Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
No title available
NASA
we're not kids anymore.

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
YOU ARE THE REASON

⁂

Kaledo Art
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

pixel skylines
Claire Keane
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Not today Justin
Three Goblin Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Today's Document
$LAYYYTER

Andulka

tannertan36
sheepfilms

Origami Around

seen from Malaysia

seen from Bulgaria
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
@blankspaceintime
Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
reblog if your name isn't Amanda.
2,121,566 people are not Amanda and counting!
We’ll find you Amanda.
world heritage post
I HAVE to reblog this eleven million note post. That’s the most notes I’ve ever seen on tumblr. Also my name is Jade, not Amanda.
i am not amanda
youve seen youngest sibling larry now get ready for oldest sibling ludwig
idk I was tired, bored and watching SU lately-
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
✦ After 500 years, you're still his Valentine
Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Manju Cookie doodle + Silent Manju Doodles
He wants that cookie so bad
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!
Not the Palace, but the Soil
Pairing: Elder Faerie Cookie x Reader Rating: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Hopeful Word Count: ~4,000 Tags: reconciliation, estranged lovers, hurt/comfort, single mother, trauma recovery, body insecurity, scars, non-sexual intimacy, pregnancy trauma, , faerie kingdom, bittersweet, family, canon divergence COMMISSION
part 2
part 1
It was always quiet here, quieter than the palace, quieter even than the wild old forests of your childhood. In the cottage at the edge of the world, silence grew soft and ordinary, settling into the corners like dust.
Elder Faerie Cookie had become part of this quiet, though not entirely. He moved through your days with careful steps, never lingering too long in any room, never asking for more than you were willing to give. He was a guest—welcome, perhaps, but not at home.
Most mornings, he arrived with the first pale light. Sometimes he brought wild honeycomb or dew-slick berries, always presented to your daughter like they were treasure. She adored him, the way children do—utterly free of caution or memory. You watched her weave blossoms into his hair, giggling when he bent down to let her, the sight both tender and strange. It was easy to love him through her eyes, at least for a little while.
For you, the days blended together, routine and careful. You kept your sleeves long, your collar high. There was never a reason to bare more than your hands or face. When your daughter tugged you into her games, you joined, but always at a distance. Hiding had become habit—your scars, your hesitance, the ache that never quite left your bones.
Sometimes you caught Elder Faerie watching you—not with hunger or longing, but something quieter. Reverence, maybe. Guilt. You never let him see you notice.
The nights belonged to you. After your daughter was put to bed, hair brushed and breath steady, you would sit by the window and watch the stars. Sometimes Elder Faerie sat across the room, hands folded, lost in thought. Conversation was rare but gentle.
One evening, as you set out bread and fruit for supper, your daughter piped up, voice high and sweet, words spilling out between bites of apple.
“Mama, how come you an’ Daddy don’t hug no more?”
You froze, a knife halfway through slicing a pear. Elder Faerie’s eyes flicked up, startled.
“Eat your dinner, sweetpea,” you said softly, but the question lingered in the air, heavy and bright.
She blinked, unconvinced. “But when I go sleepies, you be all by yourself. Daddy goes outside. He s’posed to do that?”
Elder Faerie set his cup down, steadying it with both hands. “It’s all right, blossom,” he said gently. “Sometimes big folks need to be quiet for a bit.”
She frowned, wrinkling her nose. “But you usedta hold Mama’s hand. Don’t wanna no more?” She rambled on, referencing the bedtime stories you used to tell her about your past life in the palace.
You tried to smile, small and careful. “Some things change, little one.”
“But you both here now,” she said, mouth full, voice hopeful. “Can’t you be happy?”
Her words poked something sharp inside you. “We are happy, just a different kind,” you managed.
She didn’t quite believe you. Children rarely believe what isn’t shown.
Later, after she was tucked beneath her quilt, you stood by the hearth, watching the last flames. Elder Faerie lingered in the doorway, uncertain, almost shy.
“She’s growing fast,” he said, voice so quiet you nearly missed it.
agreeing, arms hugging yourself. “She asks questions I can’t always answer.”
He hesitated. “She only wants to see you smile.”
You turned, meeting his eyes in the firelight. He looked older now, worn not by years but by the silences between you. There was a sorrow in him you recognized, because it echoed your own.
“She remembers more than you think,” you whispered.
He nodded, stepping closer until the light caught on his wings. “I remember too. I wish I could forget the worst of it.”
For a moment, the quiet between you softened. It felt gentle—almost hopeful.
He didn’t ask to stay. He never did.
But when you looked down at your hands, scarred and trembling just a little, you wondered, for the first time, if you wanted him to.
The rain came just as dusk fell, tapping lightly against the cottage roof, blurring the world outside into silver-grey shadows. You and Elder Faerie Cookie had finished the chores—your daughter already dozing on her blanket in the corner, worn out from her wildflower adventures. For once, there was nowhere to go. No reason to move.
You poured tea into two cups, your hands steady but your mind elsewhere. Elder Faerie Cookie took his with a quiet word of thanks, settling across from you at the small wooden table. The fire’s glow painted him soft and uncertain, silver in the half-dark.
Silence stretched. He traced a finger around the rim of his cup, gaze lowered. You sat stiffly, arms crossed to cover the parts of yourself that always felt too visible.
He broke the silence first, voice gentle as rain. “May I ask you something, truly?”
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
He looked at you, steady and unflinching. “Is it wrong that I want to stay? Not only for her sake—but for yours? For mine?”
Your chest tightened. You stared into your tea. “You don’t have to pretend. We both know why you come. She needs a father. That’s enough.”
He shook his head, slow and deliberate. “No. I come because I need this too. Because I miss what we had—before I ruined it.”
You squeezed your arms tighter. “You didn’t want me when I was whole. Why do you want me now, when I’m—” You trailed off, unable to finish. The word ugly hung heavy in the air, unspoken but alive.
He didn’t recoil. He didn’t rush to fill the silence. “You were always enough,” he said quietly. “It was I who was lacking. I was blind to what I had until I lost it.”
You shook your head. “You loved the queen. The one in silks and moonlight, unscarred. The girl who was easy to look at. That’s not who I am anymore.”
He reached for your hand, slow and careful, giving you every chance to pull away. His fingers were warm and steady, grounding you in the present.
“I loved you then,” he said, “but I love you now in ways I never could before. I see you. The real you. The woman who survived, who raised our child alone, who keeps standing even when it hurts.” He hesitated, then added, “If you let me, I want to learn to love every part of you. Even the parts I helped break.”
Tears threatened, but you blinked them away. “It’s not that simple.”
“No. It isn’t,” he agreed, voice low. “But I will wait, as long as you need. I’ll show you, however I can.”
Thunder rumbled outside, making the windows shiver. You were both quiet for a while, the hush between you almost like comfort.
Your daughter stirred in her sleep, sighing contentedly. Elder Faerie squeezed your hand, just once, before letting go. “You’re not alone anymore,” he said softly.
You looked up at him, searching for a lie and finding none. The honesty in his eyes left you raw, uncertain, but not afraid.
That night, you left the teacups on the table. You found yourself pausing in the hallway as Elder Faerie tucked your daughter in, his voice soft as he murmured a lullaby. He looked at you, uncertain but hopeful, as if asking for permission to keep singing.
You nodded, just barely.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. For once, the night routine felt unhurried—almost sacred. Before you could slip away, your daughter’s drowsy voice piped up from her nest of blankets, “Mamaaa… bath time, ‘kay? Got grass on my toes.”
You paused in the doorway, smiling as she stretched her arms up for you, cheeks rosy from the firelight and wild play. “Grass toes, huh?” you teased, scooping her up. “What about your nose? Looks like you rolled in the meadow again.”
She giggled, tucking her head under your chin, her hair a tangle of sunlight and clover. “I did, Mama. I was ‘posin’ to be a bunny. Bunny gotta be messy!”
Elder Faerie Cookie, quiet but present, was already near the fire, sleeves rolled as he poured water from the kettle into the big tin basin. Steam curled into the air, mingling with the scent of soap and smoke. He checked the temperature with careful fingers before nodding to you.
Together, you undressed your daughter, peeling away muddy socks and her soft, patched dress. She wiggled and kicked, squirming with delight as Elder Faerie Cookie knelt to tickle her toes. “You’re all wiggly tonight, blossom,” he said softly, his voice carrying both laughter and awe.
You set her into the warm water, her little body curling up, toes spreading wide in the basin. She gasped, then squealed, “S’hot! But not too hot! It feel nice, Mama!”
With practiced hands, you dipped a cup, pouring water gently over her shoulders and back. Her skin glowed gold and pink in the firelight, arms splashing as she tried to catch the falling drops. “Make more, make rain!” she cried, and Elder Faerie Cookie obliged, pouring a slow stream that trickled like a waterfall over her curls.
“Bubbles!” she demanded, reaching for the bar of soap. You lathered it in your hands, blowing a little pile of froth onto the surface of the water. She clapped and immediately began to scoop and pat, piling suds onto her knees and your wrists, humming nonsense songs.
“Look, Daddy! Got a crown!” She balanced a foamy lump on her head, then giggled as it slid down into her ear.
Elder Faerie Cookie smiled, the stiffness in his posture melting as he scooped bubbles onto his own chin. “And now I am the Great Bubble King. Will you be my princess, little one?”
She shrieked with laughter. “No, I be da dragon! Roar!” She sloshed water in your direction, face full of mischief. “Roar, Mama! Be ‘fraid!”
You played along, giving your best gasp and clutching your heart. “Oh, the terrible dragon’s here! Save me, Bubble King!”
He grinned, solemn as any hero, and reached over to shield you with a sudsy arm. “Have no fear, I will protect the queen from all dragons—even tiny ones.”
For a while, the world shrank to this small, glowing circle: the basin’s warm water, your daughter’s squeals, and Elder Faerie Cookie’s gentle laughter. Time stretched out, the storm outside fading behind the music of your little girl’s happiness.
When her hands grew pruney and her eyelids began to droop, you rinsed her hair, fingers gentle and slow. Elder Faerie Cookie steadied her, one large hand at her back, his voice a hush in her ear. “Close your eyes, blossom. Like rain in the trees.”
She sighed, nestling against you. “No more water, Mama. I sleepy now.”
You lifted her out, wrapping her in a towel that smelled of sunlight and wildflowers, drying her curls while she leaned, boneless and trusting, against your chest. Elder Faerie Cookie took her small foot and pressed a kiss to the sole, making her giggle one last time.
“Jammies now, Daddy?” she mumbled, half asleep.
He nodded. “Jammies and a story, if you want.”
She was limp with drowsiness, letting herself be dressed, tiny arms poking through the sleeves with your gentle guidance. She reached for her doll and held it tight, blinking up at you with heavy eyes. “You stay ‘til I sleep?”
“Of course, little star,” you promised, kissing her brow. Elder Faerie Cookie tucked the blanket up to her chin, his voice soft as velvet. “Dream sweet, blossom.”
As he sang her lullaby, you sat on the bed’s edge, watching your daughter slip into sleep, trusting you both with her whole, small world. The house felt safe and full, the walls closing gently around your family. When at last you rose and turned out the lamp, Elder Faerie Cookie met your gaze, gratitude and something deeper shining there.
The house was warmer than usual as you drifted toward your own room, the rain still whispering on the roof. When you lay down, your breath came a little easier. The wall between you and Elder Faerie Cookie didn’t feel so tall—not tonight.
Outside, the storm faded to a hush. And when sleep finally claimed you, it was softer than it had been in years.
Night settled heavy and dark. For a while, sleep held you gently—but then the dream came, the one that always started with silence...
You stood in the middle of this very cottage, though it was emptier then. Shadows pressed at the walls. Wind howled through the cracks. The air was sharp with cold, the fire dead. You were alone, pain blooming through your body, every heartbeat a thunderclap. Blood stained the floor, bright and terrifying. You screamed, but your voice was swallowed by the dark. No one answered. The walls stretched wider, the windows turned away. In the crib by the hearth, your daughter did not cry—she was silent, too small, fading like starlight at dawn.
You called for help, for him, for anyone. No one came. Only the old ache: the shame, the fear, the certainty that you were not enough.
When you woke, your throat was raw and your cheeks wet. The room was quiet, but not empty.
Elder Faerie Cookie was sitting at your bedside, worry etched into every line of his face. His wings flickered in the moonlight, trembling faintly. He must have heard you call out.
You tried to turn away, scrubbing your cheeks with your sleeve, but his hand found yours, gentle and warm.
“It was just a dream,” he whispered, voice as soft as the hush after rain. “You’re safe now. I’m here.”
Your body shook. For a moment you let yourself lean into his touch, breathing in the scent of wildflowers and storm. The tears kept coming, silent and slow.
“I almost died,” you said, voice ragged. “Right here. I was so alone. I thought—I thought maybe I was meant to be forgotten.”
He knelt beside your bed, eyes shining with grief and longing. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry. I should have been here. I should never have left you alone.”
You shook your head, biting back the sobs. “I’m not who I was. You see that, don’t you? All the soft, lovely things are gone. I’m just scars now. I don’t know how to let you look at me.”
He reached up, fingers trembling, and brushed the hair from your forehead. “May I?” he asked, voice so reverent it hurt.
He waited. He didn’t rush or move too quickly, simply holding space for you to choose, the way he once failed to do.
Your fingers shook as you let go of your nightgown. You gave a tiny nod—enough.
He breathed out, as if something inside him had just been freed.
With gentle hands, he helped you sit up. He undressed you slowly, treating every movement as a quiet ritual. Fabric slipped from your shoulders and arms, pooling softly at your waist. He paused, always checking your face for any sign of hesitation.
You didn’t pull away.
Cool air touched your skin, and the old urge to hide almost won. But his hands were warm, steadying you where fear threatened to take hold.
He kissed your shoulder, not where your skin was smooth, but right on the faded scar. His lips lingered there, soft and patient.
“You lived,” he murmured, almost to himself.
He kissed you again, and again—each kiss placed with care along the path of your survival. His mouth traced your collarbone, the hollow of your throat. His hands held your ribs, his thumbs passing softly over places that once held pain.
When he knelt before you, it was with reverence, not desire.
He pressed his forehead gently to your stomach. You caught your breath.
“This is where she was,” he whispered. “Where you carried her. Where you held on, even when everything else fell apart.”
He kissed your belly, letting his lips linger over the stretch marks and scars. Each kiss was both an apology and a promise.
You began to cry, quietly, as something deep inside you finally loosened.
“I didn’t think anyone would ever want to look at me like this,” you whispered. “I thought I’d be someone people endured. Not someone cherished.”
He looked up at you, his eyes shining. “I was wrong to ever look away. But I see you now.”
He kissed your sides, your hips, your thighs. His hands followed, not claiming, but learning and honoring. He moved over every place you had learned to hate, as if mapping you back into something whole.
He paused over a scar, then looked at you. “In the Faerie Kingdom...remember the Silver Tree? I cared for it for centuries—protected it, loved it. But I never truly understood resilience until I saw you.”
You turned your face, uncertain. He coaxed you back, gently tracing your jaw.
“These scars are your roots. They keep you here. Every one means you did not break.”
He kissed your neck, your collarbone, beneath your ear. Each touch was slow and full of meaning.
“There were nights I sat beneath that tree and begged for wisdom, for forgiveness. I never realized what I was searching for was already here. You—who carried life and didn’t give up.”
He pressed his forehead to your stomach again, voice shaking a little. “Here is where our daughter grew. Where you survived alone. I should have been here. I know that now.”
You shook your head, but he calmed you with a gentle hand. “Let me see you. Let me honor what you survived.”
He kissed along your ribs and belly, blessing every scar. “You’re like the Silver Tree—beautiful not despite what you endured, but because of it. Every line is a memory. Every scar a root.”
You shivered, not from cold, but from the newness of being cherished.
“I thought you would turn away,” you whispered.
He met your gaze. “Never. There’s nothing here that frightens me. You’re not ruined. You’re a garden after the fire—a place for new life to begin.”
He pressed his lips just above your heart. “If you’ll let me, I want to learn every part of you. I won’t run from what’s difficult. I’ll stay, even when the wind howls.”
You let him hold you close, his words filling the places you once thought empty. His arms wrapped around you, strong and careful, as if holding something ancient and precious.
Resting against his chest, you listened to the steady beat of his heart. He held you like something lost and found again.
You breathed together, long and uneven and real.
“I’m still afraid,” you admitted, your voice small.
“I know,” he said, holding you a little tighter. “I’ll be afraid too. That’s how I know this is real.”
The cottage felt different now. Not haunted, but reclaimed.
When sleep came, it wasn’t for escape, but for peace—his arms around you, his presence sure. The worst of the dream finally let go.
Morning dawned soft and golden, filtering through the cottage windows in gentle beams. For the first time in so long, you woke with a sense of lightness, the ache in your chest replaced by quiet possibility. Elder Faerie Cookie’s arm was draped gently over your waist. He was already awake, watching the sunrise with a thoughtful calm, but he did not let go.
Your daughter’s sleepy feet padded across the floor. She scrambled up between you, giggling as she burrowed under the covers. “Warm! Mama, Daddy, wake up! S’bright out!” Her joy was a song, a call to life.
You let her wedge herself in the crook of your arm, feeling her small, safe weight. Elder Faerie Cookie smiled at her—then at you. It was a real smile, warm and patient. For a while, you simply rested like that, a tangle of warmth and old hope renewed.
The days that followed felt different, quietly changed. Elder Faerie Cookie lingered after breakfast, helping with chores in the garden. He learned to braid your daughter’s hair, fingers clumsy at first, laughter filling the morning air. You walked together in the fields—sometimes three in a line, sometimes hand in hand. You began letting him take your hand, small touches that grew into something steady.
Trust rebuilt itself in little ways: a shared glance, a gentle touch, the comfort of silence that needed no filling. In the afternoons, you sat in the sun, your daughter dancing around with her flower crown. Elder Faerie Cookie would watch, then pick wildflowers for both of you, weaving them into your hair with quiet reverence.
One evening, you and he sat beneath the old willow at the edge of the garden, your daughter twirling in the grass, giggling as she tried to fly with handmade wings.
He took your hand. “ahh....may I....ask you something, dear?” he said, voice almost shy.
You nodded.
“Would you let me stay?” he asked. “Not just as a guest, but as your partner, as your husband again. Not as the man who left, but as the one who will stay, if you’ll have me.”
You searched his face, seeing not the king or the consort, but the man who had learned how to love you as you were now. The man who cherished your roots, your scars, your strength.
“Yes,” you whispered. “But only if you promise to stay, even when it’s hard.”
He squeezed your hand, his eyes bright with relief. “Always. Even if the wind howls.”
That night, the three of you shared a meal by lamplight, laughter echoing through the small house. There was no ceremony, no grand parade. Only the simple joy of being together—whole, if not unscarred.
Later, as you tucked your daughter into bed, she yawned and smiled up at you. “We all here now, Mama,” she mumbled, rubbing her eyes. “You be happy now, ‘kay?”
You kissed her brow, your heart full and fragile. “We are, little blossom,” you replied. “We really are.”
Elder Faerie Cookie stood in the doorway, waiting for you. As you walked into his arms, you felt the final remnants of the old ache fall away.
Outside, the world was in bloom. New green shoots pushed through dark earth. Wildflowers unfurled in the morning sun. You stood together in the doorway—family, changed but unbroken—ready for whatever the next season would bring.
And this time, when morning arrived, it brought laughter.
--
ya'll this winterstorm this weekend....nuthing but a little rain and water!!!!!!! but it did ice up this morning so theres that. also my formating for this piece got messed up so if theres any mistakes ive made or things that got repeated that I missed, please let me know!!!

