migration route. You wobbled as you clawed at the snow, peering over the ridge with a strained cry of burning pain through your body. A bear. A great, black cave bear stood in the drift in front of you, its nose lowered to your face, sniffing and huffing at your hair. The hot breath blew over your face before the wet end of its nose was pressed firmly into your hair. Dangerous teeth snapped in front of your face as the bear pulled away, strings of spit dripping from its jowls. It drew back enough for you to see its black eyes blown wide, staring at you through the left one. The other eye was cloudy, white and scarred. The bear grumbled again, watching you with one giant eye as you reached towards its muzzle. Your freezing cold fingers brushed the gnarled fur around its mouth, dipping into the thick, heavier fur around the bearâs ears.
 You collapsed into the snow. The burning cold met your face as you keeled over into the deep snow drift. Heavy breaths snuffled over your neck as blackness overtook you. A rumble sounded from the bear.
âDonâtâŚeatâŚme.â
 Warmth. There was something warm against your body. You felt a heavy weight over your back, stomach and legs. That was warm too. It was very warm. Cozy almost. Suddenly, drifting back to sleep seemed like the best idea.
âBest not to go back to sleep.â Someone rumbled from next to you, âYouâve taken two days to come âround as it is. I suggest you open your eyes.â It was harsh, a deep voice that carried an immediate pang of authority.
Sleepily, you dared to open your eyes and were met with a goliath of a man. His eyes were so dark they were almost black, but one was clouded with blindness, and his hair matched that, but was ladened with grey, like a salt and pepper waterfall down his back. The hair almost blended into the beard on his face and the hair over his chest and down his stomach. He snorted and blew hair from his eyes as he loomed over you, bare chested and only clothed in a thin pair of linen bottoms.
âArenât you coldâŚâ You shivered, mumbling the words as your fingers finally came back to life beneath the thick, stitched fur quilt. Inside you were tucked in with several layers of blankets.
The man snorted before leaning over you to place another log onto the roaring flames. The fire was quick to start consuming the wood and you realised then thatâs why you were so warm.
 âIâm not cold.â He grunted at you, âI have thickâŚâ He looked at himself and then shrugged, âI donât feel it like others.â
With a sleepy blink you looked from the flames to the manâs hardened face. He was older than you initially thought, but age did not make him any less large and well built, aside from the fat around his tummy, over the heavy set muscles of his form. He was infinitely tall, towering over you, standing at well over six and a half feet. A giant.
âYouâreâŚa giant.â You cooed from the floor, eyelids drooping with tiredness.
âSomething like that.â He tutted at your drooping eyelids, âNow. Eat. Drink. Then you can sleep.â
A cup was thrust at you before the man helped you sit up, his arm lifting you before he cupped your head and poured small sips of water into your mouth. You swallowed slowly, before realising how parched you were and drinking greater gulps.
âSlowly. Youâll be sick.â The man complained before he pulled the water away and started to feed you bits of gravy stewed meat. It was thick but delicious. Between your chewing he ate pieces of bread and stew before offering you more. Eventually you both cleaned out a bowl, and he went for seconds, slurping the mixture down before moving onto a great bunch of red, ripe winter berries, pushing the popping fruit between his lips by the handful.
 Tiredness set into your bones and you looked at the man as he shovelled another mouthful of berries into his mouth and chewed slowly.
âWhat are you starting at, human?â He grunted.
âWhat happened to that bear?â You asked quietly as you closed your eyes.
The man was quiet for a few moments before he answered, âWe are one in the same.â He fluffed the pillow gently before sitting you up, âCome. You need to relieve yourself or youâll get another kind of issue.â He eased you to your feet and helped you to relieve yourself before quietly tucking you back into the heated furs, âNow sleep. I will wake you again.â He promised as he settled himself in a wooden rocking chair next to you. You fell asleep just as he finished his sentence.
 Warmth woke you up again but this time you felt much more coherent. Drowsily you looked at the fire, still roaring in the hearth, and wondered what time it was as you pushed the blanket away from your legs and felt the urge to relieve yourself burn in your gut. With a huff you dared to stand on your own, wobbling back and forth before collapsing back into the furs with a grunt. The furs rumbled. With a gasp you squeezed the fur underneath your hands and were met with the thick, hot fat of a giant sleeping bear, curled around your mattress and blankets on the floor. It grumbled a deep, threatening growl before opening one black eye. Your hands were pushed against a thick, puckered scar in its fur and you recoiled with a soft gasp as it opened its mouth to yawn, revealing sharp teeth. The front right canine was cracked. With a fumble, you tried to crawl away over the furs. A giant paw slapped on top of your back, pinning you in place before the bear dragged you back towards its face. Its blind eye made you quiver but the nose that pressed to you made you squirm. It snuffled before tucking you under its arm and laying its giant head back down with a grunt before it dragged your furs closer again.
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420 notes ⢠Posted 2021-01-17 18:51:22 GMT
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