#yarnes like ‘oh god what do i do im not ready to be a father’
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sieglinde-freud · 2 months ago
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fire emblem awakening owainyarne where yarnes like “god i need to continue to taguel line” and owains like “hmm yes how can i do this for him” and instead of going to mpreg like a fucking normal person he gets henry and miriel to conjure up a taguel baby using their hair or some shit and ophelia comes maybe a few years too early and suddenly everyone becomes a part time babysitter to what are maybe the worst possible fathers in the world to a baby no one knows how to raise yet. send post
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likesomekindofcheese · 4 years ago
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Promised: Part One (The Great mini-series)
Pairing: Grigor Dymov x fem!Reader
Word Count: 2,878
 From this Anon Request:  ahhh im so happy that you'll write for grigor, gwil seems to be under hyped these days. can i request grigor having to be in an arranged marriage because peter somehow fucked up another treaty and the only way of fixing it is through an alliance (we can just ignore grigor being married already)
A/N: Of course! I hope you are okay with it being a fem! Reader. If not, just let me know and I’ll write a neutral version!
Anyways, enjoy the first part of this mini series of Peter being...Peter and you are Grigor getting into an arranged marriage to fix it up!
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“This wine tastes like shit, where’s the vodka?”
The bread roll you had been chewing on nearly fell out of your mouth in surprise. This was the man you had been expecting for weeks. The Lord and Sovereign of all of Russia. The son of Peter the Great, a legendary warrior king beloved by all who knew him. He even shared a name with this godly figure.
The second he announced his arrival sent everyone in your house into a giddy panic. The manor was cleaned inside out. Every butler and maid lined up outside for his entrance in their most pressed uniforms. Your family and you had put on your finest garbs as well. You had even bought a new dress for the occasion, a pink silk gown with white cloth down the sleeves, and a white middle part while long bows decorated your cream stomacher.
Every soul in the manor was there when his carriage arrived to greet and curtsy to him and his friend, tour the house, and serve him a meal featuring the best cuts, foods, and drinks available, some of which were gifts from the locals honoring his appearance.
And he just called your finest vintage wine shit.
Every pulse in your house was heard in that moment. Your mother gasped a little at the sound of such language used at the table. Especially from him.
“We…we have whiskey to be served after, it’s stronger” you suggest meekly.
“I suppose, just something stronger than this,” his companion next to him reasoned.
He was a man who was perhaps in his thirties at most, brown hair barely seen beneath his dusty wig and in a dark green jacket, only a few steps below Peter’s finery. He swirled the glass with his large hands and took polite sips of it. You looked for a reaction to the taste and barely saw one.
“You want the emperor to drink shit wine, then!? What kind of hosts are you?” Peter asked, leaning back in his chair.
He was far more relaxed than the sea of straight backs of everyone at your table. He even tossed the glass over his shoulder.
KKKK!
A servant behind rushed up with a broom to sweep up the bits.
Your mother and father looked at each other questioningly.  Your brother normally had a healthy appetite, but his fork paused in mid-air since the wine complaint.
With a little sigh, your father turned to a butler and asked him to retrieve a bottle of whiskey and to look for any spare vodka at once.
Looking at your brother, the sanguine chatterbox, you saw his face had paled and his jaw was still tight. Looks like it would have to be you then to alter the mood and keep the peace.
Turning to the Emperor’s companion on Peter’s right, you began to shyly greet him “Sir...uhm…I’m sorry, I forgot your last name…”
“Dymov,” he answered kindly.
His eyes softened. At least he seemed less of an unpredictable bull as his friend.
“Sir Dymov, what is the weather like in Russia? Is it as cold as everyone says?” you questioned.
“Oh, yes, very! Some winters have crowds of people wearing fur coats indoors and gathered around the fire,” he explained.
Peter cut in, chewing on the meat with an open mouth as if he were a cow in a field, “which is why we need to drink vodka to stay warm. Speaking of which, where is your butler and why the fuck hasn’t the vodka gotten here yet?!”
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Later that evening, there was some parlor entertainment as usual. Coffee, whiskey, and vodka were all served and seemed to be drank in generous amounts.
It began with you showing your musical gifts. You were to sing as your father accompanied you on the pianoforte. Your breath was feeling higher than what was needed for healthy singing. You could not help but gape at the two Russians who seemed to analyze you. They were hard not to ignore since they were both astoundingly tall, Peter only barely taller. Sir Dymov listened attentively, hands leaning against him as he and the emperor were offered the softest chairs.
But Peter was somehow enraptured. He looked right at you and was still, listening to it the whole time.
You noticed his eyes were not on your face. And your pink dress was as modest as your mothers.
Forcing yourself back into the music, you picked a spot in the parlor, near a bookshelf, and stared at it, trying to focus on the music and words. Lose yourself in its brief escape.
There was polite applause following. When you curtsied, you put a protective hand over your chest.
Your brother, more inclined to the world of theater, offered a reading of some texts by the finest playwrights of your land. Everyone listened to him as they settled for cards at a table, but you stood a while to focus on your knitting. Nerves had shot through you and you had to do something with your hands that would calm you more than cards with the boorish guest.
“May I sit here, Miss Y/L/N?” Sir Dymov asked to the spot next to yours.
“Yes, you may…” you answered, finishing a row of purl stitches.
As he sat down, he even offered to hold your yarn and straighten any strings.
“Thank you for the dinner, and the reading, and the music and everything, it was nice, far more peaceful than at home! And God knows, I could…we all could use some peace…,” he turned away briefly to keep a small eye on Peter.
“Sir Dymov, why would you need peace? Is it the war with Sweden?” you asked curiously.
His angled face looked oddly dark, despite the glow from the fire.
“No…Just a little bit of personal heartbreak, Lady Y/L/N. And your song was about love, so I was reminded of her.”
“Can you tell me what happened?” you asked
Flinching away, you cursed the impulse. It might be too personal.
“She rejected my marriage offer. She’s uhm, uh…how do I put this politely… she’s Peter’s mistress,” he explained
“Oh.”
“And she said she would not give up her position after our marriage, so she said I could either have to be married to her but share her with Peter or she would not consider my offer at all,” he sighed.
Setting your knitting away, you looked up at him with empathy.
“Sie Dymov, that sounds hard. But I can’t imagine how her saying yes would make anything easier…”
“I do miss her, and she’s in court so I see her still every day,” Dymov complained.
“You’ll find a way through heartbreak. I’ve had some of my own, but something better might happen!” you say, shrugging your shoulders.
Once you set things down and decide to join the card table, you see Peter look up from his cards and scowl.
“You know, this is dull. Where is the louder singing? The wild dancing? The animals? No wonder people die here so much, they become bored!” he spat throwing off his hand onto the table.
“Things here are…a little quiet compared to your mighty empire,” your mother answers with a plastic smile. “But we make do…”
“I’m practically dying of boredom. How the hell was my father friends with you lot?” Peter asked.
Your father’s head ticked to the side, his eyes getting bigger.
“We were friends since our youth, and he loved all of us,” he said, words tinged with a subtle venom.
Your mother cleaned up the cards, and your brother paused his dramatic reading.
“Your highness, we can all retire if you don’t want to play anymore. I think traveling all the way here from your palace must have been exhausting. Is there anything else you need to make your stay here more comfortable before tomorrow?” she asked.
Peter’s eyes glinted up at you. Your body cinched as if ready to fight or flee.
“How about you offer to bring your daughter Y/N to my bedchambers for tonight, that would make me a lot more comfortable!”
Dymov’s jaw dropped. Your father stood up a little to get out of his chair but he was beat. In a flash, your brother slammed his book shut and rushed over, staring the ruler of Russia in the face.
“How dare you treat my sister like one of your whores?! Never!” he yelled.
“It’s my right as your guest?” Peter rebutted with a bizarre calm.
“After we’ve been kind to you? Gave you our best food and wine, housed you in our nicest room?” your brother roared.
You wanted to shrink yet you were frozen. Your father walked to your side and put an arm around you.
“You can have anything you want, but you’re a married man, Peter. My daughter’s dignity is important to me, as is your own wives. I don’t want to insult her as well,” he reasoned.
“Honor? Honor? You all only spit about honor when you live shit lives with shit food and shit company!” Peter argued.
The warmth of your father’s presence left you as he walked forward. Scuttling, your mother stood by you to take your hand in his place.
“Your highness, I knew him like a brother. If Peter the Great was here…” your father warned.
“He isn’t here! And I’m the Emperor now! And he isn’t!” Peter bellowed.
So on. And so on.
You retired early, your mother by your side to escort you as you saw your father and brother arguing back and forth. The only ally Peter had, other than his title, was Dymov holding him back. To protect or stop him, you could not tell.
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The next two days there was such bad blood it was unbelievable. There were no fun outings as planned. You ate alone. You hardly saw anyone. Any room you walked into; you could hear yelling.
Your father made sure you weren’t alone with Peter, but it seemed his eyes had gotten distracted with the fighting. Hopefully, he was joking. Partly.
One night you snuck downstairs to have a glass of water and heard a few words despite yourself.
“That’s it! I leave tomorrow morning! And you can forget my support and all your fucking soldiers, too!”
“Your highness, our money is about to get tight. And our people need it even more than us!”
“Too fucking bad, then!”
Oh no…Russia is our enemy.
You cried yourself to sleep that night. The idea of now starving. And your brother was about to marry a woman he loved in a fortnight. How could he provide for her or any future children? How would all the people who depended on your generosity fare with reduced funds? Worst of all, Peter had his quick moods and ideas. What if he declared war out of spite from this one visit?
You never met Peter the Great. He sometimes seemed like a kindly fairy god father in some ways he had been mentioned. His love of your house and your country and his friendship with your father. Financial support given when needed. How so much was funded and gifted and provided thanks to his generosity.
How could any of you live after that? Even with the embarrassment alone of being insulted by an emperor?
As you woke up, you only had barely time for breakfast when your mother entered.
“Y/N…we would like to talk to you.”
“Mother, I have breakfast. And I was hoping today I’d practice my music and finish that scarf,” you dismissed.
But from the look on her face you had no choice.
“It’s important. And you must be there.”
She walked you over into the main table where days ago everyone dined awkwardly. The Emperor and his companion were there. Peter pouted yet Dymov’s face looked as if he had seen a ghost and his folded hand were shaking a little.
As you sat down in your chair, every eye looked at you, there was a moment of tense silence.
“Well, what is it?” you asked.
“We’ve reached an agreement with Peter…” your father began.
“Are we going to lose…lose everything?” you asked anxiously.
Your heart was tolling in your eardrums as the words left your lips. It had been the question that kept you worried for days.
“No, your family is going to be fine…” Dymov assured, a hand placed over his mouth.
“You can still have some of my father’s money and support from the Russian crown and our fucking alliance even!” Peter threw in, hands going up.
“But…”
“But what?” you said.
“You have to bring half of your army to fight for me, Sweden’s trying to invade us and we need men. And some of your relatives have to swear loyalty to me. But that promise needs to be secured.” Peter continued
“How? We are already sending you soldiers and subjects? What else would do it?” you asked. Although your gut was telling you the answer.
There was a little pause, but quite an evil smile from Peter.
“There has to be a marriage. Your brother’s betrothed. So you’ll have to marry into Russia to secure it!” he revealed.
Blinking, the wind was knocked out as if you had been punched in the stomach.
“Sir, you’re married to…to Sophie! That Austrian girl!” you cried.
“Sophie? She isn’t Sophie anymore; she’s already christened by my church with a new name: she’s Empress Catherine of Russia now. And since she will be your ruler and you will address her as such! Might as well christen and give you a new name too!” he scolded.
“Of course, I mean I will but…but…who do I have to marry? Do you have any…any brothers?” you fret.
Numbness gripped your hands and nausea gripped your stomach at the thought of marrying a copy of Peter.
“I’ve got no brothers, no male relatives of age or alive for you and I want this contract done soon so…”
His head turned to Dymov with a congratulatory pat on the back.
“It’s Grigor here you’ll have to fuck for life in about a month!”
Grigor’s ears turned pink and he looked up at you, lips tight.
And if I say no? you start to wonder, tasting the words.
But what choice did you have?
“Lady Y/L/N, I promise, this isn’t any easier for me either…” he finally said. “I know this arrangement isn’t coming the way you expected…and I’m just as shocked as you are.”
Would you put your family’s and your people’s future down the drain? Would you let them become bankrupt, ruin your father’s memory of his friend, and make enemies with one of the richest, largest, and most powerful countries because of your selfishness?
Besides, no suitors had been calling you, really. None likable or with good intentions at least. You were getting to the age of spinsterdom. You knew you had to be desperate if you wanted any sense of security for yourself or your family. Who knew if another offer like this could be made?
Taking a deep breath, you looked Peter in the eye.
“I will do it. For my family and for everyone who we look after.”
Peter produced a document agreeing to the engagement, marriage, and benefits it brought. You and Dymov signed it.
Afterwards there was a small service in the chapel to pray for the future and for this marriage. But you were half in another world, unaware this was happening. Dymov seemed to flush between being pale or being red.
Immediately later, they decided all was well and to make plans to leave. Before packing, Dymov approached your parents and you in the parlor.
“I have to alert you of something that will happen, when Lady Y/L/N arrives…there will be a test done by the priests to see if she’s, uh, pure…and it involves checking her…” he gestured to his pants.
You let out a shocked gasp. What kind of kingdom were you about to be thrown into?
“I just wanted you to know, so you wouldn’t be shocked,” Dymov added on.
Your mother took your hand again and rubbed your knuckles soothingly.
“We have family physicians here. Trusted friends. They will do the examination and sign a document right before she goes. There will always be a chaperone until the marriage, to make sure everything is by Russia’s standards,’ she insisted, squeezing your hand extra tight.
Before they left the whole family saw off the Russian party. As Dymov turned to you, his blue eyes darkened slightly. He bowed lowest for you and kissed your hand.
“I’ll write to you as much as I can. You can call me Grigor,” he said.
“I guess you can call me Y/F/N…Grigor,” you replied
“Goodbye, Y/F/N. We will see each other…before the wedding. Soon.”
As kind as the gesture was, your brain had not stopped reeling. It remained even as you stood there, watching the carriage trot away. A pair of blue eyes even looking at you sadly from the window.
He seemed to have the same concern
How could you travel to live in another country ruled by someone like Peter?
And how could you love, much less marry, a man you just met?
Taglist: @queenlover05​
The Great Taglist: @stardust-killer-queen​ @itsametaphorgwil​ @freaking-nix​ @im-an-adult-ish​ @grigorlee​ @themficsilike 
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