I'm gonna go insane I think the fic got deleted
suck, and i cannot stress this enough, my cock to the fucking base
The whole genetics project of the Bene Gesserit may have been dubbed a failure because Paul wasn't a girl but there was nothing stopping Paul and Feyd-Ruatha acting on that sexual tension they had in both book and film.
Paul could have taken Feyd as a third Consort. Just imagine Paul with his Empress Irulan and his wife Chani sitting at his side and Feyd just sprawled on the dais steps just wearing something scandalous like
You were right Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam, wasted potential.
the russos have committed so many sins but i might just forgive them if they have bucky in this wig for doomsday
idk i saw these tweets and thought of these gorgeous men đ
i have an idea⊠yâall wanna see ice skater!reader x hockey player!geto..?
It's them
whoâs your (baby) daddy?Â
â mini series masterlist
â°â†After being dumped by your boyfriend of 3 years, you decide to switch things up and go on your own version of a âhot girl summerââsubsequently finding yourself with a surprise that would arrive in 9 months time. The catch? You have absolutely no idea which of the 3 men you slept with is your babyâs daddy.Â
% slice of life, romance comedy
# explicit smut, angst, heartbreak, pregnancy, breakups, alcohol, questionable life choices, evasion of child support, messiness, drama, medical talk
   NANAMI â” GOJOU â” TOJI â” SUKUNA ┠EPILOGUE
© all works belong to lalunanymph. do not copy, repost or claim as your own.
Went ahead and made a new doc for the masterlist, and posted it as a public post on Patreon.
OF FLESH SIN
vampire priest x reader | 18+ | 2.6k
a ghastly sight!
one of the monastery's beloved priests has been found brutally murdered and disfigured in his chambers. father shaw, a newer addition to the monastery, claims to have answers to sate your reaching curiosityâbut he wishes for you to come to his chambers at night.
warnings; dark content; yandere/obsessive behavior; manipulation; murder; body horror; graphic descriptions of gore towards the end; briefly mentioned animal death; obvious religious overtones; prose & detail heav; historically inaccurate depictions of monastery lifeâi am aware; roughly proofread
reposted from my deleted blog @/shehungers
if this is something you enjoyed, it would totally mean the world to hear your thoughts and have a lil' reblog đ„șđ
Father Marius died in quite some awful way last night, as reported to you by the nuns hanging fresh washed garments on the clothesline in the waning, purpling daylight.
âA look of horror! Utter terror! So frightened that his jaw had become dislocated in forever a scream,â shivered one young nun, Lucy; recently a convert from the slums. âI, well, I didn't see it myself. Neither did the rest of us, actually. They say it was that new Father Shaw who found him at dawn.â
You had been raking gravel out of the yard, tiny stones kicked off of the path into the kempt lawn by prancing horses and wagon wheels, when Lucy and the other nun, Esme, had caught your attention with their dense gossip.
They regarded your approach with less caution than they would have had with their other Sisters, as gossip was deemed inappropriate, a violation, a flickering serpentâs tongue carrying covert temptations leading to luscious sins and debauchery.
They saw youâpoor, morose, the groundskeeper's only child and reminder of loveless trystsâand thought nothing of snaking you into their prattle. You were not the sort to divulge anyone's secrets without gain, without reward, and you knew that the nuns kept nothing to their names once they took their vows and donned their habits.
âFather Shaw,â you continued the discussion with some intrigue, mostly from the fact that he was very new, very young, and modestly handsome, âwhy was he awake so early? Why was he in Father Mariusâ chambers? Curious to me.â
Neither of them gave much caution to your questions, shrugging as if to dismiss your ambivalence and accusatory tone. You were bold in the way that the faithless and lost always tended to be: asking senseless things, always concerned with the wrongdoings of others, always suspicious, always inquiringâforever inquiring.
âOh, my, you're so defensive,â Esme fanned a yellow bedspread out with an oncoming breeze, catching the wind beneath the fabric so it billowed and rippled midair. âIf thatâs how you're going to be, then: why does your father stumble around the yard at night with a lantern, swinging around a pistol like a madman? Won't he hurt someone?â
Because he's a godless, superstitious drunk. Perhaps, even, a bit disturbed in his mind, but you couldn't bear to think that way, that he might be the type to need his head locked in a metal cage, gagged, arms bound, and padlocked in some damp, distant corner of an asylum.
âHe's a good man,â you relented, taking your hands from the top of the smoothed out, worn handle of the rake and resumed your task. The gravel made an awful, coarse sound as the teeth of the rake collected pieces of stone and led it back to the rest. âHe's served this monastery well. I don't mean offense about Father Shaw, I'm simply curious about what transpired is all.â
âNo offense taken,â came a voice from behind, startling both the twittering nuns and yourself at the same time. They saw it to be Father Shaw standing there, hands cuffed behind his back with a particularly demure disposition, hiked their skirts and whisked themselves away back inside. âAh, am I really such a frightful figure? I couldn't really find an opening during your conversation to invite myself in. I apologize.â
You were of a similar fretful nature, quickening your clawing and the reach of the rake. âNay, Father. I think it's simply because you're a strange man to them still. A handsome face, a warm voiceâmysterious. Give them time. They'll come around.â
âHave you?â Father Shaw asked, taking measured strides in a half-circle around to your front. He concentrated on where the teeth of your instrument struck next, tips temporarily wedged into the soft dirt before being ripped up with chunks of earth and gray gravel. âIt wouldn't do for me if you⊠were still ill at ease with me as well. I consider you my one, true friend in this place.â
Your father held a certain destestation towards Father Shaw that you'd never witnessed before, saying nothing else than that something was terribly wrong with him and not to place yourself in a position to be alone with him. This you attributed to his unsoundness, but it was always the sudden flicker of a sharp breath against candlelightâa jarring shift in his demeanor when he spoke about the Father. He'd grow neurotic and throw things about the cottage interior, convincing you to pay some mind to what he was saying.
âAnd, you're a great friend of mine as well.â Youâd hoped you sounded coherent and paced your words evenly enough. âI'm sorry if you thought I was accusing you of something, sir. I really meant nothing to it.â
Father Shawâs lips sprawled tight and pale into a fond smile, never showing his teeth, though the imprint of them seemed massive and the skin of his lips startlingly thin across them. âI know. You have nothing to fear. My feelings were not affected. If you'd like, come to my chambers later, we may pray together first, and I'll tell you everything you wish to know about what I saw to sate your curiosity.â
âThat seems improper, sir.â you said.
âHow so?â
âInviting someone to your chambers at night seems an unbecoming venture for a pious man of status, such as yourself,â you continued, now standing upright beside your rake, âif any of the sisters were to witness it, worse another priest, aren't you afraid you'd be horribly chastised? Even worse, excommunicated altogether?â
Although Father Shawâs dark eyes reflected no light, holding such demanding depth to them that it was hard to keep your bearings whenever you realized you'd been staring, his entire face was alight in amusement.
âWherever did you learn to speak like that?â he asked candidly, still glowing despite his pallor. âForgive me when I say, but your father is not an educated man. I mean no offense, please don't look at me in such a way. You are so well spoken, I only wish to know more about you.â
âI've lived here my entire life,â you told him. âThe nuns taught me how to read.â
He looked impressed. âYou can read?â
âI can!â From a near distance, you could make out your fatherâs haddard form, bent sideways on a walking cane and limping towards the pair of you. You looked up at the priestâs smooth face. âIt'd be best for you to leave before my father can speak to you. He isn't the kindest soul after a long day.
Father Shaw didn't react with any semblance of worry, but agreed that there were other things needing to be done and began away. Just as he passed you on his way towards the monastery, he let his hand rest atop of your shoulder and leaned you towards him to whisper in your ear: âcome to me tonight. I'll be waiting for you.â
There was something so luxurious and cooling about his voice, like fine silks sitting in the shade during autumn gliding across your bare skin, wrapping your neck, your chest, your nether parts. His voice was a fine, chilly mist after the first rains in spring which felt refreshing and new after a glacial winter, yet still had capacity to soak you to the bone. It was a nighttime breeze caressing your cheek, sweeping through the hairs of your scalp, making your skin burst all over with bumps.
âI don't like the way he looks at you,â said your father with a mouthful of porridge you'd seasoned with proper herbs. It was wonderfully fragrant and warm during nights that were still a bit too uncomfortable to sip anything cold. âHe looks at you like you're a slab of meat! Some prize after a hunt. I don't like him, love. Not one bit. You'd do well to stay to mind yourself and do your chores and nothing else, yâhear?â
After dinner, you cleaned up, swept the floors with hard bristles, and snuffed all the lights except for the fireplace where your father sat in his old chair, fiddling with his favorite pistol.
âIt's time for bed, old man.â You watched him fit a couple of small bullets into the loading chamber. They glinted against the orange flames. âGoodness. What have you gotten this time? Something new?â
âAye!â he grinned, nearly toothless and in a sickly sort of way. âWent to market the other day while the nuns bullied you and picked out some fine bullets from the silversmith.â He cracked the two halves of the pistol shut. âBetter to be prepared.â
You waited until sometime later once he was finally asleep, possibly after midnight, before leaving the humble cottage sitting on the fringes of the massive monastery yard and rushing across the grounds to get inside.
Once, they'd kept a guard dog on the property, one of those meaner breeds that were used for gambling, but the poor thing wound up shot dead in the middle of the night by a traveling friar who'd come to seek refuge at the monastery. The Sisters, and yourself, were horribly distraught by the entire ordeal and all vetoed the consideration of bringing another dog here.
Since then, it was no task for you (or anyone else) to get inside the building and shuffle along the shadows through the corridors. At night, the place stirred with patient insects, feral rodents large and small in the pantry, and hungry owls tamely whining from the rafters when something startled them away from their hunt of vermin.
Your feet were a light sound on the masonry below, padded by thin leather soles which alerted you to your enthusiasm as the thwap thwap thwap became louder, aggressive as you closed in on a wall and turned down another hallway for a sturdy wood door at the end of it.
As your knuckles rapped, hoping the sound wouldn't disturb the animalsâ nighttime caroling, a swift darkness moved across the floor from behind the door, briefly blocking out the soft light seeping out from underneath.
The next moment, you were being pulled inside and sat at a small table tucked to the side of Father Shawâs rather generous room. It was a simple space sparsely furnished for the barest of comfortsâonly for what was needed to liveâbut what had been made for him was of exquisite craftsmanship, some made of teakwood, which Shaw assured you was remarkably durable and highly resistant to rotting.
âIt's wonderful for boats,â he said, pouring a light amber colored brew from a metal kettle he'd heated a short while ago. âItâs good for all elements, really. Exceptional longevity. I've heard it has become a popular option in the city for burying the deceased.â
âWill Father Marius be buried in a teakwood coffin, then?â you asked, sipping politely from the cup even though you had no appetite for it. You already felt ill at ease enough having disobeyed your father by sneaking into a priest's personal chambers at night. The things the Sisters would say about youâ
âHe will be entombed underneath the monastery with the rest who have served here and passed. I believe that is all stone down there, my dear.â Father Shaw smiled tepidly, kettle aside, no tea of his own. âBut, I know that your curiosity led you here to me with questions, yes? About the state I found Father Marius in, yes?â
You tried to disguise your intrigue by drinking more of the tea, of whatever it was he had given you, and listened to the sounds of your fingertips sticking to the porcelain from sweat and steam.
âIf you wouldn't mind sharingâŠâ
âI wouldn't!â he leaned on his arms on the table, closer towards you as though with a secret. âAs I've said, you are truly the only soul here who I can confide in. You are not a sheep. And you do not fear sin as the rest do. So, you can ask me anything and I'll tell you everything.â
âTell me about Father Marius, then.â
Father Shaw reached across the table for one of your hands; his far larger, fingers much longer and colder than your own and held it as he recounted the event.
âDreadful sight, it was. It was, oh, perhaps sometime after three o'clock when I heard a massive racket. A struggle. When I knocked, all of the noise subsided at once and there was complete stillness. Silence, my dear, silence so deep, dark, and damning that I knew something awful had happened.
âI didn't knock again, I was too afraid to! But, Father Marius was getting on in age, so I couldn't just stand by, either. I kicked the door inâjust once was all it tookâand I rushed inside to see the room was a complete mess. A fight had clearly taken place, and the wallsâoh, the wallsââ
His remorse was carefully placed, stiff, and uncertain and he couldn't be seen in the vastness of his black gaze. You were moved by the vulnerability he was trying to show you, going as far to abandon your drink to place your warm hand on top of his.
âThe walls, my dear, were a mess of blood. Something vicious and awful had happened in that room. But, then, I found Father Marius lying there on the ground next to a broken window. I think he'd tried to throw himself through it. His face was shredded to pieces, his eyes gouged. When I got closer, I noticed that his tongue had been severed from his head!â
You were holding Father Shawâs hands in a bloodless grip, face ashen, teeth chattering behind your lips. âWhat on earth! That is not only horror, but cruelty!â
âOh, my love, it gets worse!â Father Shaw held you mesmerized in his gaze, the conviction and anguish with which he told his story. âCloser still, Father Mariusâ face was locked in one of pure terror, I'veâIâve never seen a human react in quite a way such as that before, to fear. The man unhinged his own jaw in a hideous scream, and it seemed to me he was skeletal. By that, it's like he was, well, quite dry.
âSo, I crouched down so much lower and inspected him all over. Do you want to know what I found?â
âYes.â You spoke breathlessly.
Father Shaw had moved out of his seat and was on one knee in front of you, both of his frigid hands on your face to smooth across your cheeks, pushing away pieces of hair obscuring some part of you he'd wanted to see.
âMy love, I saw marks in his neck. Two, beautifully, wonderfully symmetrical marks that were far too clean to be of any animal that we know of. The bite was clean, it was patient and cunning. And the fangs that had sunk into his tender flesh had drained him of blood, of the very essence that kept his heart beating until the very last.â
âSirââ your stomach plummeted, falling forever, when he smiled, teeth longer than any humans should be shown through to you. He wouldn't let you go when you went to move out of his hands, away from him. âFather Shaw, pleaseââ
âI wish you could have seen it, my love. It was a breathtaking sight and I long for someone else to admire the beauty of my work alongside me.â
It was unthinkable that a vampire could walk on these holy grounds and in the bright of day, yet Father Shaw had for countless days. Evil held you sweetly by the cheek and in your hair, kissed you with a corpseâs cold lips, and laved the skin of your skin with a long, serpentine tongue.
âOâ, my merciful lordâŠâ
Father Shaw bent your head back with a fistful of hair and spoke from your throat:
âThere is no God, only me. Come into the endless night with me, my love.â
Selective hearing
20's | 18+ blog, I occasionally share fanfictions here primarily in second person POV. â Please pay attention to the tags and warnings on the fics.
271 posts