Found my fav STP route recently. Dragon my beloved. Your horrifying beak mouth was an impossible-to-refuse lip syncing challenge đ
Shoutouts to @blacktabbygames for making such a cool game!
Secret Santa gift for @the-modern-typewriter Prompt: "Scary villain x hero in a Christmas setting of your [the writer's] choice. Could go spicy, could go whumpy, could go unexpectedly sweet!" Hope you like this! Merry Christmas!! đ đ
âYou recognised me,â the villain observes, his tone unnaturally flat. His face betrays no emotion.
âKinda hard not to, with yourâŚâ â the hero tilts their head at where the villainâs magic continues to spread, coiling around their limbs and securely fixing them in place â ââŚsnake thingies?â
The individual tendrils really do vaguely resemble snakes, although the magic in its entirety reminds them more of some writhing alien monster plant from an old Sci-fi B-movie whose title they cannot remember. Itâs not a good comparison anyway. The movie hadnât been scary at all.
They experimentally try to wrestle one of their arms free, but despite the magicâs apparent fluidity, the moment they push or pull in any direction, whatever give appeared to be there all but disappears and they canât move a millimetre.
âOh.â The villainâs eyes widen. âYou can see it.â
âSee it. Feel it. Didnât expect it to be this hot.â
An awkward pause follows.
They are decidedly not blushing. Itâs just warm. All of them is so warm now that the villainâs powers have moulded themselves around the hero like something liquid but alive. Wherever the tendrils touch bare skin â their ungloved hands and that area just above their ankles where their pants donât quite meet the rims of their boots â the raw energy buzzes, prickles just short of stinging.
Theyâd been shivering just minutes ago in their much too thin poncho and the not seasonally appropriate Agency office uniform. Well, they still are shivering, just no longer from the cold.
Where the villainâs magic is fever-hot, his scrutiny runs icy.
âYou can see it, but not fight it,â he muses. âHow curious. The Agency must be understaffed to send their defenceless little office drones out into the field.â
The hero would be glaring if the villain werenât underscoring the point by pulling his magic tighter with the mere flick of a finger. That small, anxious sound that escapes them in response brings a self-satisfied grin to the villainâs lips.
âItâs Christmas,â the hero says, once the magic has settled again.
The villain raises a brow.
âMost of the regulars are on holiday, Christmas being a time best spent with family ⌠or so Iâm told.â
âYet you are working.â
âDonât have anyone.â They arenât technically without family just ⌠Sometimes, family isnât a place of refuge and welcome. Not a home to turn to for holiday celebrations or company. Some families fashion themselves exclusive clubs with strict rules that refuse or revoke memberships as they please. The hero forces some levity into their tone. âI have nowhere else to be today, so, Iâm helping out here.â
The villain chuckles. âHelping is perhaps not what I would call that.â
âHey, I did recognise you,â they say, defensively.
âAnd look where that got you.â His smile is sharper than before, meaner. âAm I your first villain? My heartfelt condolences.â
They donât dignify that with an answer. But the answer is yes. The villains they watched being interrogated through one-way mirrors at HQ don't count.
âPity,â the villain says with zero warmth, âthat you couldnât just look the other way. What is it with you people that you're always so eager to cause unnecessary conflict.â
âReporting suspicious behaviour is kind of my job.â It comes out barely above a whisper and carries the distinct cadence of an apology.
âAh yes, and my mere existence struck you as suspicious behaviour because âŚâ
Admittedly, once theyâd recognised the villain, they hadnât taken the time to consider his appearance beyond the magic heâd been wearing around his shoulders like a particularly weaponizable scarf. The lack of a combat suit in favour of a sleek, dark coat over a woollen jumper and cargo joggers â either an outfit designed to blend in or just what the villain happens to like to wear when he isnât working â hadnât registered any more than the total absence of weaponry other than his powers. And while he could have hidden those better, itâs not like he could have simply left them at home.
There hadnât been time to ponder. It had all happened so fast. Their eyes had met, and a moment later the hero had already been scrambling away from the crowd, past a stall selling mulled wine and into the nearest alley, where theyâd scrolled through their contacts with stiff, unfeeling fingers. The villain had caught up with them before theyâd managed to call for backup.
Their gaze darts to the remnants of their smashed phone, sprinkled across the muddy snow, mere metres away but entirely useless even if they could reach it.
What if the villain hadnât had anything nefarious planned? What if the heroâs brain had naturally jumped to the most prejudiced conclusion all on its own?
Of course, it is unfair to treat his mere presence as if it is a crime. But the things he could do ...
They think about the parents with their cameras, filming their ice-skating children, the squealing toddlers on the merry-go-round, the nice old ladies selling tea out of the back of a car.
âYou could be a danger to all those innocent people,â they defend their judgement.
âAnd you could be a danger to me,â the villain replies coolly. âWould be unwise, letting someone roam free who can pick me out of a crowd with a glance. Perhaps I should thank you for revealing yourself. Very ill-advised. But quite convenient. You were so obvious about it, too.â
He has crossed the distance between them while speaking. Close enough now to reach out and tuck an unruly strand of hair behind their ear with his cold, slender fingers. His other hand settles almost gently on their throat, atop the magic that has slivered around their neck at some point during the conversation.
The tip of a new tendril is in the process of worming its way lower, nestling into the collar of their shirt. It laps against the crook of their neck and they cringe away from the touch as much as the magic allows. It doesnât hurt. It would be so much easier if it did. The touch is light; it kind of tickles and, given the overall direness of the situation, the hero really isnât in the mood for that. Or, they shouldnât be.
Unhelpfully, their traitorous mind supplies them with a thoroughly inappropriate image of what else someone who isnât the enemy could be doing to them with magic such as this.
âTell me,â the villain says as the power shifts upwards, tilting their chin back with the movement, so his nails can bite into the newly exposed skin below their jaw, âis there anything else troublesome about you, or is it just the eyes?â
He looks most pleased when their breath hitches despite their best efforts to remain stoic. His grip tightens. Heâs studying them intently, staring at their eyes like those are priced gems he considers adding to his collection.
Maybe, underneath the mockery, he actually does consider them somewhat of a threat. If he didnât, why would he be looking at them like that.
Itâs stupid, truly and utterly stupid, to feel flattered. This is not respect, they know, just sharp, calculating consideration. His attention promises imminent danger, might turn lethal at any second. Itâs not something they should revel in. Still, it feels good, too â being seen.
Has anyone ever really seen them before?
Or perhaps that is the lack of oxygen speaking.
They struggle to focus their vision but all the twinkling Christmas lights in the trees are starting to smudge into dull, red and golden blurs. Vertigo is clawing at them.
There is absolutely nothing they can do against the villain's grip. They're so pitifully out of their depth.
They think about their bland, only half-furnished two-room apartment; their first day at the Agency HQ; their nth day â no more eventful than the first â sitting at the exact same desk in the exact same office and working on the exact same old computer; their colleaguesâ looks of pity when their 14th application for a transfer to field work is being denied and their boss tells them, in stern admonishment, that their skill sets just arenât suited to solo missions. They think about her condescending smile when she finally does assign them the Christmas market job, clearly convinced the worst thing that could possibly happen here is people getting drunk enough on punch to start throwing punches.
They think of their first split-second impression of the villain as just another guy standing by the ice rink with a cup of something steaming in his hands and a mellow, unguarded smile curving his lips.
They hope this montage doesnât count as their life flashing before their eyes. Itâs way too sad a summary of their depressing lack of accomplishments.
They think, with equal parts age-old bitterness and new-found sarcastic vindication, about their colleaguesâ infantile, unofficial, end-of-the-year office rankings where flashier heroes with more impressive abilities always receive titles such as most likely to hook up with a hot reporter or most epic battle or best one-liners.
Meanwhile, all the hero has to show for are three consecutive wins of least likely to die on the job.
Which might have been a reassuring sentiment if it werenât so clearly code for âyouâll never be a real heroâ. Real heroes risk their lives on the job all the time.
Well, look at them now!
Will their colleagues manage to come up with a new title for them in time, they wonder, if the villain kills them now, just a week before this yearâs poll results will be released?
Most unexpected death has a nice ring to it.
They should be trembling in terror. Might have, if the villainâs magic werenât encasing them so â tight but soft and deceptively warm, lulling them in. The sticky heat of it leaves them squirming, stuck in a confusing limbo between gooey not-quite-discomfort and hot-bath sluggishness.
Theyâre drifting. Until theyâre not.
Itâs impossible to discern how much time has passed or when exactly the villain has released them; but their thoughts are beginning to clear and their brain catches up to the fact that there is air in their lungs again, and that the breathless, hiccuping gasps uncontrollably tumbling out of their mouth arenât sobs. Itâs laughter.
âAre you enjoying this?â The villain sounds incredulous.
They shake their head. âI donât know,â they manage, between hysterical giggles. âMaybe. Yes?â
âHow did you know I wouldnât kill you?â
âI didnât.â
That startles a short laugh out of him.
âIâve neverâ â they pant, still struggling for air â âfelt this alive before.â
âThat sounds ... unhealthy.â
There is a long pause in which the villain silently stares at them while they are more or less regaining control over their breathing.
âYou wouldnât get it,â they say then, perfectly aware they must seem most unhinged. âBet you don't even know what boredom is. Because your life is fun. Mine is not. I practically live at my stupid job, and my stupid job doesn't even pay well. No one there gives a fuck about me. And nothing exciting ever happens. So can I please just have this one damn moment without being judged?â
The villain hums, low. âAnd here I thought we were ruining each otherâs days.â He presses a hand to their forehead. âDid the heat fry your synapses?â he asks, sounding more amused than concerned. His other hand comes up to cup the nape of their neck, as if he canât help but reach out. Just as they canât help but lean into the cooling touch. His gaze drops, as if drawn, to their lips. âOr, are you just naturally this unusual?â
They can smell gingerbread and mulled wine on his breath.
âAre you going to kiss me?â they ask, because yes their synapses are definitely fried and they do not care about consequences, awkwardness, or sanity anymore.
âWould you like me to kiss you?â
âIâd certainly much rather be kissed than killed. Obviously.â
âObviously,â he repeats, smirking. âBut we've established Iâm not about to kill you. And that wasnât a yes.â
âItâs not a no either.â
âNot how consent works, darling.â
They scoff. âYou didnât ask for consent first when you strangled me five minutes ago.â
The villain laughs again, in genuine delight judging by how his magic ripples and purrs.
âOkay, fair enough,â he whispers, shifting so his lips almost brush theirs.
The kiss that follows is sweet, surprisingly chaste, and initiated by the hero.
âSo, since you mentioned earlier you have nowhere else to be today,â the villain says, afterwards, mischief gleaming in his eyes. âHave you ever had the pleasure of being kidnapped?â
Pleasure, as it turns out over the course of the next few hours, is an understatement.
If anyone at the office were to find out what the hero has been up to during their first (and best) and possibly only solo field mission, not only are they guaranteed to get fired, their colleagues will also surely create an entirely new office ranking category in their honour:
First to be seduced by a supervillain.
"You chose a bad day to infiltrate my base," the villain says.
"Because you're planning something?" The hero demanded. "I've seen people in and out all day. What are you up to?"
"It's a holiday, Hero, in case you've forgotten," the villain sighed. "I'm just trying to survive my family."
"O-oh." The hero looked lost in thought. "I, um, forgot."
"You know what?" The villain put an arm around their shoulder. "You might as well join. Everyone else wants to poke their nose where it doesn't belong. You'll fit right in."
"Oh, no, that's okay." The hero's eyes went wide at the crowd they were being dragged to, digging their heels. "This is for family, and I really should be going--"
"I'm introducing you as my fiancee," the villain stated with a mischievous grin. "Aunt Bertha will hate you."
2024 Art Wrap
This was a big animation year for me. Itâs really nice to do these art wraps to remind myself all the work Iâve accomplished.
See how I make room guardians on my Patreon!
"Why won't you just die?!"
"And deprive myself of your disappointment?"
Part 1
The hunter approached the end of a misty alley, following little red droplets that led behind a derelict building. Crawling away in the dark was the wounded vampire, tired and worn.
âAh... My faithless little hunter,â the vampire rasped. âWhat circumstances to be reunited. You appear stronger since last we met."
âI am,â the hunter agreed. They closed the space between them, looming over the fallen vampire.
"It seems faith is no longer a... necessary shield," the vampire murmured. "And yet, you kept the bauble, I've noticed."
âI saw what you did." The hunter tucked the bauble away from view. âAttacking the Guild leader in plain view. Very bold.â
"Well deserved."
"A foolish target, in any case."
The vampire laughed, then coughed at the effort. âWhy the... Pleasantries? Savoring your victory?â
The hunter knelt. "The entire Guild is after you."
The vampire grimaced. "It seems you shouldn't stall, then. Others may take your prey."
"They won't," the hunter said. They brought out a dagger.
The vampire stared, and a very human fear flitted across their face.
"I've reached the end of the road," the vampire conceded. "I won't claim to embrace death, but I'd rather it be you."
The hunter tilted their head. "How unlike you to give up."
"I've carried out my vengeance." The vampire tilted back their head. "Now satisfy yours."
"I had a different plan," the hunter said. They nicked the end of their thumb with the dagger's edge, and pressed it to the vampire's lips.
Wonder. Confusion. "You've truly lost me," the vampire whispered. "You're doing this... To what end?"
"Paying what is owed. Stop asking questions."
"You're playing with fire." The vampire's voice was low with hunger. "Offering your blood to one such as I. It seems you haven't shaken your wish for death."
"I've spilled more blood while training," the hunter scoffed.
"And if I forget myself?" The vampire whispered. "What then?"
"You're in no position to worry about that," the hunter said. "Drink."
With little other option, the vampire accepted the tithe of blood. Their cheeks flushed, and their wounds closed with unnatural speed.
"That should suffice." The vampire licked their lips and pulled away. "Thank--"
"I owe you nothing, and you owe me nothing." The hunter stood and backed away, eager to put distance between them. "We are not friends."
"Then, what are we?" The vampire gazed up at them, strangely vulnerable.
The hunter avoided their eyes. "Follow the path down to the ravine. If you leave now, you will reach the next town by sundown."
"Hunter--"
"If I see you again," the hunter said, "I will end you."
"Ah." The vampire stood and approached the hunter.
The hunter backed away, raw with a sudden panic. "D-didn't you hear me?"
"Your hand is still bleeding."
The hunter hit wall. "Hardly."
"Let me tend to it."
The hunter reluctantly held out their hand. They took the wounded thumb and gently bandaged it. Then, boldly, they pressed a small kiss in the small of their palm.
The hunter stared, then tore their eyes away with a blush.
Shouting sounded from the end of the alleyway. The Guild hunters.
"They're here," the hunter hissed. "Go, now."
"Till we meet again," The vampire whispered. "My faithless little hunter."
And then they disappeared into the mist.
Fun Story to Share.
I got my (now 18-year-old) daughter into Ao3 back in 2021. I taught her she should always comment - even if the fic looks old or abandoned or whatever. She did.
Well - she got this email this morning:
The fic was written in 2014 and essentially abandoned.
Bethy read and reviewed in 2021 (and was actually the only person who had commented at all).
Today in 2025 - the final chapter was posted by the author and this was her reply to Bethyâs comment.
âââ
Never question whether a fic is too old to comment on.
Ohhh no, this hit me right in the feels.
"That smell. What is that?"
"I'm not sure."
"I've smelled it before. It's so familiar."
"You're imagining things."
"No, no, it's this tea. You made me this tea before."
"...You should go."
Gorgeous. I could stare at these all day.
This year has been quite trying, but I'm happy that I discovered a love of making these horse animations in 2023.
"You poisoned me." Hero's hand goes to their throat, already feeling the burn, the effect of the toxin. They realized the moment they took a drink from pretty red wine Villain suggested they share.
"Not poison. Not exactly." Villain tuts. "Truth serum. It's considered a minor toxin but by no means dangerous to the average person."
Hero's eyes widen. They feel the sting of betrayal, harsher than the burn in their throat.
"Why?" They croak. "Was this the only reason you suggested dinner together?" Their eyes burn.
Villain eyes them for a moment. "You're privy to a lot of useful information about the other heroes. Information I could find useful. As for your other question," They drawl, "Why? Would you be upset by that?" Villain almost smirks.
Already feeling the effects, Hero is unable to lie. "Yes." They answer quietly. They try to avoid Villain's gaze, waiting for the interrogation to begin, meal abandoned. "I was happy when you asked me." Their words spill out of them unbidden.
They miss the surprised look on Villain's face at this admission. Quiet settles over them for a long moment.
"Looking forward to trying to mend my villainous ways?" Villain eventually huffs. "Did you hope that a nice dinner together would have been enough to change me?" Their tone borders on defensive.
Tears threaten to spill over Hero's lashes. They try to get control of their emotions, but the serum is doing something to their control, their inhibition.
"No." They confess. "No. I just wanted to spend time with you." They still can't meet Villain's gaze, the table below beginning to blur.
"Why?" Villain asks, sounding incredulous, sounding almost spooked. "We're enemies. I've nearly killed you countless times."
Hero gulps, trying to stop the words from coming out, mentally clawing at themselves to stop speaking. They tumble out anyway.
"I like spending time with you." Their hand goes to grip the table, to steady themselves as they lose control of their own voice. "I like spending time with you especially when we're not fighting."
"Stop it." Villain demands. Now it's their turn for their voice to wobble.
"I really like you." Tears brim over Hero's cheeks now, and they hear Villain suck in a harsh breath. They can't stop the words now that they're flowing out. The dam has been broken.
"Stop talking. Stop it." Villain sounds more desperate now.
"I was hoping you'd kiss me tonight."
The table shakes loudly as Villain stands, dining ware nearly falling over. Hero finally looks up at them, trying to blink away their tears. They see Villain's hollowed expression. They let out a rattling breath.
"This was a mistake." Villain finally says. Hero sees the way they dig their nails into the table cloth, before their vision is blurred by more tears. "I shouldn't have done this."
"Dinner..? Or tricking me?" Hero's voice is rough, raspy.
Villain is silent for a long moment. "It doesn't matter. What's done is done." Now it's their turn to not meet Hero's eyes.
"I'd let you take me to dinner again." Hero gulps, the truth still spilling out of them with ease. "I wish you'd take me to dinner again. Even if you trick me another time." Shame swirls in Hero's gut as they admit to this pathetic truth. It doesn't matter how many times they get burned, it won't change how much they imagine Villain's lips on theirs, their hands on them.
"I need to go." Villain's throat bobs. They shove themselves away from the table harshly, the wine spilling over. Hero watches them leave as their tears drip below.
love the solid impact and the feeling of weight
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